Taxonomic review of Aclis Lóven, 1846 (Gastropoda, Eulimidae) from Brazil with notes on other congeners from the western Atlantic and Saint Helena
Author
Souza, Leonardo Santos De
0000-0002-8242-010X
Author
Araújo, Tarciso Almeida De
0000-0002-8242-010X
Departamento de Invertebrados, Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista., São Cristóvão, 20940 - 040, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Author
Pimenta, Alexandre Dias
0000-0002-8242-010X
Departamento de Invertebrados, Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista., São Cristóvão, 20940 - 040, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-04-09
5433
4
451
499
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5433.4.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5433.4.1
1175-5326
10954420
7ADF6A54-E31C-453A-AA25-44DEDBCF2752
Aclis
sp. 1
Fig. 6
Material examined.
Brazil
:
Rio de Janeiro state
: OP II sta. 44;
MNRJ 33505
[2†].
Characterization.
Shell tall, conical, reaching about 2.0 mm long,
0.9 mm
wide, eight whorls, whitish.Protoconch conical, about 3.5 whorls, first whorl (embryonic) smooth, remaining whorls sculptured by microscopic sigmoid axial lines at small intervals. Teleoconch with slightly convex whorls, surface glossy presenting faint microscopical spiral striae and strong incremental scars with irregular intervals. Body whorl half the total length, base rounded; aperture wide, 60% of body whorl length, strongly expanded laterally, rounded anteriorly, acute posteriorly; outer lip thin, sinuous, strongly advanced close to distal area; inner lip thin, reflected. Umbilical fissure present.
Measurements.
MNRJ 33505: 7 whorls; SL= 2.0 mm; BWL= 1.0 mm; AL=
0.6 mm
; SW=
0.9 mm
; AW=
0.5 mm
.
Remarks.
Aclis
sp. 1
has a multispiral protoconch, with the first whorl (embryonic/protoconch I) smooth and the remaining whorls ornamented by microscopic sigmoid axial lines. This feature is not common in
Aclis
, but
Aclis walleri
Jeffreys, 1867
known from the North Atlantic and
Aclis aurisparva
Bertolaso & Garilli, 2009
from Pliocene deposits of
Italy
present a similar pattern of sculpture in the larval shell (
Bouchet & Warén 1986
: fig. 736;
Bertolaso & Garilli 2009
: figs 1–5). This pattern of sculpture is more common in other eulimids like species of
Batheulima
F. Nordsieck, 1968
,
Fuscapex
Warén, 1981
and
Niso
Risso, 1826
, which also presents some patterns of brownish coloration in the larval shell (
Bouchet & Warén 1986
). In
Batheulima
and
Fuscapex
, the presence of the sigmoid axial lines in the protoconch is variable, with species of the same genus showing a smooth surface (
Bouchet & Warén 1986
). This
type
of sculpture is possibly rare in
Aclis
. Despite the atypical protoconch,
Aclis
sp. 1
fits the genus by the shell shape with convex whorls (
Fig. 6A
), presence of microscopic spiral striae at the teleoconch surface (
Fig. 6B
), shape of the aperture and presence of an umbilical fissure (
Fig. 6C
).
FIGURE 6
.
Aclis
sp. 1
: MNRJ 33505.
A
. Shell in frontal view.
B
. Apical whorls: double arrows indicate microscopic and sigmoid axial line at the protoconch surface, single bottom arrow indicate microscopic spiral striae at the teleoconch surface.
C
. Body whorl. Scale bars:
A
. 1 mm;
B
. 200 μm;
C
. 500 μm.
A distinction between protoconch I and II is indicative of planktotrophy (
Warén 1983
). The remaining species studied here are probably non planktotrophic because, in general, they have a paucispiral protoconch with smooth surface, without the distinction between protoconch I and II (
Warén 1983
). The paucity of informative characters in the larval shells of
Aclis
species
limits the inference of the
type
of larval development.
The general shape of the species closely resembles
A. sarissa
,
A. kanela
and
A. walleri
. It can be distinguished from
A. sarissa
and
A. kanela
by the presence of microscopic sculpture in the larval shell. The teleoconch whorls of
Aclis
sp. 1
seems less convex than in
A. walleri
but based on limited material it is difficult to assess variation, pending further comparisons to distinguish
Aclis
sp. 1
as a new species or determining the occurrence of
A. walleri
in the southwestern Atlantic.