Bostrycapulus odites, Collin, 2005
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2005.00162.x |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/603AD32D-FFB9-FFEE-D8B1-F97B0FA4C893 |
treatment provided by |
Diego |
scientific name |
Bostrycapulus odites |
status |
sp. nov. |
BOSTRYCAPULUS ODITES View in CoL SP. NOV.
Synonymy
Crepidula aculeata View in CoL - Parodiz, 1939 [in part]: 695. Hoagland, 1977 [in part]: 364.
Crepidula aculeata var. fortis - Parodiz, 1939: 696.
Bostrycapulus aculeatus View in CoL - Olsson & Harbison, 1953 [in part]: 280. Simone, 2002 [in part]: 18.
Crepidula cf. aculeata View in CoL - sp. 1, Collin, 2003b: 618– 640.
Crepidula cf. aculeata View in CoL - South Africa. Collin, 2003a: 541–593.
Crepidula cf. aculeata View in CoL - Argentina. Collin, 2003a: 541–593.
Crepidula cf. aculeata View in CoL - Brazil. Collin, 2003a: 541– 593.
Holotype: Natal Museum V9447 / T1783 , shell and ethanol-preserved soft parts. Shell illustrated in Figure 11 View Figure 11 ; length 19.3 mm, width 15.6 mm, height 7.2 mm. Frozen tissue of this specimen: FMNH 282360 About FMNH .
Other live-collected material from the type locality: FMNH 282277 About FMNH (paratype) , BM20010453 .
Other live-collected material examined: FMNH 282297, ANSP A19744 View Materials , BM 20010456, FMNH 282350, FMNH 282368
Type locality: Wooleys Pool, Muizenburg, Cape Province, South Africa. Low intertidal zone in rock crevices, co-occurring with Crepipatella capensis .
Diagnosis: B. odites differs from the other species in the B. aculeatus species complex in exhibiting direct development from small eggs which consume nurse eggs. The protoconch is unsculptured and retains irregular growth lines ( Figs 5F View Figure 5 , 4I View Figure 4 ). Adult morphological characters are as described above for B. aculeatus . Diagnostic DNA sequence differences distinguishing B. odites from all other Bostrycapulus species are in the following positions in the COI sequences submitted to GenBank (position 1 = position 1537 of the D. yakuba mitochondrial genome, GenBank # X03240 View Materials ): 24 (c), 36 (g), 141 (c), 220 (t), 234 (c), 279 (g), 354 (t), 438 (c), 486 (a), 552 (t).
Distribution and habitat: the Atlantic coast of South America, from São Paulo, Brazil to Puerto Madryn, Argentina, as well as the south coast of South Africa from Cape Town to Port Elizabeth and north to northern Natal (Natal Museum). Material examined here was collected from rocks intertidally in South Africa and Brazil, and intertidally from rocks and subtidally from the shells of pen-shells and oysters in Argentina. This species occurs to depths of at least 40 m.
Description: shell morphology and anatomy are the same as B. aculeatus , with the exception of the protoconch. The 1 mm diameter protoconch is smooth with irregular growth lines towards the aperture ( Figs 5F View Figure 5 , 4I View Figure 4 ). The indistinct protoconch–teleoconch boundary occurs after slightly more than a single whorl is completed.
Observations of development are available for animals from Argentina and Cape Town, but only the early stages were collected. Eggs from Argentinian animals are 197 Mm in diameter. All eggs in a capsule begin to develop synchronously and gastrulation includes invagination. Gastrulas look similar to those of C. lingulata ( Collin, 2000b) . After gastrulation, the nurse eggs remain spherical with centralized yolk and ciliated epithelium. After consuming the nurse eggs, the remaining embryos form intracapsular veligers with a single embryonic kidney on each side, a distinct operculum, a very small distinct velum with a food groove, a small round head vesicle, and some black pigment on the intestine. The shells of early embryos appear smooth under a dissecting microscope. Embryos near hatching were not observed in October and November in Argentina, or December in South Africa. I observed the development of a few broods of South African animals. It appears that the embryos begin to consume the nurse eggs slightly earlier in development than those from Argentina, and that the larval features are therefore slightly less well developed relative to embryo size. Maximum length = 30 mm.
Etymology: odites is a Greek noun meaning traveller. This name refers to the large geographical distribution this species has attained despite its direct development.
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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Bostrycapulus odites
Collin, Rachel 2005 |
Crepidula cf. aculeata
Collin R 2003: 618 |
Crepidula cf. aculeata
Collin R 2003: 541 |
Crepidula cf. aculeata
Collin R 2003: 541 |
Crepidula cf. aculeata
Collin R 2003: 541 |
Crepidula aculeata var. fortis
Parodiz JJ 1939: 696 |