Deep-water Thyasiridae (Mollusca: Bivalvia) from the Oman Margin, Arabian Sea, new species and examples of endemism and cosmopolitanism
Author
Oliver, P. Graham
text
Zootaxa
2015
3995
1
252
263
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3995.1.21
810c1097-eff4-4262-acd6-1f76d05f1f83
1175-5326
236857
1D5CD052-9754-493C-836D-6A69756747D9
Channelaxinus
aff.
excavata
Dall, 1901
Figs 3A–B
FIGURE 3.
A–B,
Channelaxinus aff. excavatus
, Oman margin; C–D,
C. excavatus
(Dall)
, holotype, United States National Museum 107449; E–F,
C. adelaideana
(Iredale)
, holotype, Australian Museum, C32091; G,
C. perplicata
(Salas)
as
Cryptodon plicatus
reproduced from Verrill & Bush, 1898; H–I,
C. benthicola
(Iredale)
, holotype, Australian Museum C47714.
Afz, anterior flattened zone; lun, lunule; pfz, posterior flattened zone; psn, posterior sinus; sms, submarginal sulcus.
Material.
One shell, Off Ras Madrakah, southern
Oman
, Discovery cruise 211 st. 12719#1,
19°08´N
58°39´E
,
3150 m
, collected P.G. Oliver,
31 October 1994
.
NMW
.Z. 1995.009.17.
Description
. Shell. 11.0 mm in length,
11.5 mm
in height. Thin but robust. Equivalve. Equilateral. Outline polygonal, umbos low, beaks prosogyrous; anterior dorsal slope steep, slightly concave; anterior very short almost straight; ventral rounded; posterior ventral short, almost straight; posterior with a deep sinus; posterior dorsal long, straight, sloping steeply. Surface strongly contoured; lunule excavated and bounded by a well developed ridge; anterior slope flattened demarcated by a weak radial ridge; posterior demarcated by a deep sulcus, anterior to it a flattened zone; submarginal sulcus deeply excavated with an elongate auricle that does not rise above the submarginal sulcus. Hinge edentulous, ligament in a shallow depression on the auricle and extending for ~half the length of the auricle. Muscle scars indistinct. Shell chalky white in colour.
Remarks.
Shells of this general form are found in the East Pacific (
C. excavata
(
Figs 3
C–D) and
C. oliveri
Valentich-Scott & Coan,
2012
in
Coan & Valentich-Scott 2012
); Atlantic (
C. perplicata
Salas, 1996
) (
Fig. 3
G); and South
Australia
(
Prothyasira adelaideana
Iredale, 1930
(
Figs 3
E–F) and
P. benthicola
Iredale 1930
(
Figs 3
H–I)).
Oliver & Frey (2014)
tentatively linked
Cryptodon investigatoris
and
Conchocele koyamai
Habe, 1981
but although they have deep posterior sulci and excavated lunule they are strongly oblique in outline.
Smith (1896)
reported on a small shell of
C. investigatoris
which was not oblique and concluded that there was strong allometric growth, shells becoming proportionately longer with age. Comparing the current specimen with the growth lines on
C. investigatoris
shells reveals that the oblique form is already developed at this size suggesting that the current shell is not a juvenile of
C. investigatoris
.
With only a single shell at hand and the close similarities with the above species a conclusion cannot be reached.
Iredale (1930)
placed both
adelaideana
and
benthicola
in his new genus
Prothyasira
. The
type
species of
Prothyasira
is
P. peroniana
(
Iredale 1930
but while having a very deep posterior sulcus the lunule is not deeply sunken or demarcated by a strong ridge and there are no flattened anterior and posterior zones. These differences suggest that
Prothyasira
and
Channelaxinus
are not congeneric and that
adelaideana
and
benthicola
be transferred to
Channelaxinus
.