Fastosarion katatonos, Hyman & Köhler, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1163/18759866-20191416 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8366909 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F32A40-FF90-B14C-51BB-9F69F561FA29 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Fastosarion katatonos |
status |
sp. nov. |
Fastosarion katatonos View in CoL View at ENA sp. nov.
Figs. 18 View FIGURE 18 , 19F View FIGURE 19 , 26 View FIGURE 26
Etymology
From katatonos (Greek: broader than high), referring to the wide aperture of the shell; noun in apposition.
Material examined
Types: Holotype: QM MO85837 ( Rockhampton , c. 6km NE at Mt Archer, nr base, 23° 20' 40" S, 150° 34' 50" E, coll. 25 Jul 1994, J. Stanisic, D. Potter, G. Ingram, C. Eddie). GoogleMaps
Paratypes: QM MO54515 (same data as holotype) GoogleMaps .
Non-type material: See table 1 View TABLE 1 .
Diagnosis
External morphology: Shell (fig. 19F) small to medium-sized (8.8–12.3 mm), pale golden, 3.0–3.9 whorls, subglobose with a low spire, last whorl very large. Body 25 mm long, colour (in ethanol) beige, darker on tail with a pale keel. Mantle lobes and shell lappets large, lappets with dark streaks, right lappet with a row of five warts at base and few smaller pustules scattered randomly, left lappet with eight warts arranged in two rows.
Genital anatomy: Genitalia (fig. 26) with moderately short vagina; bursa copulatrix short; duct swollen, bursa spherical. Penis moderately large, mostly cylindrical, slender, swollen proximally, inner penial wall sculptured with very fine transverse lamellae, becoming coarser proximally; penis interior with two longitudinal pilasters, major pilaster branches distally, then proximally becomes swollen and irregular; 60% of penis contained in penial tunica. Epiphallus approx. same length as penis, entering through simple pore; epiphallus 2 equal in length to epiphallus 1; epiphallic caecum moderate length, terminating with a swollen region consisting of multiple small outpocketings; flagellum short, slender.
Remarks
Fastosarion katatonos (referred to above as ‘ Helicarionidae sp. Mt Archer’) is found in vine thickets at Mt Archer (northeast of Rockhampton) and also further to the northeast at Hidden Valley, near Yeppoon (fig. 18). It has been previously considered to be part of F. pustulosus ( Stanisic et al., 2010) , and shares with this species a very similar shell and the presence of warts and dark streaks on the shell lappets. However, F. katatonos has a slightly lower spire and more numerous warts on the shell lappets, and anatomically the two species can be very easily distinguished by their very different penial anatomy and the shape of the epiphallic caecum.
This species forms the sister taxon to F. minerva , F. deensis and F. rowani in our phylogenetic analysis. It shares some similarities with these species, in particular the subglobose shell with a relatively high whorl count and the presence of rows of warts on its shell lappets, but is smaller in size with a unique genital anatomy. This species is set apart by its distinctive epiphallic caecum shape and short flagellum, its proximally swollen penis with fine transverse lamellae, equal length epiphallus arms and its short bursa copulatrix with a swollen duct.
QM |
Queensland Museum |
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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