Scholvienia huancabambensis Strebel, 1910

Breure, Abraham S. H. & Avila, Valentin Mogollon, 2016, Synopsis of Central Andean Orthalicoid land snails (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora), excluding Bulimulidae, ZooKeys 588, pp. 1-199 : 63-64

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.588.7906

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EC4E9A71-F7B9-48D2-B245-F8DA8C0907FA

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AC08CB44-AC5B-630B-0629-FB74D4CB142E

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Scholvienia huancabambensis Strebel, 1910
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Stylommatophora Orthalicidae

Scholvienia huancabambensis Strebel, 1910 View in CoL Figs 65 H–I, 67

Scholvienia huancabambensis Strebel 1910: 26, pl. 2 figs 15, 19a.

Thaumastus huancabambensis ; Richardson 1995: 376 (references).

Thaumastus (Scholvienia) huancabambensis ; Ramírez et al. 2003: 282.

Type locality.

"Huancabamba, Peru".

Type material.

Not located.

Diagnosis.

Shell dark brown with a small, yellowish subsutural band, aperture with a dark brown band behind the lip

Dimensions.

Shell height 58.4, diameter 26.5 mm.

Distribution.

Peru, Dept. Pasco, Huancabamba.

Ecoregion.

Peruvian Yungas [NT0153].

Remarks.

Strebel described his species on the basis of material supplied by Rolle. There are several places with the name Huancabamba throughout Peru, but Rolle supplied more often material from the Chanchamayo region. Therefore it is assumed this material originated from (Tingo de) Huanacabamba in Dept. Pasco, which is at ca. 1870 m altitude in the Chanchamayo region. Strebel (1910: 26) remarked that, when the shells were held against bright backlight, one sees one, or more often two, spiral bands that are lighter than the groundcolour. This hints at a possible close relationship of this taxon with Scholvienia bifasciata (Philippi, 1845) or Scholvienia iserni (Philippi, 1867). The spiral banding visible in Strebel’s original figure (Fig. 65I) may be due to a growth anomaly.