Cremnoconchus dwarakii, Reid & Aravind & Madhyastha, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2012.00875.x |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038A87FB-190A-0144-988F-FCF2E17AF8A9 |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Cremnoconchus dwarakii |
status |
sp. nov. |
CREMNOCONCHUS DWARAKII View in CoL SP. NOV.
( FIGS 4A View Figure 4 , 5C, D, 11BB–EE, 15E–J, 16A, B, F)
Cremnoconchus syhadrensis View in CoL – Williams et al., 2003: 63 (not Blanford, 1863).
Cremnoconchus dwaraki Madhyastha, 2008 : The Hindu 29 June 2008 (as Cremenoconchus; nomen nudum).
Taxonomic history: This species was misidentified by Williams et al. (2003) as C. syhadrensis View in CoL , because the two share strong spiral ribs on the shell.
Types: Holotype ZSI / WGRS /IR.INV-2323 (Fig. 11 BB, CC); four paratypes ZSI / WGRS /IR.INV-2324, 2325 (Fig. 11DD); Hulikal Ghat , Udupi District, Karnataka, India (13.71742°N, 74.99445°E). GoogleMaps
Etymology: Named after Acharya Dwarakanth, of the Indian Naturalist Club. He was known for his knowledge of animals and plants of Karnataka and, as secretary of the club, supported many research activities and encouraged the younger generation in birding and nature conservation. The name dwarakii is derived from that of the legendary city of Dwaraka in Western Gujarat, the dwelling place of Lord Krishna and the capital of the Yadus who ruled the Anarta Kingdom during the Mahabaratha period.
Diagnosis: Shell turbinate; 8–11 ribs (including base); pseudumbilicus narrow, perforated; surface dull, with fine strong microstriae. Operculum weakly calcified, no internal ridge. Penis with slight glandular flange, slender filament. Western Karnataka State. COI: GenBank AJ 488605 View Materials .
Shell ( Figs 4A View Figure 4 , 11BB–EE): Shell H 6.0– 9.2 mm. Shape ( Table 1) turbinate; whorls slightly angled at shoul- der; suture impressed; apex slightly eroded; base slightly swollen. Columella narrow. Pseudumbilicus narrow, 0.2–0.7 mm, with sharply angled margin, perforated. Spire whorls with three strong ribs. Last whorl with 8–11 strong ribs, of which largest are sutural rib (outlining flattened sutural ramp, which may also bear an additional riblet) and rib close to pseudumbilicus. Surface dull, covered by fine, strong microstriae, intersecting with fine growth lines to give minutely lamellose effect ( Fig. 4A View Figure 4 ). Protoconch ( Fig. 16F View Figure 16 ) 1.4 whorls; diameter 0.70 mm; diameter of first whorl 0.45 mm (N = 1). Colour: usually orangebrown, darker brown on spire and with indistinct darker band at suture and outlining pseudumbilicus; occasionally all rib interspaces are dark brown, but fading on last whorl; aperture yellow-brown, columella and pseudumbilicus purple-brown, exterior bands showing through.
Animal: Head, tentacles, sides of foot, and body dark grey to black; tip of snout pale. Gills: up to 36 leaflets; grey to black. Operculum ( Table 1; Fig. 5C, D): opercular ratio 0.385 –0.511; weakly calcified, no internal ridge, slightly concave. Penis (Fig. 15E–I): unpigmented; base wrinkled, tapering to rounded tip; with triangular glandular pad on reverse side, slightly projecting anterolaterally; invagination about half length of base in ethanol-fixed specimens; filament slender, not protruding in ethanol-fixed specimens. Pallial oviduct (Fig. 15J): as for genus. One pallial oviduct contained two eggs 0.40 mm in diameter (ethanol fixed), one at two-cell embryo stage.
Radula ( Fig. 16A, B View Figure 16 ): Relative radula length 0.82– 1.25. Rachidian: length/width 1.23; 5 cusps (+ 1 outer denticle on either side). Lateral: 5 cusps (+ 1 inner denticle). Inner marginal: 6 cusps. Outer marginal: 3–5 cusps. Major cusp of each of 5 central teeth leaf-shaped with narrowly rounded or slightly papillose tip; other cusps pointed.
Range ( Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ): Western Karnataka State, Hulikal Ghat (95 km north-northeast of Mangalore). Records (Supporting Table S1): Karnataka State: Hulikal Ghat, Udupi District (ZSI/WGRS/IR.INV-2323, 2324, 2325; BMNH 20120036).
Habitat and ecology: On mossy rocks dampened by spray from rushing stream; shaded by trees (Fig. 2B). Altitude 475 m.
Remarks: This species is distinguished from all others in Karnataka by the strong ribs of the shell ( Table 4). These create a superficial resemblance to ribbed forms of C. syhadrensis from Maharashtra ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ), but in those the ribs are restricted to the upper surface (i.e. above the periphery), the pseudumbilicus is usually wide and the columella is broad; there are also differences in the penes of these two species (Table 3, Fig. 6A, B, D–G View Figure 6 , 15E–I).
At Hulikal Ghat this species was found with C. cingulatus (see Remarks on that species).
WGRS |
Western Ghat Regional Station of the Zoological Survey of India at Calicut |
BB |
Buffalo Bill Museum |
CC |
CSIRO Canberra Rhizobium Collection |
AJ |
Central Research Laboratories |
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.
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Cremnoconchus dwarakii
Reid, David G., Aravind, Neelavara Ananthram & Madhyastha, Neelavara Ananthram 2013 |
Cremnoconchus syhadrensis
Williams ST & Reid DG & Littlewood DTJ 2003: 63 |