Sinocamaena cheni Wu, 2024

Wu, Min, Chen, Tian & Shen, Wang, 2024, New camaenid genus and species from Zhejiang, East China (Eupulmonata, Helicoidea), ZooKeys 1202, pp. 135-154 : 135-154

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1202.118964

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B73212F2-69AA-4703-826B-ADE235E8B7E0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11200384

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BAD768FA-1757-4938-83A2-E84FCE83B407

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:BAD768FA-1757-4938-83A2-E84FCE83B407

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Sinocamaena cheni Wu
status

gen. et sp. nov.

Sinocamaena cheni Wu , gen. et sp. nov.

Chinese name.

陈氏中华坚螺.

Type material.

Holotype: a fully mature living snail, HBUMM 08381 - spec. 1, Zhangjiadi [张家地], Yunhe County [云和县], Lishui [丽水], Zhejiang Province; around oaks in remote forest, 27.974 ° N, 119.379 ° E, c. 820 m a. s. l., 2019 - VIII, coll. Chen, Tian [陈天]; molecular voucher specimen HBUMM 08381 a GoogleMaps . Paratypes: five fully mature empty shells, HBUMM 08381 - spec. 2 – 6, same collection data as holotype GoogleMaps ; HBUMM 08367 , a fully mature living snail; Zhangjiadi, Yunhe County, Lishui , Zhejiang Province; oak woods, coll. Chen, Tian; molecular voucher specimen HBUMM 08367 a- 1 ; HBUMM 08382 - spec. 1, a living snail that reared to maturity at laboratory, same collection data as holotype ; a fully mature empty shell, HBUMM 08370 - spec. 1, Mihougu [猕猴谷], Fengyangshan [凤阳山], Longquan County [龙泉县], Lishui, Zhejiang Province; 27.897 ° N, 119.159 ° E, 1100 m a. s. l., 2019 - VIII- 26, coll. Ye, Shi-Han [叶诗涵] GoogleMaps .

Measurement of holotype.

Shell height 19.2 mm, shell breadth 44.3 mm, aperture height 15.9 mm, aperture breadth 22.2 mm, embryonic shell whorls 1 1 / 4, whorls 4 5 / 8.

Description.

Shell (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ) large, depressed. Whorls slightly convex. Suture shallowly impressed. Umbilicus broad with embryonic whorls visible, approximately one-fifth of shell major diameter. Bottom-umbilicus transition changed gently. Columella oblique or obliquely curved. Columellar lip slightly covering umbilicus. Protoconch evenly granulate with strong radial sculpture (Fig. 1 C View Figure 1 ). Teleoconch granulate, without hairs, scales or spiral furrows (Fig. 1 D View Figure 1 ). Peristome evenly expanded, minutely sinuate. Aperture oblique, slightly expanded. Body whorl large, straight in front, sharply carinate above periphery. Aperture without inner ring-like thickening. Peristome thin, in faint purple. Shell dull and brownish yellow, with many clear thin brown bands above and beneath carina. Measurements (types, N = 8): shell height 17.5–21.0 mm (18.7 ± 1.15 mm), shell breadth 41.2–46.8 mm (43.9 ± 1.89 mm), aperture height 14.2–16.8 mm (15.4 ± 0.86 mm), aperture breadth 20.6–23.8 mm (22.3 ± 1.34 mm), embryonic shell whorls 1–1 1 / 4 (1.125 ± 0.1157 whorls), whorls 4 3 / 8 – 4 5 / 8 (4.531 ± 0.1108 whorls), shell height / breadth ratio 0.41–0.45 (0.43 ± 0.013).

General anatomy (Figs 2 View Figure 2 – 4 View Figure 4 ). Externally, a small pore present between ommatophore insertions. Eversible head wart surrounding the pore very weakly present. A mantle lobe present. Tentacles and body in dark leaden-black; sole in color lighter than dorsal side. Jaw arcuate; with 12 more or less projecting ribs (Fig. 3 H View Figure 3 ). Radula ( HBUMM 08367 - spec. 1) comprises numerous transverse rows of teeth, each row containing approximately 131 teeth, 38 + 27 + 1 + 27 + 38. Central tooth symmetrically conic, without cuspid. Lateral tooth about more than two times larger than central tooth, strong conic medially, weakly uni-cuspid at both sides. Marginal teeth gradually changing from broadly tri-cuspid to tetra-cuspid (Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ).

Genitalia (Figs 5 View Figure 5 , 6 View Figure 6 ). Penial sheath absent. Penis club-shaped, swollen near insertion of penial retractor muscle. Penis externally simple, internally with numerous longitudinal arranged low projections like scales, which do not connect to each other into pilasters along the penial inner wall. Epiphallic papilla rather developed, on side of penial retractor muscle insertion with about several longitudinal pilasters which join apically. Epiphallus very short and stout, internally with a septum longitudinally dividing epiphallus into two separate chambers which one is empty and another one with about 10 pieces of high and low pilasters among which middle one is the strongest (Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ). Flagellum absent. Membranous sac surrounding terminal genitalia absent. Dart sac apparatus absent. Vas deferens thin, slightly thickened near epiphallus. Vagina thick, subequal to penis in length. Bursa copulatrix duct thin, proximally not expanded. Measurement in holotype: P – 9.9 mm; Ep – 2.4 mm; VD – 19.4 mm; PR – 4.8 mm; Va – 7.2 mm; FO – 5.4 mm; BC plus BCD – 55.3 mm.

Ecology.

This species was found in the litter layer in broad-leaved forest where oaks dominate (Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ). However, the rediscovery of this species failed at one of the known localities (Zhangjiadi, Lishui) in April 2023.

Etymology.

This new species is named in memory of Professor Chen De-Niu [陈德牛 Nov 1939 – March 2024], a known malacologist working on Chinese land molluscs. Prof. Chen was one of the doctoral supervisors for Wu M.

Distribution.

Zhejiang (only from type localities: Yunhe, Longquan).

Remarks.

The new species and Camaena vulpis (Gredler, 1887) are superficially similar in having the densely and minutely granulate surface, numerous spiral thin bands and the general shape of shell. However, besides possessing a distinctly larger shell and a higher spire, the latter species has a totally different genital system, which has a long flagellum ( HBUMM 08664, Liannan [连南], Nature Reserve of Giant Salamander, Guangdong, China, 2023 - VII, coll. Wang Chong-Rui [王崇瑞], Chen Hui [陈辉]). The new species can be promptly distinguished from all the other Chinese camaenid taxa in genitalia because of the absence of the dart sac apparatus and the flagellum.

The phylogenetic analysis suggested that the new species / genus and the taxa distributed in Central China are possibly close relatives (Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ). For other comments see the genus.