A late Pleistocene gastropod fauna from the northern Caspian Sea with implications for Pontocaspian gastropod taxonomy
Author
Neubauer, Thomas A.
Department of Animal Ecology and Systematics, Justus Liebig University, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 26 - 32 IFZ, 35392 Giessen, Germany & Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P. O. Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
Author
Velde, Sabrina van de
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P. O. Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
Author
Yanina, Tamara
Moscow State University, Faculty of Geography, Leninskie Gory, 1, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Author
Wesselingh, Frank P.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P. O. Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
text
ZooKeys
2018
2018-07-04
770
43
103
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.25365
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.25365
1313-2970-770-43
4D984FDD93664D8B8A8E9D4B3F9B8EFB
FFA0FF981B4D3C194F12F960FFCFFF05
1310213
Laevicaspia caspia (Eichwald, 1838)
Fig. 8A-K
Laevicaspia caspia
*1838
Rissoa caspia
m.; Eichwald: 154-155.
Laevicaspia caspia
1841
Rissoa caspia
- Eichwald: 256-257, pl. 38, figs 14-15.
Laevicaspia caspia
1853
Riss.
[
oa
]
caspia
m. - Eichwald: 273.
Laevicaspia caspia
non 1876
Hydrobia caspia
, Eichw. - Grimm: 150-153, pl. 6, fig. 15.
Laevicaspia caspia
non 1877
Hydrobia caspia
, Eichw. - Grimm: 79-80, pl. 7, figs 3a-d.
Laevicaspia caspia
non 1887
Micromelania caspia
Eichw. sp. - W. Dybowski: 21.
Laevicaspia caspia
non 1888
Micr.
[
omelania
]
caspia
Eichw. sp. - W. Dybowski: 78, pl. 1, fig. 1.
Laevicaspia caspia
? 1896
B.
[
uliminus
] (
Napaeus
?)
goebeli
Westerlund: 188.
Laevicaspia caspia
1914
Micromelania
(?)
Micromelania curta
Nalivkin: 21-22, 31, pl. 6, figs 1-2 [partim; non figs 3-4, 7, 9-14].
Laevicaspia caspia
1914 [
Micromelania
(?)
Micromelania curta
] var.
Micromelania curta plano-convexa
Nalivkin: 22, 31, pl. 6, figs 15-18.
Laevicaspia caspia
non 1914
Micromelania caspia
Eichw. - Nalivkin: 22, 31, pl. 6, figs 5-6 [partim; non fig. 8].
Laevicaspia caspia
non 1917
Micromelania
(
Turricaspia
,
Laevicaspia
)
Laevicaspia caspia
Eichw. - B. Dybowski & Grochmalicki: 5-8, 36-38, pl. 1, figs 1-3.
Laevicaspia caspia
non 1969
Pyrgula caspia
(Eichw.). - Logvinenko & Starobogatov: 369-370, fig. 364 (1).
Laevicaspia caspia
1987
T.
[
urricaspia
]
caspia
(Eichw.). - Alexenko & Starobogatov: 33, fig. 2.
Laevicaspia caspia
2006
Turricaspia caspia
(Eichwald, 1838). - Kantor & Sysoev: 106, pl. 49, fig. M.
Laevicaspia caspia
2014
Euxinipyrgula lincta
. - Taviani et al.: 4, fig. 3c [non
Micromelania lincta
Milashevich, 1908].
Laevicaspia caspia
2016
Turricaspia caspia
(Eichwald, 1838). - Vinarski & Kantor: 246.
Material.
300 specimens
(
RGM 1309788
,
RGM 1309789
, 1309797,
RGM 1309798
,
RGM 1310196
,
RGM 1310257
,
RGM 1310258
,
LV 201511
)
.
Type
material.
Lectotype
:
ZIN
(No.
1 in
systematic catalogue), designated by
Alexenko and Starobogatov (1987)
.
Type
locality.
"In eodem lapide calcario Dagesthanico, fossilis" (in the same limestone of Dagestan [referring to the previous species, also found in Dagestan], fossil).
Dimensions.
9.01
x
3.31 mm
(
RGM
1310257, Fig.
8A-C
); 7.88
x
3.31 mm
(
RGM
1310258, Fig.
8D-F
); 10.33
x
3.92 mm
(
LV
201511, Fig.
8I-K
); 9.92
x
3.83 mm
; 10.21
x
3.88 mm
; 9.52
x
3.54 mm
; 9.69
x
3.61 mm
.
Figure 8.
Pyrgulinae
.
A-C
Laevicaspia caspia
(Eichwald, 1838),
RGM
1310257
D-F
L. caspia
,
RGM
1310258
G
L. caspia
,
RGM
1310197
H
L. caspia
,
RGM
1310198
I-K
L. caspia
, LV 201511.
Description.
