Notes on the hypselostomatid snails (Gastropoda: Heterobranchia) from limestone hills in Western Cambodia with a new record and a new species
Author
Sutcharit, Chirasak
Author
Ngor, Peng Bun
Author
Páll-Gergely, Barna
Author
Jeratthitikul, Ekgachai
Author
Siriwut, Warut
Author
Srisonchai, Ruttapon
Author
Ng, Ting Hui
Author
Jirapatrasilp, Parin
Author
Panha, Somsak
text
Journal of Natural History
2023
2023-09-27
57
25 - 28
1287
1303
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2023.2223386
journal article
273183
10.1080/00222933.2023.2223386
5cd7307d-1cec-4f08-8965-9c8e1ca2f625
1464-5262
10015601
Gyliotrachela khmeriana
Sutcharit and Panha
,
sp. n.
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:58A3E65E-0289-48D2-ABD5-
D52762D0E754
(
Figures 1
,
4
;
Table 1
)
Type material
Holotype
CUMZ 14206
/1 (height
3.1 mm
, width
3.4 mm
, and 5 whorls;
Figure 4
(a, b)),
paratype
CUMZ 14206
/2 (1 shell; height
3.2 mm
, width
3.4 mm
, and 5 whorls;
Figure 4
(c)).
Type locality
The
limestone hills at
Phnom Sampeov Mountain
,
Banan District
,
Battambang Province
,
Cambodia
(
13.026000°N
,
103.101011°E
)
.
Etymology
The specific name ̍
khmeriana
′ refers to the most numerous ethnic groups of
Cambodia
; a Latin feminine adjective.
Figure 4.
Gyliotrachela khmeriana
sp. nov.
(a, b) Holotype CUMZ 14206/1 from Phnom Sampov, Battambang, (a) shell with apertural dentition arrangement, and (b) protoconch sculpture. (c) Paratype CUMZ 14206/2 from the type locality with apertural dentition (very reduced basal lamella). Abbreviations: a = angular lamella, b = basal lamella, c = columellar lamella, lpl = lower palatal lamella, p = parietal lamella, upl = upper palatal lamella.
Diagnosis
Shell minute heliciform, and slightly short and straight tuba. Protoconch sculptures with shallow pits and spiral striations; teleoconch without spiral striation. Apertural dentition with six lamellae (parietal, angular, upper and lower palatals, basal, and columellar).
Figure 5.
Comparative shell (tuba) and apertural dentition among the three genera based on the respective type species. (a)
Anauchen
Pilsbry, 1917
(syntype MNHN-IM-2000-35,161 of
Boysidia gereti
;
Bavay and Dautzenberg, 1904
). (b)
Gyliotrachela
Tomlin, 1930
(lectotype SMF 4587/1 of
Hypselostoma hungerfordianum
Möllendorff, 1891
). (c)
Hypselostoma
Benson, 1856
(syntype NHMUK 1954.6.2.568 of
Tanystoma tubiferum
Benson, 1856
; after
Preece
et al
. 2022
: fig. 70d). Abbreviations: a = angular lamella, p = parietal lamella.
Description
Shell heliciform, last whorl large, straight tuba, and spire conical. Shell colour brownish,
3.1 mm
in length,
3.4 mm
in width, and with five whorls. Protoconch about two whorls, sculptured with roundish shallow pits, and thin spiral striations present. Teleoconch with irregularly or wrinkled arranged on strong or weak growth lines. Spire raised, whorls slightly angular, resulting in a scalariform shape of the upper whorls; suture wide and impressed. Last whorl angular and short tuba projecting anteriorly. Only wide and shallow columellar furrow present and extended to onset of tuba. Outer outline of peristome rounded, aperture triangular due to the well-developed sinulus and the angled parietocolumellar and columellar-basal junctions; peristome free with broadly expanded lip margins. Apertural dentition with six prominent lamellae: angular, parietal, upper and lower palatals, columellar (sometime very tiny), and basal. Parietal (p) lamella very tall and situated deep inside on parietal wall. Angular (a) lamella relatively small and situated anteriorly close to expanded lip. Palatal wall with tall and strong upper (upl) and lower palatal (lpl) lamellae. Basal (b) lamella small, knob shaped and located between lower palatal plica and the columellar lamella. Columella lamella strong and prominent. All apertural dentition with smooth surfaces. Umbilicus wide and deep.
Distribution
Gyliotrachela khmeriana
sp. nov.
is known only from the
type
locality (
Figure 1
). The snails were found on a limestone wall outside the cave, occurring sympatrically also perhaps syntopically with
G. torticollis
and
Georissa
sp.
However,
G. khmeriana
sp. nov.
was found in lower abundances than the others, and only
two specimens
were collected.
Differential diagnosis
This new species differs from all other known hypselostomatids from
Cambodia
in having slightly angular whorl, short and straight tuba, strong angular lamella, last whorl angular, protoconch with rounded pits, and spiral striations. In contrast,
H. cambodjense
has an elevated spire and a shouldered last whorl, is without angular lamella, and has an infraparietal plica;
A. informis
Vermeulen
et al
., 2007
from
Vietnam
possesses a rounded last whorl, spiral striations on teleoconch, and adnate peristome, is without angular lamella, and has upper palatal and basal lamellae that are sometimes absent (
Benthem Jutting 1962
;
Vermeulen
et al
. 2007
). This new species also differs from
H. rupestre
Benthem Jutting, 1962
and
H. dilatatum
Benthem Jutting, 1962
from
Vietnam
, both of which possess a rounded last whorl, elongate conical spire, interpalatal and infrapalatal plicae, and a robust supracolumella, and are without angular lamella (
Benthem Jutting 1962
).
In addition, two congeners,
G. tarutao
(
Panha and Burch, 2002
)
and
G. khaochakan
Panha and Burch
in
Burch
et al
. (2003)
from
Thailand
, also differ from this new species. In comparison,
G. tarutao
has a very short tuba, elongated conical spire, umbilical furrow extended to an expanded lip, and infraparietal and subcolumellar plicae present, while
G. khaochakan
possesses an elongated conical spire, spiral striations present on the entirety of the shell, the last whorl shouldered, and an infrapalatal plica present (
Panha and Burch 2002
;
Burch
et al
. 2003
).
Remarks
The type locality, Phnom Sampeau, is located about
13 km
west of
Battambang
town on road no. 57 leading to
Pailin Province
. The mountain is of karstic limestone with limestone forest and is surrounded by villages, plantation areas and paddy fields. Conspicuous human disturbance includes the presence of a temple with complex tourist attractions, such as a bat cave and a memorial commemorating the grisly history of the caves during the previous civil war, and small-scale limestone quarries around the foot of the hills.
The difference between the genera
Gyliotrachela
and
Paraboysidia
Pilsbry, 1917
[=
Bensonella
Pilsbry and Vanatta, 1900
; see
Páll-Gergely and White (2023)
] lies in the detached aperture in the former and the adnate aperture in the latter. However, as
Pilsbry (1917)
already suspected, there is a nearly perfect morphological continuum between the two extremes, and
Gyliotrachela khmeriana
sp. nov.
can also be considered an intermediate character state. This new species is similar to some
Paraboysidia
species
from the Malaysian Peninsula, mostly in terms of the arrangement of the apertural barriers. The most similar species is probably
Paraboysidia serpa
Benthem Jutting, 1950
, which also has a keel on its body whorl. However, the new species has a more strongly detached aperture, and more keeled upper whorls.