New species of Muricidae Rafinesque, 1815 (Mollusca: Gastropoda) from the Western Indian Ocean
Author
Roland, Houart
Author
Virginie, Héros
text
Zoosystema
2015
2015-09-30
37
3
481
503
http://dx.doi.org/10.5252/z2015n3a4
journal article
10.5252/z2015n3a4
1638-9387
5156547
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EDB0C7A2-7B5E-4E39-91CE-B823BB38ACA0
Timbellus pannuceus
n. sp.
(
Figs 4
J-O; 7A)
TYPE MATERIAL. —
Holotype
(lv) MNHN-IM-2007-36940 BOLD ID BOMGA026-15, GenBank accession number
KP697989
for COI gene
KC860506
and
5 paratypes
MNHN,
1 paratype
coll. RH (as listed below).
TYPE
LOCALITY. —
Madagascar
, between Nosy Be and Banc du Leven,
12°40’S
,
48°12’E
,
492-524 m
[MIRIKY: stn CP3184].
MATERIAL EXAMINED. —
Northwest
Madagascar
. MIRIKY: stn CP3184,
between Nosy Be and Banc du Leven
,
12°40’S
,
48°12’E
,
492- 524 m
,
2 lv
, 1 dd (
holotype
MNHN-IM-2007-36940 and
1 paratype
(lv) MNHN-IM-2007-38031 BO LD ID BOMGA025-15, GenBank accession number
KP697990
for COI gene KC86050,
1 paratype
(dd) MNHN-IM 2000-30003. —
Stn CP
3188,
between Nosy Be and Banc du Leven
,
12°31’S
,
48°22’E
,
298-301 m
,
2 lv
(
1 paratype
MNHN-IM-2000-30004;
1 paratype
Coll. RH
). —
Stn DW
3197,
West of Cap d’Ambre
,
12°07’S
,
48°58’E
,
362-431 m
, 3 dd. —
Stn CP
3209,
between Nosy Be and Banc du Leven
,
12°43’S
,
48°14’E
,
291-353 m
, (
2 lv
paratypes
MNHN-IM-2000-30005). —
Stn CP
3223,
between Nosy Be and Banc du Leven
,
12°46’S
,
48°11’E
,
430-488 m
, 1 dd
.
DISTRIBUTION. — North-western
Madagascar
, taken alive at
301- 492 m
, shells at
431-
492 m
.
ETYMOLOGY. — Latin,
pannuceus
, wrinkled. This species is named for the wrinkled surface of the shell.
DESCRIPTION
Shell medium sized for the genus, up to
22.6 mm
in height at maturity (
paratype
MNHN). Height/width ratio 1.4 (
holotype
). Slender, narrowly-ovate, lightly built. Shoulder ramp strongly sloping, weakly concave.
Ivory-white, occasionally with a light tan spiral band between P4 and P5 and occasionally on shoulder ramp. Aperture white.
Spire high with 1.5 protoconch whorls and teleoconch with up to five narrow, very weakly shouldered whorls. Suture weakly adpressed.Protoconch small, whorls rounded, smooth, glossy, maximum width 900 µm. Terminal lip narrow, low, weakly curved.
Axial sculpture of teleoconch whorls consisting of very narrow, webbed varices starting from the first whorl. First to last teleoconch whorls with three varices. No intervariceal sculpture except narrow, low, growth striae. Spiral sculpture of moderately high, narrow, smooth primary and secondary cords. First whorl with very low P1, second and third with P1 and P2, s1 occasionally starting, fourth with P1, (s1), P2, s2, P3, last whorl with P1, (s1), P2, s2, P3, s3, P4, (s4), P5, P6, ADP, MP, ABP, (ads).
Aperture moderately large, roundly-ovate. Columellar lip narrow, more broadly expanded adapically, weakly flaring, rim partially weakly erect, adherent at adapical extremity. Anal notch shallow, broad. Outer lip smooth, occasionally with weak or strong denticles within: ID broad, low, D1- D6 narrower; aperture occasionally smooth or with only a few denticles visible, others obsolete. Siphonal canal moderately long, broad, weakly bent dorsally and abaxially, narrowly open, with variceal webbing extending to 50-60% of its length.
Operculum and radula not examined.
REMARKS
Eight Indo-West Pacific species are included in
Timbellus
, all with a similar shell morphology consisting of a protoconch of 1.5 to 1.75 smooth whorls, smooth or almost smooth teleoconch whorls and thin, webbed variceal wings. These are
T. vespertilio
(Kuroda, 1959)
,
T. flemingi
(Beu, 1967)
,
T. fulgens
(Houart, 1988)
,
T. levii
(Houart, 1988)
,
T. marshalli
(Houart, 1989)
,
T. stenostoma
(
Houart, 1991
)
,
T. crauropterus
(
Houart, 1991
)
and
T. rubidus
(Houart, 2001)
.
Four of these species (
T. flemingi
,
T. marshalli
,
T. crauropterus
and
T. rubidus
) do not need to be compared with
T. pannuceus
n. sp.
due to important differences in shell characters. The remaining four differ from
T. pannuceus
n. sp.
as follows.
Timbellus vespertilio
(
Fig. 6A, B
) differs in having more strongly shouldered teleoconch whorls with a relatively broader shoulder ramp and a more obvious and broader shoulder cord (P1). It also has fewer obvious spiral cords on the teleoconch whorls and on the abapertural face of the variceal wings.
Timbellus vespertilio
is known only from southern
Japan
, the East
China
Sea and
Taiwan
.
Timbellus fulgens
(
Fig. 4P, Q
) was described from
New Caledonia
and was identified from
South Africa
by
Houart (1991)
. Similar specimens are now also recorded from
Madagascar
. However it differs from
T. pannuceus
n. sp.
in having a much smoother shell and smoother variceal wings with much lesser obvious primary cords and obsolete secondary cords.
FIG. 3. —
A -G
,
Vokesimurex rectaspira
n. sp.
; ATIMO VATAE: stn CP3589;
A
,
B
, holotype MNHN IM-2009-14495, 41.2 mm;
C
,
D
, paratype MNHN IM-2000- 30001, 38.2 mm;
E
,
F
, paratype MNHN IM-2000-30001, 24.8 mm;
G
, protoconch;
H
,
I
,
Vokesimurex gallinago fernandesi
(Houart, 1990)
; Mozambique, 93-112 m, holotype MNHN IM-2000-0089, 63.2 mm;
J -L
,
Vokesimurex dolichourus
(Ponder & Vokes, 1988)
;
J
,
K
, MIRIKY, stn CP3288, 46-54 m, 56.2 mm;
L
, protoconch;
M
,
N
,
Vokesimurex aliquantulus
n. sp.
; MIRIKY, stn CP3206, 70-74 m, holotype MNHN IM-2007-36971, 28.3 mm. Scale bars: G, L, 500 µm.
Timbellus levii
, a species currently only known from
New Caledonia
and
Tonga
(
Houart & Héros 2008
) has a larger shell, reaching
36 mm
in height, with smooth teleoconch whorls, almost smooth, broader variceal wings and with a much narrower and higher aperture.
Timbellus stenostoma
from
New Caledonia
has a much smaller and smoother shell, reaching
15 mm
in height, with a much smaller aperture and a longer siphonal canal.