The unknown bathyal of the Canaries: new species and new records of deep-sea Mollusca
Author
Ortega, José Rafael
Author
Gofas, Serge
text
Zoosystema
2019
2019-11-28
41
26
513
551
journal article
23381
10.5252/zoosystema2019v41a26
cef5076b-424b-4cdc-8d13-6e472d861e09
1638-9387
3726028
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CF16A992-0401-44C8-BEEE-842CE7F1D27E
Liostomia canaliculata
n. sp.
(
Fig. 25J, K
)
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
156041FB-BB06-4A69-B683-2E03FBEBF626
TYPE
MATERIAL. —
Holotype
.
sh., MNHN-IM-2000-34278, from SEAMOUNT 2 DW130
.
TYPE
LOCALITY. — Off W Gran Canaria,
28°08.95’N
,
15°53.11’W
/
28°09.06’N
,
15°52.92’W
,
655-
660 m
.
ETYMOLOGY. — Latin adjective meaning “channelled”, alluding to the subsutural channel.
DESCRIPTION
Shell minute, globose with a low, markedly stepped spire, and the last whorl occupying more than 4⁄5 of the total height. Protoconch
c.
280 µm
in diameter, with its apex obliquely immersed in the first teleoconch whorl (
type
B of van
Aartsen, 1987
), smooth and glossy.Teleoconch of two whorls, shouldered with a very strong keel separated from the suture by a broad channel, smooth except for growth lines which are particularly conspicuous within the subsutural channel. Last whorl with maximum convexity near the periphery, flat between keel and periphery and only slightly convex in the abapical part. Umbilicus broad and conspicuous, delimited by a blunt keel. No columellar tooth. Dimensions of the
holotype
: 1.0 mm height ×
0.95 mm
diameter.
REMARKS
This species does not resemble any known gastropod from the North Atlantic, but is clearly identified as a member of the
Pyramidellidae
by the heterostrophic protoconch. Among all the pyramidellid genera reported in the area,
Liostomia
was considered because its
type
species, although quite different in aspect, is also umbilicate, has the protoconch nucleus similarly immersed, lacks a columellar tooth, and has an incipient subsutural keel on the first teleoconch whorl, admittedly not so conspicuous (
HØisaeter 2014
).
Liostomia mamoi
Mifsud, 1993
was described from the Mediterranean and has a height/diameter ratio close to that of
L. canaliculata
n. sp.
, although lacking the spiral keels.