A new genus and thirteen new species of Scaphopoda (Mollusca) from the tropical Pacific Ocean
Author
Scarabino, Victor
Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, département Systématique et Évolution, case postale 51, 57 rue Cuvier, F- 75231 Paris cedex 05 (France) and Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Montevideo (Uruguay) victor. scarabino @ mnhn. fr
scarabino@mnhn.fr
Author
Scarabino, Fabrizio
Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Montevideo (Uruguay)
text
Zoosystema
2010
2010-09-30
32
3
409
423
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.5252/z2010n3a3
journal article
10.5252/z2010n3a3
1638-9387
4554365
Gadilina lauensis
n. sp.
(
Fig. 1G
, P-T)
TYPE MATERIAL
. —
Fiji
.
Lau Ridge
,
BORDAU 1
, stn CP 1400,
16°28’S
,
179°50’W
,
1004-1012 m
,
1 lv
holotype
(
MNHN 22780
)
;
3 dd
paratypes
(
MNHN 22781
)
.
TYPE
LOCALITY
. —
Fiji
, Lau Ridge,
16°28’S
,
179°50’W
,
1004-1012 m
(
BORDAU
1, stn CP 1400).
ETYMOLOGY. — From Lau Ridge, the
type
locality.
OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED. —
Fiji
.
Lau Ridge, BOR DAU 1, stn CP 1400,
16°28’S
,
179°50’W
,
1004-1012 m
, 3 dd.
DISTRIBUTION. —
Fiji
. Live at
1004-1012 m
.
DESCRIPTION
Shell
58.8 mm
long, slender, smooth, polished, translucent, rather strongly curved and thin-walled. Transverse section suboval throughout, slightly flattened on dorsal side and rounded ventrally. Anterior aperture straight, apex with a thick callus and lumen slightly oval.
Radula: rachidian tooth slightly curved in section, anterior margin irregular, internal face irregularly rough with a medial knob; lateral teeth wide, head roughly granulose, with three major primary cusps, the central quite pointed, and five small denticles on the internal face; marginal teeth sinusoidal, with a small cusp in the anterior angle connecting with laterals.
Measurements of
holotype
: L 58.8, W 3.42-3.2, w 0.65, arc 5 at 26 from apex.
REMARKS
The most similar species to
G. lauensis
n. sp.
is
Gadilina pachypleura
(
Boissevain, 1906
)
(
syntypes
ZMA 3.06.063, ZMA 3.06.064, examined) from
Indonesia
at
1788-1886 m
depth (
Boissevain 1906
). The new species is more curved and tapering, and has a larger and straighter anterior aperture.
Gadilina insolita
(
Smith, 1894
)
, widely distributed in the Indo-Pacific region, has a highly variable shell outline, especially in the morphology of the apical region, from a wide apex and a very thick apical callus with a small lumen to a long tapering apical area without a clear callus (
Smith 1894
;
Scarabino 1995
: fig. 95a, b). In young specimens, the vestiges of longitudinal threads are clearly visible in the apical area. Also, the transverse section of the shell varies from roughly oval to triangular with the dorsal side straight in the apical area in extreme forms (V. Scarabino pers. obs.).
Gadilina lauensis
n. sp.
is the third living species known in the genus. The radula of
G. insolita
(illustrated by
Scarabino 1995
: fig. 90) is quite similar and confirms that this character is appropriate for identification of the genus.
Subfamily
EPISIPHONINAE Chistikov, 1975