Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species

Anatoma megascutula new species (Figures 18–20) Type material. Holotype (MNHN 24954: Fig. 18). 5.03 × 3.36 mm. Paratypes: Norfolk Ridge, 24.867 ˚S, 168.183 ˚E, 820–1220 m (MNHN 24959, 1: Fig. 19 A); Tongatapu, Tonga, 21.083 ˚S, 175.367 ˚W, 456–510 m (MNHN 24955, 1...

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Main Authors: Geiger, Daniel L., Marshall, Bruce A.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2012
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166691
https://zenodo.org/record/6166691
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6166691
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Mollusca
Gastropoda
Lepetellida
Anatomidae
Anatoma
Anatoma megascutula
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Mollusca
Gastropoda
Lepetellida
Anatomidae
Anatoma
Anatoma megascutula
Geiger, Daniel L.
Marshall, Bruce A.
Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Mollusca
Gastropoda
Lepetellida
Anatomidae
Anatoma
Anatoma megascutula
description Anatoma megascutula new species (Figures 18–20) Type material. Holotype (MNHN 24954: Fig. 18). 5.03 × 3.36 mm. Paratypes: Norfolk Ridge, 24.867 ˚S, 168.183 ˚E, 820–1220 m (MNHN 24959, 1: Fig. 19 A); Tongatapu, Tonga, 21.083 ˚S, 175.367 ˚W, 456–510 m (MNHN 24955, 1: Fig. 19 B); Fiji, 17.300 ˚S, 179.550 ˚W, 820–863 m (MNHN 24956, 1: Fig. 19 C). Type locality. E of Rapa, Austral Islands, French Polynesia, 27.618 ˚S, 144.257 ˚W, 800–850 m, 7 Nov. 2002, N. O. Alis (BENTHAUS stn CP 1891). Etymology. Mega-, Greek prefix for large; -scutula, Latin for saucer, shallow bowl, referring to the large size of this flat-shelled species. Noun in apposition. Description. Shell large (to 6.8 mm. Figs 18–19), trochiform depressed, discoidal. Protoconch of 0.75 whorl, flocculent sculpture, apertural varix not connected to embryonic cap, apertural margin shallow sinusoid. Teleoconch I of 0.75–0.875 whorl, approximately 20–30 axial cords, no spirals. Teleoconch II of 3.3 whorls, suture lightly impressed, no sutsel except for last quarter whorl with slight descent showing 1 spiral thread. Shoulder broadly convex, many barely perceptible, low axial cords becoming somewhat more noticeable with growth; first low spiral thread after 0.125–0.8 whorl, increasing in strength to become low to distinct spiral cords, approximately a dozen after first teleoconch I whorl, approximately 25 at apertural margin, forming indistinct thickenings at intersection with axials. Base without constriction below selenizone, continuously sloping with umbilicus; axial sculpture as on shoulder if usually somewhat stronger; approximately 22 spirals, distinct threads from selenizone onwards, changing at mid-base into steps. Umbilicus variable; open, bordered by carina, walls straight, smooth; additionally with distinct funiculus; closed by parietal callus [see Remarks]. Aperture oblong D-shaped. Selenizone at periphery, keels moderately strong, moderately elevated (usually low due to erosion); lunules distinct; slit open, margins converging. Radula (Fig. 20). Rachidian tooth trapezoid, apical cusp largest, 4–5 on each side in continuous arc. Lateral tooth 1 broadened, apical cusp slightly larger than 7–8 distal ones on cutting edge. Lateral teeth 3–4 similar, apical cusp largest, 3–5 along outer margin of cutting edge. Lateral tooth 4 reduced, apical cusp largest, three small ones on each side. Lateral tooth 5 enlarged by moderate broadening, apical cusp largest, about 12 small cusps along inner edge, approximately 8 not reaching apical cusp along outer edge. Inner marginal teeth with triangular tip, apical cusp largest, approximately 8 minor cusps on each side. Outer marginal teeth with indistinct separation of shaft and tip, tip with multiple fine bristles. Radular interlock of central field moderate. Operculum corneous, thin, round, multispiral, with central nucleus, covering approximately 70 % of aperture. Distribution. Western Pacific, 450–1650 m. Specimen records. Australia. N of Norfolk Island, Norfolk Ridge, 26.432 ˚S, 167.181 ˚E, 750–774 m (NMNZ M.301394, 7). Coral Sea. 21.317 ˚S, 157.967 ˚E, 970 m (MNHN, 1). New Caledonia. Grand Passage, 18.808 ˚S, 163.190 ˚E, 683 – 669 m (MNHN, 2). 