Morphological description of Laevicaulis stuhlmanni (Simroth, 1895) (Pulmonata, Veronicellidae) from Egypt
Author
Ali, Reham Fathey
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3368-8107
Faculty of Organic Agriculture, Heliopolis University, Cairo, Egypt & Faculty of Agriculture, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt
reham.ali@agr.cu.edu.eg
Author
Robinson, David G
USDA APHIS PPQ National Malacology Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Author
Liberto, Fabio
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8533-0911
Via del Giubileo Magno 93, 90015, Cefalu, Italy
text
Biodiversity Data Journal
2022
2022-10-07
10
85495
85495
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.10.e85495
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.10.e85495
1314-2828-10-e85495
66CCC6EAD17E5D6EA809D65F2D1970D1
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni (Simroth, 1895)
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
Synonymy
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
Vaginula stuhlmanni
Simroth, 1895
Eleutherocaulis stuhlmanni
(Simroth, 1895)
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
Vaginula schnitzleri
Simroth, 1895
Vaginula aequatorialis
Simroth, 1896
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
Vaginula brauni
Simroth, 1913
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni aegypti
Ali and Robinson, 2017 (
nomen nudum
)
Materials
Type status:
Other material
.
Occurrence
:
catalogNumber:
USDA 144250
; occurrenceRemarks: found on grass in
Marriot Hotel
in
Cairo
; recordedBy:
Reham Fathey Ali
; individualCount:
25
; sex:
hermaphrodite
; lifeStage:
juvenile and adults
; preparations: whole animal (ETOH);
Taxon
:
scientificNameID: urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1255847; scientificName:
Laevicaulis
stuhlmanni (Simroth, 1895); kingdom:
Mollusca
; class:
Gastropoda
; family:
Veronicellidae
;
Location
:
continent:
Africa
; country:
Egypt
; stateProvince:
El Gezira Street
, on
Gezira Island
,
El Zamalek district
; county:
Egypt
;
Event
:
samplingProtocol:
collecting by hand and observation
; year: 2006; month: 4; day: 15; habitat: garden; eventRemarks: collecting at late hours of night in activity periods;
Record Level
:
institutionCode: USDA - USDA APHIS
National Malacology Collection
,
Academy of Natural Sciences
,
Philadelphia
, Pennsylvania, USA; collectionCode: "Terrestrial slugs"; basisOfRecord:
PreservedSpecimen
Description
General description of external morphology
The slug has a dorsal-ventrally flattened body; the notum has a dark brown background, with a light longitudinal colour band running down the centre; in some specimens, it is reduced to punctation (Fig.
1
). Some specimens have a darker band on both sides of the notum, these bands being connected together on the head and in the back and could be thick or thin or as rows of dark spots (Figs
1
,
2
). The hyponata are uniform light brown. The head has two pairs of tentacles that are hidden under the notum, the first (lower) shorter chemotactic pair and a longer (upper) pair of ocular tentacles. The adult specimens of
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
preserved in alcohol have been measured (n = 15): mean length 44 mm (range: 36-52 mm), mean width 16 mm (range: 12-19 mm), mean foot length 38 mm (range: 23-48 mm), mean foot width 6 mm (range: 4-9 mm), mean width of right hyponota 5 mm (range: 3-7 mm), mean width of left hyponota 5 mm (range: 3-7 mm).
Diagnosis
Genitalia description
:
The female genital pore is located on the right hyponotum, posterior to the middle of the total length and the male genital pore opens in the anterior portion just below the right ocular tentacle. The anterior male genital complex is composed of two elements, the phallus
sensu stricto
and the phallic gland, both enclosed in a muscular sheath sharing a common atrium that opens through the genital pore. The phallus is slender (Figs
3
,
4
) and has a sub-distal annular swelling. In some specimens, the phallus is less slender, with a distal swelling, caused by the invagination of the distal part. The phallic gland is composed of a conical papilla that arises from a vase-shaped base. On the proximal part, there are a number digitiform tubules, numbering from ten to seventeen, averaging 12.5
+/-
1.8 tubules. In three specimens, it was noticed that one of the tubules branched into two smaller tubules (Fig.
