Cerithideopsis malayensis, Reid & Claremont, 2014
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3779.1.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7CE74DE8-BEF2-4E42-A727-FEF9833878D4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5056569 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E987F4-0D55-6433-0FC5-14DB623BF9BC |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cerithideopsis malayensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Cerithideopsis malayensis View in CoL new species
( Figures 2F–H, N, O View FIGURE 2 , 3B View FIGURE 3 , 4 View FIGURE 4 )
? Cerithidea fortunei View in CoL — Casto de Elera, 1896: 329 (not A. Adams, 1855).
Cerithidea (Cerithidea) largillierti View in CoL — Hasegawa, 2000: 133 (in part, includes C. largillierti View in CoL , C. australiensis View in CoL ).
Cerithidea largillierti View in CoL —Lozouet, 2008: 286, pl. 88, fig. 4 (not Philippi, 1848).
Cerithideopsis largillierti View in CoL — Lozouet & Plaziat, 2008: 57, 112, pl. 20, figs 4–6 (in part, includes C. largillierti View in CoL , C. australiensis View in CoL ).
Types. Holotype NHMUK 20100434 About NHMUK /1 ( Fig. 2N View FIGURE 2 ) and 6 paratypes NHMUK 20100434 About NHMUK /2 ( Fig. 2F, O View FIGURE 2 ), Kradeh , Kanchanadit, 20 km NE Surat Thani, Thailand.
Etymology. From its distribution, centred on the Malay Peninsula.
Taxonomic history. The record of ‘ Cerithidea fortunei ’ from Mindoro by Casto de Elera (1896) could possibly apply to this species. Also from the Philippines, it has previously been identified and figured as C. largillierti (Lozouet 2008; Lozouet & Plaziat 2008).
Diagnosis. Shell small (to 26 mm), brown with one pale spiral band above periphery; animal blackish, yellow edge to foot, 2 yellow bands across snout, yellow tentacles; Malay Peninsula , southern South China Sea, Philippines; COI: HE680619 View Materials – HE680622 View Materials , HE680624 View Materials , HE680625 View Materials .
Material examined. 18 lots.
Shell ( Fig. 2F–H, N, O View FIGURE 2 ): H = 11.0– 26 mm. Shape elongated conical (H/B = 2.40–2.63, SH = 3.00–3.40); not routinely decollate, 7–11 whorls remaining in well preserved shells, but apex and protoconch always eroded. Spire whorls moderately rounded, suture distinct; spire profile slightly convex, slightly concave towards apex; periphery rounded; relatively delicate. Adult lip only slightly thickened, not flared; sometimes 1 previous lip on final whorl; apertural margin sinuous in side view; anterior canal a weak notch. Sculpture on spire of straight axial ribs, usually becoming curved (opisthocyrt) on last 2–3 whorls, ribs rounded, ribs and interspaces of similar width, 20–27(33) ribs on penultimate whorl, ribs becoming weaker and irregular on final whorl; smallest apical whorls with 3 spiral cords if well preserved, increasing to 6 by whorls 5–6, then becoming weak or disappearing, so that only a trace of 8–10 spiral elements is visible above periphery on penultimate whorl; base with 8–10 cords, of which 2 at periphery slightly enlarged, with marked groove between. No ventrolateral varix, but 0–3 indistinct or prominently raised and rounded varices may be present at any point on last whorl ( Fig. 2F View FIGURE 2 ). Surface with spiral microstriae on thick periostracum; short periostracal fringe or bristles remaining on larger striae (i.e. 8–10 striae macroscopically visible above periphery) if well preserved; surface sometimes covered by thick black concretion. Colour: brown, with broad cream band above periphery, often concealed by periostracum; band visible by transparency within aperture.
Animal ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ): sides of foot dark grey, broad yellow margin; head black, snout black with 2 broad transverse yellow stripes (one at tip), tentacles and tentacle bases yellow (examined in two samples from Kedah and Surat Thani). Yellow coloration not preserved after storage in ethanol, but pattern visible as absence of black pigment.
Range: Malay Peninsula, southern South China Sea , Philippines. Records : Burma: Kadan Kyun (King I.) ( NHMUK 1887.3.10.189). Thailand: Ao Nam Bor, Phuket I. ( NHMUK) ; Kradeh, Kanchanadit, 20 km NE Surat Thani ( NHMUK 20100434 About NHMUK ) . Malaysia: Bugang jetty, Merbok estuary, Kedah ( NHMUK 20080700 About NHMUK ) ; Pulau Lumut, Selangor ( USNM 661026 About USNM ) . Indonesia: near Bengkalis, Sumatra (T. Goulding & B. Dayrat); Cirebon , Java ( NNML) ; Mempawah, Borneo ( MZB) . Vietnam: Chilins, Vung Tau ( ANSP 330740 About ANSP ) . Philippines: Abatan R., Bohol ( MNHN) ; Ponson I., Camotes I. ( USNM 287982 About USNM ) .
Habitat and ecology. In Malaysia and Thailand this species was found on firm, peaty mud and in shallow pools with leaf litter, in deep shade at the landward side of the Rhizophora belt. In the Abatan River mangal ( Philippines) Lozouet & Plaziat (2008) recorded it on mud in puddles in the shaded inner reaches of the mangrove forest, where it was rare.
Remarks. This species is small, usually scarce and difficult to find in its shaded, muddy habitat among leaf litter. It appears to have been overlooked in previous studies of the mangrove-associated molluscs of Southeast Asia (e.g. it was not mentioned by von Martens 1897, Van Benthem Jutting 1956 or Brandt 1974).
Molecular samples were available only from the Andaman Sea and Gulf of Thailand coasts of the Malay Peninsula. These showed no phylogeographic structure, in contrast to some other shallow-water marine gastropods in which a genetic break persists between the Indian and Pacific Oceans in this vicinity, consistent with repeated isolation of the two ocean basins during sea-level fluctuations associated with Plio-Pleistocene glaciations ( Reid et al. 2006). This could suggest that expansion to the Andaman Sea from the western Pacific (where its sister species C. largillierti occurs) is relatively recent. No molecular samples from the Philippines were available, but this is an area of endemicity in the potamidid genus Cerithidea ( Reid et al. 2013) . Shells from the Philippines do not differ obviously from those from the rest of the range but, in view of the limited morphological distinction between the three species of the C. largillierti complex, the conspecificity of the population in the Philippines should be tested with molecular data.
For comparison between the three species of Cerithideopsis in the Indo-West Pacific, see Remarks on C. australiensis below and Table 2 View TABLE 2 .
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Cerithideopsis malayensis
Reid, David G. & Claremont, Martine 2014 |
Cerithideopsis largillierti
Lozouet, P. & Plaziat, J. - C. 2008: 57 |
Cerithidea (Cerithidea) largillierti
Hasegawa, K. 2000: 133 |
Cerithidea fortunei
Casto de Elera, R. P. 1896: 329 |