Scaphopoda (Mollusca) from the Brazilian continental shelf and upper slope (13 º to 21 ºS) with descriptions of two new species of the genus Cadulus Philippi, 1844
Author
Caetano, Carlos Henrique Soares
Author
Scarabino, Victor
Author
Absalão, Ricardo Silva
text
Zootaxa
2006
1267
1
47
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.173183
e66afec9-257b-473d-978b-1940bac0537b
11755326
173183
Gadila pandionis
(Verril & Smith
in
Verril, 1880)
Figs. 78–80
+
Cadulus pandionis
Verril
and Smith (
in
Verril) 1880: 392, 399; Verril 1882: 558, pl. 58, figs. 30, 30a.
+
Cadulus (Gadila) pandionis
: Pilsbry and Sharp 1898: 171
, pl. 25, fig. 63. +
Gadila pandionis
: Steiner and Kabat 2001: 445
; 2004: 626.
Type
material
Lectotype
USNM
38644 (designated by Johnson, 1989: 56 as "
Holotype
");
Paralectotypes
MCZ
186811, 3 dd,
MCZ
186812, 1 dd,
MCZ
186813, 2 dd,
MCZ
186814, 7 dd.
Type
locality
off Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts,
USBF
sta
876, 219 m
(by subsequent designation).
Diagnosis
Shell medium (to
13 mm
), white, slender, strongly curved, mainly in the posterior third. Maximum diameter at anterior third. Ventral side well curved; dorsal side curved except for occurrence of bulge at maximum diameter. Dorsal view fusiform, fast tapering from the maximum diameter to apex. Apex oval, lateral view rounded. Apex with two Ushaped notches, one ventral and other dorsal. Preapical callus thin, lumen suboval. Oral aperture oblique, sligthtly dorsoventrally depressed.
Material examined
Lectotype
of
Gadila pandionis
; IBUFRJ 10698, sta C13, 13 dd; IBUFRJ 10917, sta C35, 2 dd; IBUFRJ 14313, sta R4#1, 5 dd; IBUFRJ 14314, Jops II, sta 3201,
21
º37’S,
39º54’W
,
1320 m
, 3 dd.
Distribution
USA
: New
Jersey
to Florida (Henderson 1920, Steiner & Kabat 2004);
Brazil
: Bahia, Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro (this study). Shells
46 to 1320m
(Henderson 1920, this study).
Remarks
As pointed out by
G. perlonga
, we consider that Johnson’s
lectotype
designation (Johnson, 1989: 56) as valid because in spite of wrong use of the term
holotype
, the author explicitly selected from the
type
series a particular specimen to serve as the namebearing
type
(see ICZN Art. 74.5).
Gadila pandionis
resembles most closely
G. watsoni
(Dall, 1881)
sharing apical features, two semicircular notches, one dorsal and one ventral, leaving two lateral pointed lobes (
Fig. 80
). The distinction between these two species is questionable; the
lectotype
of
G. w a t s o n i
is a broken shell and the
paralectotype
is a juvenile that makes any comparisons difficult.