Chiton (Chiton) cumingsii, , Frembly, 1827
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa067 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10541479 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039D87D8-FFDC-2929-ECD8-36F8B1F8FE90 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Chiton (Chiton) cumingsii |
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CHITON (CHITON) CUMINGSII View in CoL FREMBLY, 1827
( FIGS 4C View Figure 4 , 7A, B View Figure 7 , 10 View Figure 10 , 11 View Figure 11 )
Chiton cumingsii Frembly, 1827: 198 View in CoL , suppl. pl. 16, fig. 3; Dall, 1919: 247. Chiton cumingsii: Reeve, 1847 View in CoL , pl. 1, figs 2a, b; Plate, 1902: 46, pl. 3, figs 179–184, pl. 4. Chiton cumingi: Pilsbry, 1893: 164 , pl. 30, figs 29–31. Chiton (Amaurochiton) cumingsii: Bullock, 1988b: 166 View in CoL , figs 59–63, 69, 74 and 77. Chiton (Chiton) cumingsii: Kaas et al., 2006: 113 View in CoL , fig. 37, map 14 (bibliography and synonymy).
Type material: NHMUK 20190538 About NHMUK /1 (lectotype from the J. E. Gray collection, no locality data) , NHMUK 20190538 About NHMUK /2 (paralectotype, teratological specimen) , NHMUK 20190538 About NHMUK /3–4 (paralectotypes), all designated herein .
Type locality: Valparaiso, Chile, fide Frembly , 1927 .
Descriptive notes: Size: animal up to 84 mm long and 40 mm width ( Table 2). Colour: usually pink with black concentric lines compact ( Fig. 4C View Figure 4 ), some individuals can be almost black; jugal area usually more vivid colour. Body shape: oval to elongated-oval, middle dorsal elevation. Slit formula: 12–15/1/10–16. Plates: intermediate plates separated by space not exposed mantle, slightly overlapping one over the other, lines of growth in intermediate plates apparent to the naked eye ( Fig. 10 View Figure 10 ). Intermediate plate with numerous aesthetes ( Fig. 11E, F View Figure 11 ). Tail valve back straight ( Fig. 10D View Figure 10 ). Apophyses: moderately short, connected by short jugal lamina, delicately denticulate, clearly triangular and trapezoidal intermediate valves in valve series ( Fig. 10B, C, F View Figure 10 ). Perinotum: moderately broad, dorsally with imbricated, flat and triangular scales ( Fig. 11A, C View Figure 11 ). Spicules at the ventral side of the perinotum ( Fig. 11C View Figure 11 ). Radula: central tooth rounded and hooked. The major lateral rounded ( Fig. 11B, D View Figure 11 ).
Distribution: We found this species from Lobitos (~ 4°S), Peru to Quellón (~ 43°S), Chile ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ). It was
previously reported from Paita (~ 5°S), Peru to Puerto Montt (~ 41°S), Chile ( Marincovich, 1973) .
Remarks: This species is easy to differentiate from all other Chiton species in the area by their high number of ribs in all plates with small grains. In the head valve, they have more than 40 ribs of grains. This species has been introduced in the Canary Islands (28°06’N, 15°25’W) ( Arias & Anadón 2013).
Notes on designation of type material: The lectotype and paralectotype material comprise a single lot in the collections of the Natural History Museum, London ( NHMUK) ( Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ). It is probable that some of Frembly’s specimens were deposited in the NHMUK via the collections of contemporaries, such as Hugh Cuming and J. E. Gray, although there is nothing to link any of this early material to Frembly directly ( T. S. White, pers. comm). Type material for other species described by Frembly has also been attributed to the NHMUK collection ( Kaas et al., 2006; Bullock, 1988b), although the status of these specimens requires further careful investigation. In the original description of Chiton cumingsii, Frembly (1827: 199) noted ‘A specimen also was found [showing] ... only seven valves, but inside the articulation of the other valve was plainly seen’. Chiton teratologies are rare ( Torres et al., 2018). There was only one teratological specimen of this species in the NHMUK collection, amongst a lot of four specimens (NHMUKMUK 20190538/1–4) from the J. E. Gray Frembly (1927) ( Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ). The specimen closest to the potentially generalized dimensions given in Frembly’s original description (‘length two inches, breadth 1 3/10’; 5.0 × 3.3 cm) has been designated the primary lectotype ( NHMUK 20190538/1, dimensions, 4.2 × 2.3 cm).
NHMUK |
Natural History Museum, London |
T |
Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Chiton (Chiton) cumingsii
Ibáñez, Christian M, Pardo-Gandarillas, M Cecilia, Méndez, Marco A, Sellanes, Javier, Sigwart, Julia D & Sirenko, Boris 2021 |
Chiton cumingsii Frembly, 1827: 198
Kaas P & Van Belle RA & Strack HL 2006: 113 |
Bullock RC 1988: 166 |
Dall WH 1919: 247 |
Plate LH 1902: 46 |
Pilsbry HA 1893: 164 |
Frembly, JRN 1827: 198 |