Five new Napaeus species (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Enidae) from Gran Canaria and El Hierro (Canary Islands)
Author
Yanes, Yurena
Instituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra (CSIC-Universidad de Granada), Camino del Jueves s / n, 18100, Armilla, Granada, Spain. E-mail: yurenayanes @ ugr. es
Author
Santana, Jesús
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain. E-mail: CASIOPEA _ 69 @ terra. es; franciscodeniz @ yahoo. es Arinaga, Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain. E-mail: miguel _ artiles @ yahoo. es
_69@terra.es
Author
Artiles, Miguel
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain. E-mail: CASIOPEA _ 69 @ terra. es; franciscodeniz @ yahoo. es Arinaga, Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain. E-mail: miguel _ artiles @ yahoo. es
_69@terra.es
Author
Deniz, Francisco
Author
Martín, Javier
El Coromoto, La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain. E-mail: javimarba @ hotmail. com
Author
Alonso, María R.
Departamento de Biologia Animal, Universidad de La Laguna, E- 38206 La Laguna, Tenerife, Islas Canarias, Spain.
Author
Ibáñez, Miguel
Departamento de Biologia Animal, Universidad de La Laguna, E- 38206 La Laguna, Tenerife, Islas Canarias, Spain.
mibanez@ull.es
text
Zootaxa
2011
2011-06-01
2901
1
35
51
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.2901.1.3
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.2901.1.3
1175-5326
5284936
Napaeus validoi
Ibáñez, Alonso & Martín
,
n. sp.
Figs. 1
,
3 F
,
7 D–F
,
8 B
,
9 B
Type locality.
Ñameritas (Gran Canaria;
UTM
: 28RDR3389,
1000 m
altitude).
Holotype
(
Fig. 3 F
; empty shell):
TFMC
(
MT 0418
).
Leg. M. Nogales
,
10 November 1984
.
Paratypes
.
14 specimens
and 11 shells, collected between 1984 and 2010 from the central-western part of Gran Canaria; deposited in
AIT
and the
JSGC
collection (1 shell)
.
Etymology.
The specific name is dedicated to our friend Manuel Valido, malacologist from Gran Canaria.
Distribution and habitat
(
Fig. 1
).
Endemic to Gran Canaria, occupying an area of about
25 km
2
of the Reserva Natural Integral de Inagua, the Monumento Natural del Roque Nublo and their surroundings, associated mainly with pine forest, within an altitudinal range between 950 and
1450 m
.
Napaeus validoi
is a ground dweller; the specimens collected had the shell disguised by a covering of vertic soil (a
type
of clayey soil), altering its appearance considerably as in other disguised
Napaeus
species.
Diagnosis
.
Shell slender, nearly cylindrical, with prominent aperture and wide lip. Epiphallus with epiphallic caecum. Penial appendix shorter than penis and epiphallus combined. Bursa copulatrix duct shorter than diverticulum.
Description
.
Shell (
Fig. 3 F
) dextral, slender (SB/SH index), nearly cylindrical, with 7–7½ slightly convex whorls. Body whorl intermediate in size (BH/SH index), occupying about 4/7 of the shell surface area (BS/SS index). Protoconch smooth, shiny, with about 1½ whorls. Aperture short and very wide (AH/SH and AB/SB indices), rounded, with elliptical section at palatal side, more curved at the junction of the columellar and palatal margins. Angle (
Fig. 2
) between columella and upper palatal margin about 114º. Peristome discontinuous, expanded as wide, whitish lip, more developed in lower part of palatal edge and reflected on columellar edge, partly covering umbilical slit. Older specimens with a callosity between peristome edges and a small nodule at the junction of parietal and palatal margins. Aperture extending laterally beyond penultimate whorl by 50% (
ca
1.6 mm).
Shell colour brown. Ornamentation characterised by numerous oblique radial ribs, regularly placed on body whorl and sinuous, sometimes interrupted in remainder of teleoconch whorls, forming small protuberances that are irregularly distributed (
Fig. 9 B
).
FIGURE 9.
Details of shell ornamentation of holotypes (penultimate whorl). A.
Napaeus arinagaensis
n. sp.
B.
N. validoi
n. sp.
C.
N. grohi
n. sp.
Genital system (
Fig. 8 B
;
two specimens
dissected). Atrium very short. Penis about one quarter of length of epiphallus, with two portions. Distal portion tubular, located between atrium and insertion of penial retractor muscle. Proximal portion slightly swollen. Epiphallus tubular, opening distally into penis, two regions defined by presence of epiphallic caecum, distal region slightly longer and more slender than proximal region. Flagellum very short. Penial appendix arising from distal penis portion near genital orifice, shorter than penis and epiphallus combined. Part A
1
of penial appendix not much differentiated from small, globular part A
2
, slightly longer than penis. Appendicular retractor muscle inserting laterally in the proximal zone of part A
1
, joining penial retractor on diaphragm walls.
Free oviduct longer than vagina. Bursa copulatrix complex with well-developed diverticulum, branching off near proximal end of bursa duct, longer than bursa duct and similarly inflated when accommodating partner’s spermatophore.
FIGURE 10.
Napaeus grohi
n. sp.
, holotype. A. Genital system. B. Detail of the flagellum. C. Internal anatomy of penis. A
4
–A
5
, parts of the penial appendix; ag, albumen gland; bc, bursa copulatrix (although this appears be bent it is in fact only wrinkled); e, epiphallus; f, flagellum; go, genital orifice; o, free oviduct; par, penial appendix retractor; p, penis; pr, penis retractor; sph, sphincter between epiphallus and penis; v, vagina; vd, vas deferens.
Comparison with other taxa.
Shell morphology:
Napaeus validoi
(max. SH = 19.1 mm) has almost the same height but is more slender (SB/SH index = 0.42) than
N. interpunctatus
(
Wollaston, 1878
)
(max. SH = 20.0 mm; SB/ SH index = 0.46), which is the biggest
Napeus
species
from Gran Canaria. The
N. validoi
shell (
Fig. 3 F
) has a form similar to that of
N. chrysaloides
(
Wollaston, 1878
)
(
Fig. 3 E
), but is clearly higher, has a stronger ornamentation, and its rounded aperture is nearly twice as large as that of
N. chrysaloides
.
Genital anatomy:
N. validoi
is similar to
N. venegueraensis
and
N. chrysaloides
,
without important differences between them. The apparently greater length of the diverticulum of the bursa copulatrix in
N. validoi
(
Fig. 8
) can be attributed to the remains of a spermatophore inside the dissected specimens.