Large, slender ovoid shell comprising up to 8.3 whorls. Protoconch large, measuring 535-600
µm
at 1.15-1.2 whorls, with initial part inflated; nucleus almost immersed, 190-230
µm
wide; nucleus and early protoconch bear intentions of malleate sculpture, which passes into granular surface after half a whorl accompanied by onset of spiral striae; P/T boundary indistinct. Whorl convexity decreasing rapidly: first teleoconch whorl moderately convex, second to last whorl low convex, sometimes almost straight-sided; maximum convexity is in lower half; whorls closely attached, suture narrow; a very small but marked convexity appears at upper suture, producing a faintly stepped spire; occasionally, it is accompanied by shallow abapical concavity. Last whorl makes up 46-50% of shell height, passing over regular but weakly convex to near straight-sided to slightly concave base. Aperture slender ovoid, inclined, closely attached to preceding whorl; in latest ontogeny, shell growth is more abapically directed, resulting in marked thickening at adapical tip. Peristome simple, thin, slightly expanded and indented at base; distinctly and regularly sigmoidal in lateral view, with upper half broadly indented and lower half broadly protruding; inner lip protrudes in lateral view, extending sheet-like over base of penultimate whorl; umbilicus mostly closed, rarely very narrow, slit-like. Growth lines weakly sigmoidal: strongly prosocline in upper half, weakly opisthocline in lower half. Several specimens show faint spiral threads on last and penultimate whorls.
Discussion.
Different concepts of this species previously applied have led to considerable confusion about its real identity. This is partly rooted in the description and illustration provided by
Eichwald (1838
,
1841
) that were insufficient to allow safe discrimination from similar species. For instance,
Micromelania caspia
sensu
Grimm (1876
,
1877
), W.
Dybowski (1887-1888)
and B.
Dybowski and Grochmalicki (1917)
differs from the present species in the acute apex, the moderately convex whorls, the deep suture and the thin peristome. As already noted by
Alexenko and Starobogatov (1987)
, it represents a different species, i.e.,
Laevicaspia lincta
(Milashevich, 1908). That species was described from Lake Katlabukh near the Danube delta in Ukraine (
lectotype
, which matches
Milashevich's
description, is illustrated in
Kantor and Sysoev 2006
: 95, pl. 45, fig. D; as
Euxinipyrgula lincta
). Specimens from the Neoeuxinian (late Pleistocene) of the Marmara Sea identified as
E. cf. lincta
by
Taviani et al. (2014)
differ from that species in the near straight-sided whorls and thickened peristome; in fact, the material corresponds well to
L. caspia
.
Micromelania caspia
sensu
Nalivkin (1914)
comprises at least two species, both being more elongate, having more whorls and relatively smaller last whorls than
L. caspia
. In turn, some of the illustrated
syntypes
of "
Micromelania
"
Pyrgula curta
Nalivkin, 1914 and the variety "
Micromelania
"
Micromelania curta var. planoconvexa
Nalivkin, 1914 from Bakunian deposits of Shikhovo, Apsheron Peninsula, Azerbaijan, closely resemble the present species and are thus (partly) considered synonymous. "
Micromelania
"
Micromelania curta
encompasses a great variability of shapes, ranging from slender, elongate (
Micromelania caspia
-
type
) to broad, conical shells. Since no
holotype
or
lectotype
have been designated, the status of this species is unresolved at present. Note that
Pyrgula curta
sensu
Logvinenko and Starobogatov (1969)
and
Kantor and Sysoev (2006)
does not correspond to
Nalivkin's
species but rather to the specimens
Nalivkin (1914)
misidentified as
Micromelania caspia
.
Similarly,
Pyrgula caspia
sensu
Logvinenko and Starobogatov (1969)
is a quite different species, showing highly convex whorls and an inflated last whorl. It rather ranges within the morphological variability of
Turricaspia meneghiniana
(see below).
Alexenko and Starobogatov (1987)
finally brought stability to the identity of
L. caspia
by designating a
lectotype
(see
Kantor and Sysoev 2006
: 106, pl. 49, fig. A; as
Turricaspia caspia
), which matches well our specimens. The label accompanying their specimen reads "Kaspiyskoye more" ("Caspian Sea"), which differs from the information provided by Eichwald (Dagestan) (see also discussion in
Vinarski and Kantor 2016
: 246). Inspection of the catalogue of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg (
ZIN
), however, confirmed that the
lectotype
is based on
Eichwald's
original material.
The similar
Laevicaspia iljinae
(Golikov & Starobogatov, 1966) from Holocene deposits of the Crimean Peninsula can be distinguished in its more slender shape and the spruce-like whorl outline (i.e., steep, straight-sided upper two-thirds passing over convexity into flatter, convex lower third; see also
Kantor and Sysoev 2006
: 108, pl. 49, fig. D).
Distribution.
Endemic to the Caspian Sea (
Logvinenko and Starobogatov 1969
stated that the species occurs at a depth of
30-150 m
in the middle and southern Caspian Sea, but these data have to be revised given their incorrect concept of
L. caspia
).