Type material of land snails (Mollusca: Gastropoda) described from New Zealand by taxonomists in Europe and North America between 1830 and 1934, and the history of research on the New Zealand land snail fauna from 1824 to 1917
Author
Brook, Fred J.
Author
Ablett, Jonathan D.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-11-14
4697
1
1
117
journal article
24883
10.11646/zootaxa.4697.1.1
2a01bfb5-6e33-42b5-ab5d-4f8512c9128f
1175-5326
3542832
AF79BEA3-3CC8-49CA-9707-A8D5B4DAACD
Helix decidua
Pfeiffer, 1857
Pfeiffer, 1857. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 25: 108.
Type
material:
Original description based on one or more specimens in the Cuming collection;
type
material not found in
NHMUK
collections in 2018, whereabouts unknown
.
Type
locality:
‘New Zealand’ (
Pfeiffer 1857b: 108
).
Remarks:
There are no published illustrations of the
type
material.
Hutton (1884b: 203)
and subsequent authors have generally included this species in the genus
Therasia
Hutton, 1883
(e.g., Pilsbry 1892 [in
1892–1893
]: 71;
Hedley & Suter 1893: 641
;
Suter 1894d: 245
,
1904a: 63
,
1913b: 657
;
Powell 1979: 316
;
Spencer
et al
. 2009: 216
), but this appears to be based on a misinterpretation. Pfeiffer’s original description referred to a ‘depressed turbiniform’ shell, of five whorls, that was 3.5 mm wide and
2 mm
high. By contrast, descriptions and illustrations by later authors (e.g.,
Hutton 1884b: 203
; Pilsbry 1892 [in
1892–1893
]: 71, pl. 22, figs. 52–54;
Suter 1913b: 657
, pl. 50, fig. 8;
Powell 1979: 316
) referred to shells that were much larger and more loosely-coiled, with diameters of c.8.0–9.5 mm, and which were almost certainly not conspecific with
Helix decidua
Pfeiffer. In
the absence of the
type
material it is not possible to reliably determine the identity of Pfeiffer’s species, but the original description suggests that it is probably a species of
Laoma
Gray, 1850
or
Phrixgnathus
Hutton, 1883
, sensu
Suter (1913b)
and
Powell (1979)
[
Punctidae
].
Systematic position: Not determined.
Distribution:
Probably native to
New Zealand
, but regional distribution not known.