18.900 ˚S, 163.317 ˚E, 525 m (MNHN, 1); Loyalty Basin, 20.983 ˚S, 166.983 ˚E, 1600–1640 m (MNHN, 3); 23.050 ˚S, 167.533 ˚E, 825–830 m (MNHN, 1); Loyalty Ridge, 24.767 ˚S, 170.117 ˚E, 850–855 m (MNHN, 1); Norfolk Ridge, 24.867 ˚S, 168.183 ˚E, 820–1220 m (MNHN, 1); Porthos Bank, Norfolk Ridge, 25.333 ˚S, 168.950 ˚E, 680–980 m (NORFOLK 2 DW 2068, MNHN, 1). New Zealand. Graveyard Seamount Complex, Chatham Rise, 42.766 ˚S, 179.989 ˚W, 757–875 m (NMNZ M.174849, 1). Fiji. 17.300 ˚S, 179.550 ˚W, 820–863 m (MNHN, 1). Tonga. 20.633 ˚S, 178.050 ˚W, 476–478 m (MNHN, 1). Tongatapu, 21.083 ˚S, 175.367 ˚W, 456–510 m (MNHN, 1). French Polynesia. E of Rapa, Austral Islands, 27.618 ˚S, 144.257 ˚W, 800–850 m (MNHN, 1). Remarks. Anatoma japonica (A. Adams, 1862) from the Indian Ocean and Indo-Pacific has a wider sutsel on whorl 2 (0.5–1 × vs. 0× width of selenizone), has stronger axial than spiral sculpture, and has a narrower selenizone. Anatoma maxima from the Indo-Malayan Archipelago has coarser sculpture (14 vs. 25 spirals on shoulder at apertural margin; distinct vs. indistinct axials) in which axials and spirals form points at intersections, a less rapid expansion of the whorls (1.4 vs. 1.8), and a wider sutsel at the apertural margin showing 2–3 spiral threads. Anatoma rainesi from the Eastern and Western Pacific has a sutsel on the early whorls, has strong axial cords on teleoconch I, and the selenizone is closer to the periphery of the shell. Anatoma rapaensis Geiger, 2008 from French Polynesia shares the overall discoidal shape with no sutsel, but the protoconch lacks an apertural varix, the teleoconch I is shorter (0.2 vs.> 0.75 whorl, the axial sculpture is more pronounced forming sharp points at the intersection with the spirals. Anatoma regia (Mestayer, 1916) from New Zealand has a narrower but still noticeable sutsel on early whorls, has a narrower selenizone, and its axial sculpture is stronger than the spiral sculpture. Anatoma disciformis (Golikov & Sirenko, 1980) from the boreal north Pacific has an overall taller shell, a protoconch with strong flocculent sculpture, and much stronger axial cords. Anatoma tenuis (Jeffreys, 1877) from the temperate north Atlantic has a shorter teleoconch I (0.4 vs. 0.75 whorl), and has stronger axial than spiral sculpture. The number of axials on teleoconch I is difficult to count due to erosion of the early parts of the whorl. The condition of the umbilicus is quite variable in the limited number of specimens available. The more open condition is found in smaller specimens, while the callus closing the umbilicus is encountered in the largest specimens, which suggest an ontogenetic change. Other conchological characters all suggest that the specimens belong to a single species. The radula of A. megascutula shows an unusual arrangement in the central field. Lateral teeth 1–3 are not similar to one another, lateral tooth 1 is much broadened, and lateral tooth 4 is not as reduced as in most other species. : Published as part of Geiger, Daniel L. & Marshall, Bruce A., 2012, New species of Scissurellidae, Anatomidae, and Larocheidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Vetigastropoda) from New Zealand and beyond, pp. 1-33 in Zootaxa 3344 on pages 24-26, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.281437
format Text
author Geiger, Daniel L.
