The genus Serrata Jousseaume, 1875 (Caenogastropoda: Marginellidae) in New Caledonia
Author
Boyer, Franck
John T. Huber
text
Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle
2008
196
389
436
journal article
978-2-85653-614-8
1243-4442
Serrata exquisita
n. sp.
Figs 27, 28
TYPE MATERIAL. —
Holotype
(dd)
MNHN 20608
and
4 paratypes
(dd)
MNHN 20609
.
TYPE
LOCALITY. —
Northern
New Caledonia
,
18°49’S
,
163°16’E
,
613-647 m
[BATHUS 4: stn DW 918]
.
MATERIAL EXAMINED. —
Northern
New Caledonia
. BATHUS 4: stn DW 918,
18°49’S
,
163°16’E
,
613-647 m
, 4 dd (
holotype
,
Fig. 27 and
paratypes
, Fig. 28), 1 fragment (
paratype
).
DISTRIBUTION. —
Northern
tip of
New Caledonia
, at the latitude of
Grand Passage
, shells in
613-647 m
.
DESCRIPTION. — Shell slender biconical, solid, opaque. Protoconch paucispiral, bulging, asymmetrical. Spire tall, narrow, whorls weakly convex. Aperture long, narrow, weakly oblique. Base tapering. Outer lip moderately thickened, subvertical, shoulder sloping, outer margin narrow, bevelled, inner edge smooth, faintly reflected over central area. Four thin columellar plaits, more oblique from uppermost to lowest one.
Colour whitish (faded).
Dimensions: 4.80 x 2.00 mm.
Radula unknown.
REMARKS. — From the small lot of shells at hand,
Serrata exquisita
seems somewhat variable. The illustrated
paratype
(Fig. 28) has a more narrowly pointed spire than the
holotype
, and a more shouldered and more reflected labrum, with a less smooth inner edge. Although
S. exquisita
is similar to
Dentimargo
in shell outline and to
Volvarina
in its smooth labrum, the faintly excavated lower labrum suggests that it belongs in
Serrata
.
Serrata exquisita
shows some similarities to
S. coriolis
from the central Loyalty Ridge, but differs from it in its more biconical outline, its more attenuated base, its smooth inner labrum and its more oblique columellar plaits.
ETYMOLOGY. — Latin
exquisitus
(adj., exquisite), referring to the delicate morphology of the shell.