A revision of the extant species of Theodoxus (Gastropoda, Neritidae) in Asia, with the description of three new species
Author
Sands, Arthur F
Justus Liebig Univrsity Giessen, Giessen, Germany
Author
Gloeer, Peter
Biodiversity Research Laboratory, Hetlingen, Germany
Author
Guerlek, Mustafa E
Mehmet Akif Ersoy niversity, Burdur, Turkey
Author
Albrecht, Christian
Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany
Author
Neubauer, Thomas A
Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany & Naturalis Biodiversity Centre, Leiden, Netherlands
text
Zoosystematics and Evolution
2020
96
1
25
66
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zse.96.48312
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zse.96.48312
1860-0743-1-25
F2C8585A1268443693348B64AE20F6EE
4EDA9B5B777551B7BBB0152DD188E5EF
Theodoxus macri (G.B. Sowerby II, 1849)
Figure 18A-H
Neritina Macri
G.B. Sowerby
II 1849
: 531, pl. 116, fig. 222.
Neritina
Macrii [sic]:
Martens 1879
: 88-90, pl. 13, fig. 13 (partim, non pl. 4, figs 11-13, pl. 13, figs 27-29); Blanckenhorn 1889: 81 (synonymy tentative);
Kobelt 1899
: 5, pl. 212, figs 1327, 1328 (partim, excluding synonyms).
non
Theodoxia
Macrii [sic]:
Germain 1921
: 516-518.
non
Theodoxus macrii
[sic]:
Amr and Abu Baker 2004
: 222, fig. 2;
Handal et al. 2015
: 25-26, fig. 1B.
?
Theodoxus macrii
[sic]:
Gloeer
2019
: 46, fig. 32.
Type
locality.
Asia Minor (= Anatolia).
Type
material.
According to
Dance (1966)
, most material described by G.B. Sowerby II is deposited in
BMNH
, and parts also in the Tomlin Collection of
NMW
. Unfortunately, the
types
could not been located in either of these two institutions (A. Salvador, H. Wood pers. comm. 07/2018).
Remarks.
The identity of this species is doubtful at the moment. G.B. Sowerby II (1849) based it on a black periostracum, oval shell, and a grey, more inclined columellar plate. The short description and sole figure, as well as the imprecise locality information ("Asia Minor") and the apparent lack of
type
material, render an attribution of newly collected specimens to that species uncertain.
Sands et al.'s (2019a)
material from eastern Cilicia and south-east Anatolia fit well in terms of shell shape and periostracum colouration, and we tentatively consider them to belong to
T. macri
(Fig.
18
). The previous perception of
T. macri
was a different one though. In the literature of the late 19th century, it has been commonly considered a more widely distributed Middle Eastern species, with the junior synonyms
N. karasuna
and
N. michonii
(
Martens 1879
,
Westerlund 1886
,
Kobelt 1899
). More recently,
Dagan (1971)
,
Tchernov (1975)
, and
Bandel (2001)
considered
T. macri
a junior synonym of
T. jordani
, but based only on material from Israel and Jordan. Molecular analyses suggest that
Theodoxus
from Jordan, Israel, and Palestine belong to a single species,
T. jordani
, which is distinct from all other species (
Sands et al. 2019a
; Fig.
2
). Although the true identity of
T. macri
remains dubious at the moment, these results indicate that
T. macri
does not occur outside of Cilicia and south-eastern Anatolia. Probably all previous records of
T. macri
from the Middle East (e.g.
Najim 1959
;
Elkarmi and Ismail 2006
;
Handal et al. 2015
) refer to
T. jordani
. If this is corroborated,
T. macri
likely diverged from a common ancestor with
T. jordani
in the early Pleistocene (
Sands et al. 2019a
; Fig.
2
).
Figure 18.
Theodoxus macri
(G.B. Sowerby
II
, 1849).
A
-
D
. Specimen collected close to Harbiye Falls, Harbiye, Antakya, Turkey (
UGSB
24179);
E
-
H
. Specimen from Lake
Yenisehir
,
Reyhanli
, Turkey (
UGSB
24180);
I
,
J
. Specimen from Lake
Balik
, Adalar, Turkey (
UGSB
24181). All specimens (A-J) were used in the phylogeny (Fig.
2
). Scale bars:
1 mm
.
Note on authority: G.B. Sowerby II (1849) attributed the name to
Recluz
based on a manuscript name, but Sowerby remains the sole author of this species.
Distribution.
The distribution range of
T. macri
cannot be fully elucidated at present (see Remarks). The material studied by
Sands et al. (2019a)
derives primarily from the drainage systems in eastern Cilicia and nearby drainages in south-east Anatolia (Fig.
3A
).