Sermyla kupaensis, Lentge-MAAss & Neiber & Gimnich & Glaubrecht, 2021

Lentge-MAAss, Nora, Neiber, Marco T., Gimnich, France & Glaubrecht, Matthias, 2021, Evolutionary systematics of the viviparous gastropod Sermyla (Gastropoda: Cerithioidea: Thiaridae), with the description of a new species, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 192 (3), pp. 736-762 : 753-754

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa120

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:14715EED-3C76-4F47-AD05-9DE6F6F8127D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308576

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/072C87E5-FFE4-FFBC-FC42-A726C8552894

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sermyla kupaensis
status

sp. nov.

SERMYLA KUPAENSIS View in CoL SP. NOV.

( FIGS 1P–T View Figure 1 , 4 View Figure 4 , 11A, B View Figure 11 )

Zoobank registration: urn: lsid: zoobank. org:act: 14715EED-3C76-4F47-AD05-9DE6F6F8127D

Etymology: For the type locality, the township of Kupa in south-western Sulawesi.

Type material: Holotype, Indonesia, Sulawesi, Kupa, stream E of road Makassar-Parepare , 4°7.567´S 119°37.426´E ( MZB Gst. 12.191 w) GoogleMaps ; 16 paratypes from the type locality ( ZMB 190982) ; 88 paratypes from the type locality ( ZMB 191388 w) ; 80 paratypes from the type locality ( MZB Gst. 12.192 w) ; five paratypes from the type locality ( ZMH 94335 w) .

Additional material examined: Indonesia: Sulawesi: Makassar, 5°8′ S 119°25′ E ( ZMB 210079, 210082). GoogleMaps

Diagnosis: Shell as in S. riquetii . Veliger larvae (> 1000) are released from the subhaemocoelic brood pouch of the female.

Description

Shell ( Fig. 1P–T View Figure 1 ): The shell of S. kupaensis cannot be distinguished from that of S. riquetii .

Reproduction: Female S. kupaensis individuals were found to contain only veliger larvae (> 1000) in their brood pouches, i.e. the species has an ovoviviparous reproductive strategy.

Juvenile shell ( Fig. 5B View Figure 5 ): Since we did not observe any shelled juveniles in the brood pouch, we display the image of a veliger larvae with an already clearly visible operculum. We are not able to make any further statements concerning the juvenile shell of S. kupaensis .

Radula ( Fig. 11A, B View Figure 11 ): Typical, as in other Thiaridae (see: Glaubrecht et al., 2009). Rachidian with a subtriangular central denticle with broadly rounded tip and three smaller denticles on either side of central denticle, also triangular in shape with a rounded tip. Central denticles of lateralia broader and rounder than seen in other thiarids, flanked by two relatively large denticles forming a pronounced wing-shaped plate on the inner side projecting towards the central teeth. Marginal teeth with six to seven denticles.

Ecology: This species lives in water bodies above tidal influence, although empty shells may be washed downstream. Near Kupa it was found exclusively at elevations of several dozen metres above the sea level on an elevated plateau with muddy pools of stagnant water adjacent to the river course, but not in the running stream itself. The species seems to prefer these pools with stagnant water over running water, apparently due to the richer muddy substrate it lives in and feeds from.

Distribution: It is known only from the type locality. Shells found in Makassar further south on Sulawesi along the same coast line are probably also attributable to this species.

Remarks

Shells of S. kupaensis cannot be distinguished from S. riquetii but are, on average, slightly larger than samples from Thailand, Vietnam and Bali, for which an euviviparous reproductive strategy could be confirmed here. The different reproductive strategy, i.e. ovoviviparity, and the divergent mitochondrial haplotypes, suggest that the specimens from Sulawesi represent a distinct evolutionary lineage. Specimens of S. carbonata from Australia, which has a euviviparous reproductive strategy, usually have a higher spire than S. kupaensis . Moreover, some populations of S. carbonata can readily be distinguished by their weaker shell sculpture.

ZMB

Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Zoological Collections)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Lepidoptera

SuperFamily

Cerithioidea

Family

Thiaridae

Genus

Sermyla

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