A new genus and species of uncertain phylogenetic position within the family Hydrobiidae (Caenogastropoda, Truncatelloidea) discovered in Tunisian springs
Author
Khalloufi, Noureddine
University of Carthage - Environmental Biomonitoring Laboratory (Group of Hydrobiology), Faculty of Sciences of Bizerte - Zarzouna 7021, Tunisia. & Email: khalnour 2003 @ yahoo. fr
khalnour2003@yahoo.fr
Author
Béjaoui, Mustapha
University of Carthage - Environmental Biomonitoring Laboratory (Group of Hydrobiology), Faculty of Sciences of Bizerte - Zarzouna 7021, Tunisia. & Email: bejaouimustapha @ yahoo. com
bejaouimustapha@yahoo.com
Author
Delicado, Diana
Justus Liebig University Giessen, Department of Animal Ecology & Systematics, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 26 - 32 IFZD, 35392 Giessen, Germany. & Corresponding author: didelicado @ gmail. com
didelicado@gmail.com
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2017
2017-06-09
328
1
15
journal article
22096
10.5852/ejt.2017.328
b4a9d454-c103-4db2-ad54-da79735dc5d5
2118-9773
3829412
C5422F6E-0DF8-4064-875D-E8B8C6EF4B0C
Genus
Bullaregia
gen. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
93209E6C-8DBC-4869-BAAD-FA4692D5FAB1
Type
species
Bullaregia tunisiensis
sp. nov.
, by present designation.
Diagnosis
Shell ovate-conic, penultimate whorl tall relative to remaining whorls; aperture pyriform, angled on top; umbilicus closed by inner lip. Operculum corneous, yellowish, thin, pliable, ellipsoidal, paucispiral with submarginal nucleus. One pair of basal cusps on radular central tooth. Ctenidium bearing welldeveloped gill filaments. Presence of bursa copulatrix; unpigmented renal oviduct with a pouch at the end of the coiled section; two seminal receptacles, SR1 elongate and pedunculate, SR2 globular, sessile and less developed. Strap-like penis attached to the neck behind the right eye, with one dorsal, strap-like glandular lobe.
Etymology
Referring to the archeological site Bulla Regia, the region where the genus was found; gender feminine.
Remarks
This genus differs from conchologically similar genera from Europe (e.g.,
Belgrandiella
,
Terranigra
Radoman, 1978
and
Litthabitella
Boeters, 1970
) and Central Asia (e.g.,
Chirgisia
Glöer, Boeters & Pešić, 2015
) in bearing a strap-like penis (tapered in
Belgrandiella
,
Terranigra
and
Chirgisia
, but broadly triangular in
Litthabitella
), with one dorsal glandular lobe (absent in all the aforementioned genera) (see
Radoman 1983
;
Szarowska 2006
;
Glöer
et al.
2014
).
Bullaregia
gen. nov.
resembles
Terranigra
and
Litthabitella
in having two seminal receptacles (none and one in
Chirgisia
and
Belgrandiella
, respectively), but they are distinguished by their globular shape (elongate in
Terranigra
and
Litthabitella
), and in the position and absence of the duct.
Bullaregia
gen. nov.
conforms to
Litthabitella
in the radula features, but differs from
Belgrandiella
in the number of basal cusps on the radular central tooth (two pairs in the latter) (see
Szarowska 2006
).
Based on molecular and morphological data,
Szarowska (2006)
tentatively classified
Litthabitella
within the family
Assimineidae
(outside
Hydrobiidae
), which suggests a large genetic distance between this genus and
Bullaregia
gen. nov.
Moreover, our genetic findings indicated that
Bullaregia
gen. nov.
and
Belgrandiella
differ from each other by 17.1% COI p-distances.