Protocuspidaria verityi Allen & Morgan, 1981

Gofas, Serge, Luque, Ángel A., Oliver, Joan Daniel, Templado, José & Serrano, Alberto, 2021, The Mollusca of Galicia Bank (NE Atlantic Ocean), European Journal of Taxonomy 785 (1), pp. 1-114 : 94-95

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.785.1605

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8B61E9CD-DDCA-43FC-AB0A-B227C1A579E8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5837840

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D63CF03C-C32B-FFBC-8C37-FE400B7DFA4A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Protocuspidaria verityi Allen & Morgan, 1981
status

 

Protocuspidaria verityi Allen & Morgan, 1981 View in CoL

Fig. 43D–G View Fig

Material examined

GALICIA BANK • 2 spm, 2 sh, 6 v; 43°00.12′ N, 11°57.67′ W; 1706 m; 29 Jul. 2011; BANGAL 0711 V2; MNCN GoogleMaps 3 v; 42°37.77′ N, 11°49.46′ W; 818 m; 30 Jul. 2011; BANGAL 0711 V3; MNCN GoogleMaps 1 v; 42°59.61′ N, 11°58.41′ W; 1671 m; 7 Aug. 2011; BANGAL 0711 V9; MNCN GoogleMaps .

Remarks

This species was misidentified as Protocuspidaria colpodes (Dautzenberg & H. Fischer, 1897) in Salas (1996), in the preliminary INDEMARES BANGAL report ( Gofas et al. 2014b) and in Gofas et al. (2017), on the grounds that could be an older name, but Krylova (1995) convincingly recognized these as separate species and the GB specimens would then go to P. verityi .

Bathymetric distribution of the species

There is a clearcut separation between mollusc communities on the shallower summit platform of GB and the deeper samples collected below the Mediterranean outflow (i.e., below 1200 m). This is highly supported when involving the beam-trawl catches only ( Fig. 45B View Fig ) by the Bray-Curtis similarity index and a R ANOSIM value of 0.7 (both on quantitative and on presence/absence data). The grouping of the deep samples is also retrieved when taking into account all samples ( Fig. 45A View Fig ), even though the sampled surfaces and the meshed are unequal between dredge, beam trawl and otter trawl. Table 3 shows the contribution of the species to the similarity between samples, calculated on the quantitative data for beam trawls only.

Trophic groups

Filter feeders, mostly the bivalves, account for more than half of the individuals collected (Fig. 46). Among these, Limopsis Sasso, 1827 represent roughly half of the specimens of the “filter feeders” group (but different species on the plateau and in the deeper samples), while the presence of the many ectoparasitic species (mostly, in the family Eulimidae ) is testimonial from a quantitative point of view.

MNCN

Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales

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