Clathrocaspia logvinenkoi

Wesselingh, Frank, Poorten, Jan Johan ter, Kijashko, Pavel, Albrecht, Christian, Anistratenko, Olga Yu, Frolov, Pavel, Gándara, Alberto Martinez, Gittenberger, Arjan, Gogaladze, Aleksandre, Mikhail Karpinsky, Popa, Luis, Sands, Arthur F, Vandendorpe, Justine & Wilke, Thomas, 2019, Mollusc species from the Pontocaspian region - an expert opinion list, ZooKeys 827, pp. 31-124 : 68

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.827.31365

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:10B66389-5E42-4E52-87D8-F49E2405D651

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B5944C7F-018D-E6E8-E952-E1782DB043A7

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Clathrocaspia logvinenkoi
status

 

Clathrocaspia logvinenkoi View in CoL (Golikov & Starobogatov, 1966)

*1966 P. [yrgula] (Caspia) logvinenkoi Golikov & Starobogatov: 354, fig. 1(7).

2006 Caspia logvinenkoi (Golikov & Starobogatov, 1966). - Kantor and Sysoev: 88, pl. 41, fig. I.

2007a Caspia (Clathrocaspia) logvinenkoi (Golikov & Starobogatov, 1966). - Anistratenko: 25-26, fig. 2.

2016 Caspia logvinenkoi (Golikov & Starobogatov, 1966). - Vinarski and Kantor: 224-225.

Status. Accepted Pontocaspian species.

Type locality. Don Delta, Russia.

Distribution. Known only from the type locality.

Taxonomic notes. The species has distinctive shell characters: broad conical shape with a weak subsutural bulge and apically thickened peristome.

Remarks. The type material was collected by Mordukhay-Boltovskoy in 1937 and comprises two specimens, the holotype and the paratype. Three additional specimens were collected from the same region in 2006 ( Anistratenko 2007a). The salinity at the type locality fluctuates between freshwater and ca. 1‰.

Conservation status. Not assessed. In the fifty years since the description of this species five specimens have been collected; this is likely evidence of its rarity. Known only from two close localities, C. logvinenkoi appears to have an extremely narrow distributional range in the Azov–Black Sea Basin, being endemic to the Taganrog province (e.g., Anistratenko 2007a).