3
). The papilla gland is at the same level as the phallus papilla tip in some samples or distally forward (Figs
5
,
6
). However, in two specimens, the phallus papilla stalk was distally more forward than the gland papilla or not at the same level (Fig.
7
). The papilla of the phallic gland is pointed conical and different in length and width relative to its base in each individual; at the base of the papilla, typically four to five thin lines of wrinkles can be seen, possibly produced by the contraction and expansion of the papilla. Some specimens have up to seven to twelve thin lines of wrinkles (Fig.
7
). The posterior genitalia are characterised by a more or less oval hermaphroditic gonad (ovotestis) made up of rounded acini; from it arises a large convoluted hermaphroditic duct that connects to the albumen gland, the latter being conical and very large. The vas deferens can be divided into four parts: the proximal posterior vas deferens (from the fertilisation complex to the prostatic gland), the distal posterior vas deferens (from the prostate to the ligament duct), the middle vas deferens (from the ligament duct, in anterior direction inside the integument) and the anterior vas deferens (from the exit of the tegument to the phallus). The prostatic gland is dark yellow to pale coffee colour with a smooth surface; the ligament duct is a short duct that connects the middle vas deferens to the short duct of the bursa copulatrix; the bursa copulatrix is large and oval (Fig.
8
).
Distribution
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
was first collected from the indoor ornamental plants garden of a hotel located in El Gezira Street, on Gezira Island, Cairo, El Zamalek District, Cairo, Egypt (30°03
'27.4"
N 31°13
'28.1"
E). There have been subsequent unconfirmed reports from anthropochorus environments elsewhere in Egypt. The distribution map of
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
,
Laevicaulis alte
and
Laevicaulis striatus
is illustrated in Africa (Fig.
9
).
Biology
The species
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
was reported for the first time in Egypt under the
nomen nudum
L. stuhlmanni aegypti
(
Ali 2017a
,
Ali 2017b
) and the biological attributes, such as life cycle, pre-oviposition period, oviposition period, post-oviposition period, reproductive output, incubation period, generation period and life span, were documented and described.
As in all veronicellid species, the slug is a hermaphrodite species that possessing both male and female genitalia and self-fertilisation can occur. However, mating or cross-fertilisation was not observed for this species under laboratory conditions. The reproductive season of this species starts in March, when the seasonal temperature rises and lasts until November (
Ali 2017b
). The incubation period for the eggs to hatch averaged 15 days with ranges from 10 to 19 days at a temperature of 29 to 31°C and a humidity between 52% and 64%.
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
reaches sexual maturity after an average of 86 days with ranges 53 to 115 days after hatching, depending on the surrounding conditions. Total life span averaged 155 days with ranges between 127 to 188 days. The oviposition period averaged 46 days with ranges one to 74 days; each slug can produce around five egg clutches ranging from one to twelve egg clutches/slug with an average of 47 eggs/clutch (range 10 to 120 egg/clutch) under laboratory conditions. Generation period averaged 102 days with ranges 69 to 127 days (
Ali 2017b
). This species laid multiple egg masses during its activity months. In Figs
10
,
11
,
12
, the eggs are oval to spherical elongate shape and translucent. The eggs are joined together by a thin interconnecting thread producing a gradually spiral-like egg mass with distinct faecal pellets ribbon deposited on the top of the eggs.
Taxon discussion
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
is a native slug of Eastern and Central Africa (Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Kenya, Tanzania) (
Forcart 1953
). Veronicellids have been recorded throughout the tropics on a number of ornamental plants including flower beds and seedlings causing significant economic losses (
Robinson and Hollingsworth 2005
,
Gomes et al. 2013
). It is a phytophagous species and often occurs in large numbers beneath decaying vegetation in its natural habitat; however, through this study and from other growers and
farmers'
observations, the species was also found in commercial plantations.
L. stuhlmanni
is usually active during the night, while it is buried in the ground during the day (
Ali 2017b
). It is a hermaphrodite and member of a genus that includes some widespread and invasive pests, such as
Laevicaulis alte
(
Raut 1999
,
Das and Parida 2015
).
Taxonomic remarks
The validity of
Laevicaulis
Simroth, 1913 as the objective senior synonym of
Eleutherocaulis
Simroth, 1913 was recently confirmed by
Sajan and Tripathy (2021)
. The type species, in both cases by subsequent designation, is
Vaginulus comorensis
Fischer, 1883, a junior synonym of
Vaginulus alte
A.
