Taxonomy and anatomy of Amphiboloidea (Gastropoda: Heterobranchia: Archaeopulmonata)
Author
Golding, Rosemary E.
Author
Ponder, Winston F.
Author
Byrne, Maria
text
Zootaxa
2007
1476
1
50
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.176773
1a670eb6-5f50-42d6-ace0-3e52fd4f4c17
1175-5326
176773
Phallomedusa solida
(Martens, 1878)
Ampullacera fragilis
;
Quoy & Gaimard, 1832
(in part): 201–203, pl. XV, figs. 10–12 (not of
Lamarck 1822
).
Ampullarina quoyana
;
Angas, 1867
: 232 (not of
Potiez & Michaud 1838
).
Amphibola solida
Martens
, in
Schacko, 1878
: 1
–9, pl. I, fig. 1.
Amphibola fragilis
;
Bouvier 1892
: 146
–153 (not of
Lamarck 1822
).
Salinator quoyana
;
Cotton & Godfrey 1932
: 150
(not of
Potiez & Michaud 1838
).
Salinator solida
;
Woolacott 1945
: 2
, pl. III, figs. 1, 2, 7, 9.
Type
material
:
Holotype
(
Fig. 2
H) from ‘Australia’, Robillard (
ZMB
, 22207).
Other material examined
:
Australia
, Queensland: Port Douglas, Dickson’s Inlet, in mangroves,
3 Jun 1977
, I. Loch, P.H. Colman and R. Creese (AMS C.400788); Proserpine River, opposite Flying Fox Island, in mangroves,
1 May 1975
, W.F. Ponder (AMS C.446518).
Australia
, New South
Wales
: Brisbane Waters, Fagan's Bay, on mud in saltmarsh,
10 Mar 2003
, R.E. Golding, W.F. Ponder and H. Fukuda (AMS C.442245); South side of Narrabeen Lakes, on sandy mud amongst reeds and mangroves,
Mar–Sep 2004
, R.E. Golding and M. Hill (AMS C.442241, C.442277, C.442286); Lane Cove River, Boronia Park, on mud in open mangrove forest at low tide,
Dec 2003
–
Sep 2004
, R.E. Golding, M. Hill and P.M. Golding (AMS C.442276, C.442284, C.442266); Parramatta River, Homebush Bay, on mud amongst dense mangroves,
Dec 2003
–
Feb 2004
, R.E. Golding (AMS C.442247, C.442259, C.442262); Lake Illawarra, Kully Bay, creek near lake with sparse saltmarsh vegetation,
3Mar 2004
, R.E. Golding and P.M. Golding (AMS C.442239).
Australia
, Tasmania: Stanley, Sawyer Bay, East Inlet, damp mudflats at low tide,
20 Apr 2004
, W.F. Ponder (C.446517).
Redescription
: Shell (
Figs. 2
H, I): Solid, opaque, spire relatively tall, conical, shell diameter to
20 mm
, axial striae indistinct. Whorls rounded, lacking shoulder. Outer lip of aperture slightly thickened at base. Exterior white with brown, narrow zigzag lines on all whorls. Interior of aperture white.
Operculum (
Figs. 3
D, 4A): Thick, dark brown, corneous, elliptical, columellar edge straight, outer edge curved forming rounded point in upper left corner (viewed from exterior). Nucleus paucispiral, eccentric. Prominent hollow keel curving around nucleus on interior of operculum, containing muscular projection from foot.
External morphology (
Figs. 5
A, 6C): Head-foot dark grey in preserved specimens, protruding only a short way beyond shell when animal is crawling; diffuse black pigment across snout. Eyes at central base of small, triangular tentacles.
Mantle organs (
Fig. 7
E): Narrow, opposed ciliary tracts restricted to exhalant canal in mantle cavity; roof of mantle cavity with numerous blood vessels. Hypobranchial gland at right anterior mantle cavity roof pyriform, flat, light brown with dark brown flecks in fresh and formalin-preserved specimens, outer surface smooth.
Digestive system: As for
A. crenata
.
Radula (
Figs. 11
A, B): Each row with central tooth, inner and outer lateral teeth and, on each side, approximately 25 marginal teeth. Central tooth with five wide cusps, mesocone enlarged, rectangular; inner lateral teeth unicuspid, narrow; outer lateral teeth equal in size to central tooth, with three wide cusps increasing in size towards centre of radula; marginal teeth elongate, unicuspid, wide, increasing in length towards outer edge of radula.
Central nervous system (
Fig. 12
F): Pleural ganglia separated from adjacent cerebral, pedal and parietal ganglia by short connectives. Procerebrum, parapedal and subcerebral commissures present. Right parietal ganglion slightly larger than left, right parietal-visceral commissure shorter than left parietal-visceral commissure.
Reproductive system (
Figs. 13
C, 15A, B, 17A, B): Ovotestis composed of numerous lobes uniting to form single acinule duct. Seminal vesicle diverticulum from upper hermaphrodite duct, posterior to junction with acinule duct. Hermaphrodite duct coiling anteriorly, swollen with pale pink, iridescent sperm. Numerous (>10) seminal receptacles present as yellow, spherical projections from hermaphrodite duct. Spermoviduct embedded in right body wall distally, emerging to divide into muscular oviduct/vagina and long vas deferens. Muscular vagina long, with thick, folded walls and two lateral bulges proximally, narrowing distally. Small flagellum of vas deferens extending beyond junction with oviduct; vas deferens very long, coiled, yellow to orange in fresh and formalin-preserved specimens, muscular exterior lined internally with tall narrow prostatic cells containing spherical secretory vesicles. Complex penis with more spiral flange coiling more than three times around penis; spiral base with unciliated external sperm groove between spirally coiled lateral flanges. Penis attached near genital aperture, retractor muscle inserting into base of penis. Flange forming large shield distally and dividing into numerous moderately long tentacle-like appendages. Penial appendages and inner surface of spiral flange with long, forked, chitinous papilla-like microsculpture. Egg mass narrow, cylindrical string deposited in coil on surface of substratum.
Distribution and habitat
(
Fig. 1
): East and south-east coast of
Australia
, from north Queensland to South
Australia
and the north-west of Tasmania (based on AMS collections). Found in upper littoral mangrove, saltmarsh and mudflat habitat, often very abundant.
Remarks:
The shell of
P. s o l i d a
was first figured by
Quoy & Gaimard (1832)
as a variety of
S. fragilis
; although it is not clear where their figured specimen was collected, it appears to be similar to material from south-east
Australia
. The species has also been incorrectly attributed to
S. quoyana
by
Angas (1867)
and
Cotton & Godfrey (1932)
from Adelaide (South
Australia
).
Phallomedusa solida
is dominant in saltmarshes and at the back edge of mangrove habitat along the east coast of
Australia
.