Rhinus gilbertus, Simone, Luiz Ricardo L. & Casati, Rafael, 2013

Simone, Luiz Ricardo L. & Casati, Rafael, 2013, New land mollusk fauna from Serra da Capivara, Piauí, Brazil, with a new genus and five new species (Gastropoda: Orthalicoidea, Streptaxidae, Subulinidae), Zootaxa 3683 (2), pp. 145-158 : 153-154

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3683.2.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CD588D74-2452-48BA-9162-E0C30DEDC907

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6150440

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A1D87F5-E057-FB01-FFD5-FA79FA9FFB78

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rhinus gilbertus
status

sp. nov.

Rhinus gilbertus new species

( Figs. 23–34 View FIGURES 16 – 23 View FIGURES 24 – 34 )

Types. Holotype MZSP 112449 ( Figs. 24–28 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ). Paratypes MZSP 111827, 27 shells (sta. P2), MZSP 111835, 98 shells (sta. P2), MZSP 111839, 50 shells (sta. P2), MZSP 111844, 9 shells (sta. P1) ( Figs. 30–31 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ), MZSP 111845, 9 shells ( Figs. 32–33 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ), USNM, 2 shells; MNRJ, 2 shells. All from type locality.

Type locality. BRAZIL. Piauí; Serra da Capivara ; Coronel José Dias municipality, close to Sítio do Mocó town, Cave Toca de Cima dos Pilão, 8°51’47.10”S 42°33’26.96”W (R. Casati col, 2012).

Diagnosis. Shell somewhat elongated, with width/length ratio of ~40%. Axial undulations relatively strong, almost forming sculpture. Peristome occupying ~30% of shell length, strongly deflected. Umbilicus opened, narrow.

Description. Shell of about 20 mm. Color pure white to pale brown. Periostracum not preserved. Outline somewhat turriform to bulimuloid; width ~40% of length. Protoconch of 1.5 whorls, opaque, obese, suture wellmarked; sculptured by delicate, uniform, undulating striae ( Figs. 23 View FIGURES 16 – 23 , 29 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ); occupying ~5% of shell length and ~25% of shell width; border protoconch-teleoconch clear, slightly prosocline (angle ~10° with longitudinal axis) ( Figs. 28, 31, 33 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ). Spire of ~6 rounded whorls, tall, being wider in penultimate whorl; angle ~50° ( Figs. 24–26, 29, 30– 33 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ); suture well-marked. Sculpture uniform series of axial, narrow undulations, from suture to suture, ~ 60 in penultimate whorl; interspaces between undulations equivalent to their width. Body whorl equal ( Figs. 30, 31 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ) to ~5% narrower ( Figs. 24, 26, 32, 33 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ) than preceding whorl. Peristome deflected outwards, expanding ~10% width of preceding whorl; aperture orthocline ( Figs. 25, 31, 33 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ). Aperture elliptical, occupying ~30% of shell length and ~50% of width ( Figs. 24, 30, 32 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ); lacking teeth; outer lip rounded, with middle region slightly straight; inner lip highly concave, superior half almost straight, inferior half also almost straight and wide, as tube surrounding umbilicus; low, blunt columellar carina somewhat distinct ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ). Callus thin, planar, simple, narrowly attached to penultimate whorl ( Figs. 24, 25, 30, 32 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ). Umbilicus opened, narrow, partially occluded by inner lip ( Fig. 27, 34 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ).

Measurements (in mm): Holotype MZSP 112449: 21.9 by 8.3 ( Figs. 24–28 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ); paratypes: 111844 ( Figs. 30–31 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ): 18.7 by 7.5; MZSP 111845 ( Figs. 32–33 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ): 18.7 by 8.1.

Distribution. Only known from type locality.

Habitat. Caatinga semi-dry environment; collected inside caves.

Material examined. Types. Non-type material from type locality MZSP: 112347, 10 shells, 112356, 10 shells, 112357, 9 shells, 112367, 4 shells, 112368, 7 shells, 112373, 7 shells, 112399, 15 shells, 112415, 25 shells, 112420, 15 shells, 112432, 40 shells, 112437, 20 shells, 112442, 18 shells.

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the father of junior author, Gilberto Casati, who provided financial support and encouragement from his academic affairs.

Systematic remarks. The main character of the genus Rhinus is the hairy periostracum, a character that cannot be seen in the examined material, composed of mostly long dead shells. However, the resemblance of R. gilbertus with several species of this genus suggests the generic attribute. Another character suggestive of the genus is the striated protoconch ( Figs. 23 View FIGURES 16 – 23 , 29 View FIGURES 24 – 34 ). Only few of the Rhinus that have elongated shell; most has a more globose shape. The elongated-shaped Rhinus ( Simone, 2006) , R. gilbertus resembles R. constrictus (Pfeiffer, 1841) , from NE Brazil, differing in being more slender (width/length ratio of ~40%, against ~62% of that species); it also resembles R. evelinae Leme, 1986 , from São Paulo, and R. obeliscus Haas, 1936 , from Santa Catarina. It differs in having a slightly more rounded outline, as that two species are still more elongated (ratio of both species ~35%), and two fewer whorls. R. gilbertus is the most elongated Rhinus from the NE Brazil, as elongated shape is more common in SE Brazilian species. A young specimen is shown in Fig. 29 View FIGURES 24 – 34 , displaying a different shape.

MZSP

Sao Paulo, Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Stylommatophora

SuperFamily

Orthalicoidea

Family

Orthalicidae

Genus

Rhinus

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