Seven new genera and thirty-four new species of buccinoid gastropods (Neogastropoda: Buccinidae) from the Aleutian Islands, Alaska
Author
Mclean, James H.
Author
Clark, Roger N.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-09-26
5351
2
151
201
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5351.2.1
journal article
270509
10.11646/zootaxa.5351.2.1
b3b05d51-3aeb-49c7-bbc1-0365bc92c886
1175-5326
8391375
F34F6B3C-F251-4D8E-B002-A96BD70CA1BE
Volutopsius gracilis
n. sp.
Figure 19 D–E
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
58A8BD6B-DF20-4AF2-BCB9-5296AA4DEF48
Type
locality:
E of
Shumagin Islands
,
Aleutian Ids.
,
Alaska
(
55°42.75 N
,
158°52.65W
);
97 m
.
(
NMFS 143-2015
-
1-62
)
.
Type material:
Holotype
:
LACM 3589
;
Paratypes
:
Pt
1,
LACM
3604, 142.1 mm
.
N of Unimak Island
(
56°41.06 N
,
165°51 W
),
80 m
(
ex
-
Rae Baxter
,
LACM 1984-106
105.5 mm
)
;
Pt
2,
SBMNH
169016, 103 mm
.
Wide Bay
, S side of
Alaska
Peninsula
(
57°11.13 N
,
156°07.03 W
),
91 m
(
NMFS 147-200301
-
125
)
;
Pt
3,
RNC 5031
,
86.5 mm
.
W of Trinity Islands
SW of
Kodiak Island
(
56°41.56 N
,
152°54.96 W
),
71 m
(94-200901-183).
Referred material:
RNC 4505
,
90.2 mm
.
Unimak Pass
,
N of Akun Island
(
54°21.19 N
,
165°35.51 W
),
146 m
(94-199401-9)
;
RNC
4858, 108 mm
.
W of Trinity Islands
SW of
Kodiak Island
(
56°41.56 N
,
152°54.96 W
),
71 m
(94-200901-183).
Description:
Shell large for genus (to
142 mm
; LACM 84–106.5), elongated; whorls sub-angulate; cream to light brown, with very thin tan periostracum. Protoconch smooth, with 1.5 whorls; teleconch with 3.5 whorls; axial sculpture variable, smooth or irregularly wrinkled; spiral sculpture usually lacking, but may have 5–8 faint spiral cords at mid-whorl. Aperture slightly more than half of shell height; canal short, narrow. Operculum less than half of aperture height, nucleus terminal.
Radula: Typical for genus, lateral teeth with two large, curved cusps; rachidian tooth with seven cusps, outer cusps much larger than, inner ones, five inner cusps small, slender, of unequal length, equally spaced.
Remarks:
Kantor (1990)
reviewed the
Volutopsiinae
, and concluded that
Volutopsius stefanssoni
Dall, 1919
(figs H–J) (along with what appears to be
V. gracilis
) was synonymous with
Volutopsius castaneus
(Mörch, 1857)
(figs. 19 F–G), however
Kessler (1985)
had previously demonstrated that the two were distinct. Kantor also considered
Volutopsius simplex
Dall, 1907
(fig 19 J) to be a variety of
V. castaneus
, but morphologically it appears to be a smooth, round-shouldered form of
V. stefanssoni
.
Volutopsius gracilis
is very similar to
V. castaneus
with which it has long been confused, but from which it differs in 1) larger size 140+ mm compared with
100 mm
for
V. castaneus
; 2) shell proportions, slender profile, aperture a little over ½ of shell height, compared with compact profile, aperture about 2/3–3/4 of shell height in
V. castaneus
; 3) Rachidian tooth with seven cusps, opposed to five in
V. castaneus
; 4) Geographic distribution,
V.
gracilis
is restricted to the vicinity of the
Alaska
Peninsula, whereas
V. castaneus
has a much broader range, from Adak Island (
177°W
) east to the Kenai Peninsula (
148°W
). Although the
type
of
V. castaneus
was said to have come from Sitka,
Alaska
, no specimens have been verified from the eastern Gulf of
Alaska
(
Clark, 2018
). It more likely came from the vicinity Kodiak Island, or perhaps Unalaska Island. The range of
V. castaneus
appears to extend around the Bering Sea shelf to
Kamchatka
. 5) Bathymetric distribution,
V. castaneus
is a shallow, in shore species, commonly found at
1–35 m
, and rarely below
50 m
, whereas
V.
gracilis
is an off-shore species, found below
70 m
, and 6) Shell color
V. gracilis
is always cream to light brown, whereas
V. castaneus
may be orange-brown dark brown, tan or white.
Volutopsius gracilis
forms a complex with similar (often axially sculptured) species (
Clark, 2018
):
Volutopsius castaneus
(Mörch, 1857)
,
Volutopsius stefanssoni
Dall, 1919
,
Volutopsius trophonius
Dall, 1902
.
Etymology:
The name is from the Latin, for slender.
Distribution:
Alaska
Peninsula, vicinity of Unimak Pass (
165°W
), from north of Unimak Island, south and east to south of Kodiak Island (
152°W
), at depths
71–
146 m
.
Habitat:
Mud, muddy-sand and gravel bottoms, at bottom temperatures of 4.6°–6.3°C.