Review of the types of Indo-Pacific Triphoridae (Mollusca, Gastropoda) in the Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Paris
Author
Albano, Paolo G.
Department of Animal Conservation and Public Engagement, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Villa Comunale, 80121 Naples (Italy) and Department of Palaeontology, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, A- 1090 Vienna (Austria) pgalbano @ gmail. com (corresponding author)
Author
Franco, Davide Di
Author
Azzarone, Michele
Department of Palaeontology, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, A- 1090 Vienna (Austria) davide. di-franco @ senckenberg. de mikeal. mikeal @ gmail. com
franco@senckenberg.de
Author
J., Piet A.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden (The hannco. bakker @
Author
Bakker
Netherlands) @ naturalis. nl
Author
Sabelli, Bruno
Museo di Zoologia dell’Università di Bologna, via Selmi 3, 40126 Bologna (Italy) bruno. sabelli @ unibo. it
sabelli@unibo.it
text
Zoosystema
2023
2023-01-20
45
2
13
106
journal article
10.5252/zoosystema2023v45a2
1638-9387
7569742
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:11878F2F-A180-44B2-8CBC-F1577E258F6F
Triphoris pupaeformis
Deshayes, 1863
(
Fig. 9
)
Triphoris pupaeformis
Deshayes, 1863: 105
, pl. 12, figs 3-4.
TYPE
LOCALITY. —
La Réunion
.
TYPE
MATERIAL
. — Not found (but see Remark).
ADDITIONAL
MATERIAL
. —
Reunion Island
•
Triphora
aff.
pupaeformis
: MNHN-IM-2000-479;
2 specimens
; La Réunion (coll. Vignal) •
MNHN-IM-2012-36192;
1 specimen
;
Cap La Houssaye
,
La Réunion
(coll.
Jay
)
.
ORIGINAL DESCRIPTION. —
T. testa brevi
, ovato-oblonga, cylindraceopupaeformi, apice mucronata, proboscidea, atro-fusca; anfractibus duodecimis, angustissimis, lentissime crescentibus, sutura canaliculata vix distinctis, bifariam granulosis, granulis paulo albescentibus, appressis, ultimo brevissimo, basi bisulcato, canali brevi terminato; apertura ovato-rotunda, lateraliter brevi fissurata.
[Latin diagnosis followed by a discussion in French]
TRANSLATION OF THE LATIN TEXT. — Short shell, ovate-elongated, cylindrical-pupoid with a pointed and elongated apex, dark brown; twelve whorls, very narrow and growing very slowly, with a channelled and strongly distinct suture and with two spiral cords of slightly whitish and flattened granules, very short last whorl, with two grooves at the base, short siphon; ovate-rounded aperture, laterally shortly fissured.
REMARKS. — A
neotype
of
T. pupaeformis
was designated by
Jay (2007)
(inventory number MNHN-IM-2000-9492,
Fig. 9G, I
). However, there are significant differences between Jay’s
neotype
and Deshayes’ original description.
T. pupaeformis
is described as bearing two spiral cords (“
bifariam granulosis
”) and, importantly, the suture has the same size of the interspace between the spiral cords (“la suture qui les réunit est à peine distincte quoique profonde, parce qu’elle est absolument semblable à l’intervalle qui sépare les deux rangées de granulations dont les tours sont chargés”). In contrast, the designated
neotype
has three spiral cords on the lower half of the shell, the second starting as a fine thread and becoming fully grown only on the last whorl. This implies, however, that the interspace between the cords, even at mid-shell height, is much broader than the suture. Additionally, Deshayes described the shell as dark brown (“
atro fusca
”) with whitish tubercles (“
granulis paulo albescentibus
”) which are broad and very close one to each other (“ces granulations sont comme écrasées, larges, épaisses, très-rapprochées, blanchâtres vers le sommet”). The designated
neotype
has small and well-spaced tubercles, which are whitish only on the third spiral cord and on the last whorl. Therefore, we consider that the designated
neotype
does not match Deshayes’
T. pupaeformis
and propose to invalidate such designation.
Triphoris pupaeformis
closely resembles
T. crassula
von Martens, 1880
, whose locus typicus is
Mauritius
(
lectotype
illustrated by
Albano & Bakker (2016))
. However, also
Obesula borbonica
Jousseaume, 1898
from the Red Sea and
La Réunion
,
T. triticea
Pease, 1861
, from Hawaii,
Opimaphora albogemmata
Laseron, 1958
, from the Capricorn group, Great Barrier Reef,
Australia
, belong to this species group but their relations are still unclear. In the Vignal (MNHN-IM-2000-479) and Jay (MNHN-IM-2012-36192) collections, there are two and
one specimens
, respectively, similar to
T. pupaeformis
from
Reunion
, characterized by two spiral cords with the prominent, closely arranged, whitish tubercles on brown background (
Fig. 9
A-G and J, K, respectively). The lot MNHN-IM-2000-479 from the Vignal collection contains two more specimens that belong to another species, because they have three spiral cords.