Ferussac
, 1822.
The systematics of the
Laevicaulis
species are uncertain, due to the description of several taxa in the second half of the 1800s, based only on external characters such as body colour and body measurements of the slug or on inadequate descriptions of genitalia.
Simroth (1895)
described a subspecies
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni atrolimbatus
, but its validity is questionable.
Laevicaulis striatus
and
L. stuhlmanni
have similar female genitalia and phallic glands. However, the phallus in the two species reportedly has a different apex. In
Simroth 1895
: 62, the original description of
L. stuhlmanni
describes a cylindrical phallus, slightly tapered distally, with a flat terminal disc, in the middle of which the sperm duct opens. The descriptions and figures of
L. stuhlmanni
in Simroth (1896: 18, Pl. 3, figs. 6 B-C) and the synonym
Vaginula aequatorialis
) and those of Forcart L (1953: 74-76, Pl. 5, figs. 1 A-E) are consistent with the original description of
L. stuhlmanni
. However, part of Forcart's description of
L. stuhlmanni
(
Forcart 1953
: 75, Pl. 4 figs. 10 A-B) is not consistent with
L. stuhlmanni
's original description, while it fits well with
L. striatus
in the same paper (
Forcart 1953
).
Simroth (1896)
described the new species
Vaginula striata
, based on external features of sexually immature specimens. Forcart (1953: 79-86, Pl. 5, figs. 3 A and C) reviewed
L. striatus
, based on adult specimens sampled in the type locality. These specimens are characterised by the phallus with a subdistal annular swelling. The important character given for
L. stuhlmanni
is that it has a phallus with a flat terminal disc, while
L. striatus
has a phallus with a subdistal annular swelling. Based on these data,
Liberto et al. (2021)
classified the
Laevicaulis
population from Libya as
L. striatus
.
However, as shown by
Colosi (1927)
for
Laevicaulis somalicus
(
Colosi 1927
) and as evidenced by
Forcart (1953)
(P1. 4, fig. 10; P1. 5, figs. 1, 3) for
L. stuhlmanni
and
L. striatus
, the length of the phallus and the shape of the phallic apex are variable according to the contraction or erection of the phallus; therefore, it cannot be excluded that
L. striatus
is a synonym of
L. stuhlmanni
. Pending a modern taxonomic review involving a molecular analysis of the
Laevicaulis stuhlmanni
/
Laevicaulis striatus
group, the authors attribute the population examined here and the one reported from Libya (as
Eleutherocaulis striatus
in
Liberto et al. (2021)
to the senior taxon
L. stuhlmanni
(Simroth, 1895). The length of the phallus stalk of
L. stuhlmanni
in
Forcart (1953)
(when not contracted) is similar to that measured in the population from Cairo (Egypt) i.e. one or one and a half times the length of the papilla of the phallic gland, whereas in the populations from Benghazi (Libya), it is longer, i.e. two and a half times. The
L. stuhlmanni
populations described by
Forcart (1953)
have a variable external colour: greyish, reddish, yellow, brown or blackish-brown, the sole is uniformly blackish and always much darker than the hyponota or light with blackish margin ("subspecies"
atrolimabratus
).
L. stuhlmanni
from Egypt and Libya has an external colouration more similar to that described by
Forcart (1953)
for
L. striatus
: notum reddish-brown, yellow or greenish-brown unicoloured or with a median stripe, flanked on each side by two rows of irregular dark spots or stripes; hyponota and foot lighter than the notum.
Recently,
Ali and Robinson (2020)
and
Ali and Robinson (2022)
recorded
Laevicaulis alte
from Abo Rawash, Giza, Egypt.
L. alte
is distinguished from
L. stuhlmanni
by having a very dark notum with a pale thin well-defined white or creamy line on the dorsal surface, running the length of the body; the lighter hyponota have a creamy or grey colour; both surfaces minutely granular; the phallus with a sub-basal annular swelling (
Grimpe and Hoffmann 1925
,
Benthem-Jutting 1952
,
Forcart 1953
,
Brodie and Barker 2012
,
Prakash et al. 2015
).