Liotipoma lifouensis, Mclean, 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/z2012n2a10 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6C26A814-FF97-147A-DA0B-7EED6F6DF694 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Liotipoma lifouensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Liotipoma lifouensis View in CoL n. sp.
( Fig. 10 View FIG )
TYPE MATERIAL. — Holotype: LIFOU, stn 1434, Loyalty Islands, Lifou, Santal Bay, 20°52.5’S, 167°08.1’E, 5-20 m, ♂ shell, H 2.6, D 4.3 mm ( MNHN 24770, Fig. 10 View FIG A-D). Paratype: LIFOU, stn 1432, Shelter Reef, 20°53.5’S, 167°02.7’E, 12-32 m, ♂ shell, H 2.9, D 4.3 mm ( MNHN 24771, Fig. 10 View FIG E-H).
TYPE LOCALITY. — Lifou, Loyalty Islands.
DISTRIBUTION. — Lifou, Loyalty Islands.
ETYMOLOGY. — After the type locality, Lifou Island, Loyalty Islands.
DESCRIPTION
Male shell ( Fig. 10 View FIG )
Whorls 3.3; profile of medium height for genus; with single keel at periphery, positioned at midwhorl; profile below shoulder with weak basal angulation. Axial sculpture of strong ribs, 22 on final whorl, evenly spaced, strongly spinose at periphery, spines projecting backward throughout final whorl. Spiral sculpture of two prominent cords on shoulder, forming coarsely clathrate sculpture. Base with strong subtending cord, and one strong cord between subtending cord and peripheral cord; emergent cord prominent; base with deep pits on both sides of subtending cord; all basal cords broad, with narrow interspaces. Umbilicus bordered by broad periumbilical cord; axial ribs weak across emergent cord. Umbilicus of moderate width, obstructed by narrow, tongue-like extension of inner lip, extending more than half the diameter of aperture, in same plane as aperture. Final lip massive, extending for ∕₄ of final quarter whorl, with successively decreasing layers of deposition, with indentations conforming to spiral sculpture. Aperture nearly radial, plane of aperture aligned slightly outside of coiling axis. H 2.6, D 4.3 mm (holotype).
Female shell
Unknown.
Operculum
Unknown.
REMARKS
The two illustrated male shells have the long narrow tongue that extends across the umbilicus to connect with the emergent cord, which is a condition unlike that of all other species. The holotype shell has backward projecting spines, but this is not seen in the second male shell ( Fig. 10 View FIG E-H). Both specimens have comparable basal sculpture of broad cords with narrow interspaces and coarse clathrate sculpture of the shoulder slope. The specimen shown in Figure 10 View FIG E-H has an additional basal cord, compared to the holotype specimen, but this is considered to an intra-specific difference. This species cannot be confused with any other species. It is of the same size as the male shell of L. mutabilis n. sp. ( Fig. 4 View FIG ) from Lifou, but has a longer apertural tongue.
MNHN |
Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle |
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.