Granulifusus discrepans (Kuroda & Habe, 1961 )

Kantor, Yuri I., Fedosov, Alexander E., Snyder, Martin Avery & Bouchet, Philippe, 2018, Pseudolatirus Bellardi, 1884 revisited, with the description of two new genera and five new species (Neogastropoda: Fasciolariidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 433, pp. 1-57 : 17-20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2018.433

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F4E9A74F-FAAE-4CE4-A959-D86C9633882D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793705

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C84287C4-0C3A-EB68-FE42-22A918817B10

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Granulifusus discrepans (Kuroda & Habe, 1961 )
status

 

Granulifusus discrepans (Kuroda & Habe, 1961) View in CoL

Figs 3 View Fig A–E, 4A

Pseudolatirus discrepans Azuma, 1960: 45 View in CoL (ex Kuroda MS). nomen nudum.

Pseudolatirus discrepans View in CoL – Kuroda & Habe in Habe 1961: 66, pl. 33, fig. 6. — Habe 1962: 102, pl. 33, fig. 6. — Higo, Callomon & Gotō 2001: 87, fig. G3002 (holotype illustrated). — Mallard & Robin 2017: 152.

Granulifusus discrepans View in CoL – Poppe 2008: pl. 343, fig. 1.

Molecular diagnosis

A molecular diagnosis is given in Table 2 View Table 2 .

Type material

Holotype

JAPAN: off Cape Ashizuri , southwestern Shikoku ( NSMT Mo 40377) (not seen).

Sequenced material

SOLOMON SEA: 1 lv, MADEEP, stn CP4337, SE Ainto Bay, New Britain, 06°07’ S, 149°17’ E, 287– 447 m (MNHN IM-2013-46327).

PHILIPPINES: AURORA 2007, 1 lv, stn CP2657, 16°01′ N, 121°51′ E, 342–358 m ( MNHN IM-2007- 34604); 2 lv, stn CP2673, 15°01′ N, 121°45′ E, 431–493 m ( MNHN IM-2007-34583, MNHN IM-2007- 34488); 2 lv, stn CP2732, 15°27′ N, 121°36′ E, 556 m ( MNHN IM-2007-34580, MNHN IM-2007-34581).

Other examined material

PAPUA NEW GUINEA: 1 lv, PAPUA NIUGINI, stn CP3949, 5°12′ S, 145°51′ E, 380–407 m (MHNH 2013-15374, not sequenced); 1 lv, stn CP4023, 5°22′ S; 145°48′ E, 340–385 m ( MNHN IM-2013-9777, not sequenced).

Description

Shell large, with multispiral protoconch of 2.75 conical, smooth, convex, grayish whorls, last ¼ whorl with 6–7 rounded axial riblets progressing in strength, protoconch/teleoconch boundary without varix, defined by appearance of spiral sculpture. Protoconch diameter 960 µm, exposed height 890 µm ( Fig. 3E View Fig ). Teleoconch with regularly convex whorls, upper ones slightly angulated, with long slightly sinuous to nearly straight siphonal canal; aperture in young specimens with 3–4 plicae, in adult with a single columellar plica, delimitating siphonal canal, and sometimes with indistinct parietal tooth. Axial sculpture of distinct axial ribs, 7–8 per whorl on upper whorls, obsolete on posterior whorls in shells over 50 mm. Spiral sculpture of 2–3 raised cords on periphery of upper whorls and numerous thin riblets of even strength. On posterior whorls, cords obsolete and some riblets more pronounced. Background colour tan, with darker brown spiral bands along suture.

Radula (MNHN IM-2013-46327, SL 18.2 mm, Fig. 4A View Fig ) 1.83 mm in length (32% of AL without canal), of 75 transverse rows of teeth, of which 35 nascent. Radula narrow, distance between outer edges of lateral teeth about 65 µm (1.12% of AL). Lateral teeth medium broad, arcuate, with attenuated outer anterior corner, producing short ‘handle’. Lateral teeth with five closely spaced, slightly curved cusps similar in length, small outermost cusp (seen on lower right lateral tooth on Fig. 4A View Fig ), and much smaller but distinct innermost cusp. Central tooth small, very narrow, trapezoid, with three subequal cusps. Narrow but distinct transverse folds of radular membrane situated serially between rows of lateral teeth. Couto (2016: fig. 58) illustrated the radula of an adult specimen (SL 66 mm). The lateral teeth were relatively much broader, with 6 main cusps nearly identical in size and an additional innermost cusp. The radula had a similar width (1.1% of AL, measurements taken from photo) to the one studied herein; the differences in teeth morphology can possibly be explained by ontogenetic variability.

Distribution

From Japan throughout the East China Sea to the Philippines and the Solomons.

Remarks

This is the largest species of Granulifusus , which attains a shell length over 90 mm (http://www.conchology.be, last accessed 6 Mar. 2017). Due to the ontogenic change in sculpture pattern, the shell morphology differs from that in other Recent members of the genus, but the radula is similar. Young specimens bear a superficial resemblance to specimens of the Miocene species Pseudolatirus bilineatus of similar size (compare Fig. 3C, G View Fig with Fig. 3 View Fig D’, F’).

NSMT

National Science Museum (Natural History)

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Neogastropoda

Family

Fasciolariidae

SubFamily

Fusininae

Genus

Granulifusus

Loc

Granulifusus discrepans (Kuroda & Habe, 1961 )

Kantor, Yuri I., Fedosov, Alexander E., Snyder, Martin Avery & Bouchet, Philippe 2018
2018
Loc

Pseudolatirus discrepans

Mallard D. & Robin A. 2017: 152
Higo S. & Callomon P. & Goto Y. 2001: 87
Habe T. 1962: 102
Habe T. 1961: 66
1961
Loc

Pseudolatirus discrepans

Azuma M. 1960: 45
1960
Loc

Granulifusus discrepans

Poppe 2008 : pl. 343, fig. 1
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