Cochlostoma Jan, 1830 revised: an overview of the subgenus Turritus Westerlund, 1883 and its species (Caenogastropoda, Cochlostomatidae)
Author
Zallot, Enrico
365E17AD-6938-4364-A526-F1BDA2663E10
Per Ligont 1, 33070 Budoia, Italy.
ezallot@gmail.com
Author
Kamchev, Panche
9FA2BE01-3355-4340-B57C-9E2841D5E4C2
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden, the Netherlands.
panekamchev@gmail.com
Author
Schilthuizen, Menno
683D0AB7-CDD8-4FAA-94B6-436F3BFB8873
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden, the Netherlands. & Taxon Expeditions, Rembrandtstraat 20, 2311 VW Leiden, the Netherlands.
menno.schilthuizen@naturalis.nl
Author
Fehér, Zoltán
E801EC76-8B1E-450B-993E-BBBE57C00EA9
WWF Hungary, Álmos vezér útja 69 / A, 1141 Budapest, Hungary.
feher.zoltan.nhmus@gmail.com
Author
Mattia, Willy De
C74A049D-9D7B-4A1F-878B-5BDFD104219F
Central Research Laboratories, Burgring 7, 1010, Vienna, Austria; Department of Evolutionary Biology, University of Vienna, Djerassiplatz 1, 1030, Vienna, Austria.
wdemattia@gmail.com
Author
Gittenberger, Edmund
D786C279-FC92-4D08-AF16-F79A9705E0AE
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P. O. Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, the Netherlands.
egittenberger@yahoo.com
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2024
2024-03-21
927
1
163
https://europeanjournaloftaxonomy.eu/index.php/ejt/article/download/2475/11013
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2024.927.2475
2118-9773
10853688
B6E43365-FACA-49BA-8CCD-77E4BF8F0016
Subgenus
Turritus
Westerlund, 1883
Type
species
Pomatias stossichi
Hirc, 1881
(subsequent designation
Wenz, 1923: 1781
).
Diagnosis of the subgenus
The conical shell varies from
5.4 to 10.4 mm
in height and has from 6.3 to 10 whorls, it is always ribbed, either spotless or with marked spots. The umbilicus is either hidden by an inwardly curved columellar lobe or visible. The protoconch is initially smooth and after 1.2–1.5 whorls finely ribbed. The columella is either solid or hollow. The operculum is thin, almost transparent and flexible. In the female genitals, the pedunculus of the bursa copulatrix and the seminal receptacle are superficial. The angle between the pedunculus of the bursa copulatrix and the distal oviduct is less than 45 degrees. In the male genitals, the penis is situated close to the right eye and has an internal spermiduct.
Fig. 12.
Morpho-anatomical features which allow to distinguish
Turritus
Westerlund, 1883
from other subgenera of
Cochlostoma
Jan, 1830
.
Differential diagnosis
Morpho-anatomical features which allow to distinguish
Turritus
from the other
Cochlostoma
subgenera
(see also
Zallot
et al
. 2015: 78
):
• from
Auritus
: the operculum is thin and transparent in
Turritus
, with more or less developed concretions in
Auritus
(
Fig. 12A
). The protoconch is dull and strong in
Turritus
; it is translucent and fragile in
Auritus
;
• from
Eupomatias
Wagner, 1897
: in the female genitals of
Eupomatias
, the proximal oviduct always runs over the apex of the elongated seminal receptacle, never as such in
Turritus
(
Fig. 12B
);
• from
Lovcenia
: the protoconch is smooth in the first 1.5–2 whorls in
Turritus
, only the first 0.5 whorl in
Lovcenia
(
Fig. 12C
);
• from
Wagneriola
Zallot
et al
., 2015
: the seminal receptacle is moved dorsally and there is a ventralanterior connection of the pedunculus to the bursa copulatrix in
Wagneriola
, never as such in
Turritus
(
Fig. 12D
);
• from
Cochlostoma
s.s.
and
Clessiniella
Zallot
et al
., 2015
: in the female genitals, the pedunculus is connected apically to the bursa copulatrix in
Clessiniella
and
Cochlostoma
s.s.
, never apical in
Turritus
(
Fig. 12E
).
No known morpho-anatomical features allow to distinguish with certainty the subgenus
Dalfreddia
Zallot
et al
., 2015
from
Turritus
; however, they resolved in well-separated clades in the molecular analysis (see
Fig. 11
).
Distribution
(
Fig. 13
)
The subgenus inhabits only rocky limestone soils. It is widespread along the Italian and Balkan peninsulas. It inhabits the most eastern and western parts of the Alps. West of the Alps, it is found in the southern coastal mountains of
France
and
Spain
. It inhabits the two main islands of the western Mediterranean, Sardinia and Sicily. One African species on the coast of
Algeria
probably also belongs to this subgenus. Clade A seems to be restricted to the Balkan and Italian Peninsulas and it is also present on the two main islands (Sicily and Sardinia) of the western Mediterranean Sea. It may be, however, that a species of this clade inhabits the south coast of
France
(see remarks in
C.
(
T.
)
macei
(
Bourguignat, 1870
))
. Clade B is present both on the Balkan and Italian peninsulas. It is also found on the most western and eastern sides of the Alps and in the south coastal mountains of
France
and
Spain
. It is missing from the most parts of the Alps, which are inhabited on the calcareous south side by species of
Eupomatias
,
Clessiniella
and
Dalfreddia
; it is not living in the
Puglia region
in South of
Italy
either, which is inhabited by species of
Auritus
(except on the Gargano peninsula which does not host, despite the favourable environment, populations of
Cochlostoma
).
Remarks
No morphological synapomorphies of
Turritus
are known, but its monophyly is supported in the molecular phylogenetic analyses (
Zallot
et al
. 2015
). Recognizing a species purely morphologically is often impossible without geographical information and molecular data. For this reason, classical dichotomous keys based on morpho-anatomical character states will not be presented.
Clade A
Note to clade A
In an unresolved polytomy at the root of clade A there are morphologically and anatomically almost indistinguishable taxa, namely the Slovenian
C.
(
T.
)
stussineri
(
Wagner, 1897
)
, in the currently accepted taxonomy as a subspecies of
C.
(
T.
)
gracile
(Pfeiffer, 1849)
,
C.
(
T.
)
patulum
(
Draparnaud, 1801
)
for the South of
France
and, in a small area of the Central Appennine, populations referred to in the Appendix as NFS064.