Marshall, Bruce A.
author_facet Geiger, Daniel L.
Marshall, Bruce A.
author_sort Geiger, Daniel L.
title Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species
title_short Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species
title_full Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species
title_fullStr Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species
title_full_unstemmed Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species
title_sort anatoma megascutula geiger & marshall, 2012, new species
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2012
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166691
https://zenodo.org/record/6166691
long_lat ENVELOPE(7.990,7.990,63.065,63.065)
ENVELOPE(15.539,15.539,69.033,69.033)
ENVELOPE(-62.900,-62.900,-64.300,-64.300)
geographic Austral
Pacific
Indian
New Zealand
Tonga
Rapa
Geiger
geographic_facet Austral
Pacific
Indian
New Zealand
Tonga
Rapa
Geiger
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6166691 2023-05-15T17:37:37+02:00 Anatoma megascutula Geiger & Marshall, 2012, new species Geiger, Daniel L. Marshall, Bruce A. 2012 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166691 https://zenodo.org/record/6166691 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/2C4EDD54A327FFE3FF8FFF9661441F76 http://zoobank.org/293824D9-E73D-4D75-8058-1786E951DB23 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281437 http://publication.plazi.org/id/2C4EDD54A327FFE3FF8FFF9661441F76 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281453 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281454 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281455 http://zoobank.org/293824D9-E73D-4D75-8058-1786E951DB23 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166692 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Mollusca Gastropoda Lepetellida Anatomidae Anatoma Anatoma megascutula article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2012 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166691 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281437 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281453 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281454 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.281455 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166692 2022-04-01T11:20:55Z Anatoma megascutula new species (Figures 18–20) Type material. Holotype (MNHN 24954: Fig. 18). 5.03 × 3.36 mm. Paratypes: Norfolk Ridge, 24.867 ˚S, 168.183 ˚E, 820–1220 m (MNHN 24959, 1: Fig. 19 A); Tongatapu, Tonga, 21.083 ˚S, 175.367 ˚W, 456–510 m (MNHN 24955, 1: Fig. 19 B); Fiji, 17.300 ˚S, 179.550 ˚W, 820–863 m (MNHN 24956, 1: Fig. 19 C). Type locality. E of Rapa, Austral Islands, French Polynesia, 27.618 ˚S, 144.257 ˚W, 800–850 m, 7 Nov. 2002, N. O. Alis (BENTHAUS stn CP 1891). Etymology. Mega-, Greek prefix for large; -scutula, Latin for saucer, shallow bowl, referring to the large size of this flat-shelled species. Noun in apposition. Description. Shell large (to 6.8 mm. Figs 18–19), trochiform depressed, discoidal. Protoconch of 0.75 whorl, flocculent sculpture, apertural varix not connected to embryonic cap, apertural margin shallow sinusoid. Teleoconch I of 0.75–0.875 whorl, approximately 20–30 axial cords, no spirals. Teleoconch II of 3.3 whorls, suture lightly impressed, no sutsel except for last quarter whorl with slight descent showing 1 spiral thread. Shoulder broadly convex, many barely perceptible, low axial cords becoming somewhat more noticeable with growth; first low spiral thread after 0.125–0.8 whorl, increasing in strength to become low to distinct spiral cords, approximately a dozen after first teleoconch I whorl, approximately 25 at apertural margin, forming indistinct thickenings at intersection with axials. Base without constriction below selenizone, continuously sloping with umbilicus; axial sculpture as on shoulder if usually somewhat stronger; approximately 22 spirals, distinct threads from selenizone onwards, changing at mid-base into steps. Umbilicus variable; open, bordered by carina, walls straight, smooth; additionally with distinct funiculus; closed by parietal callus [see Remarks]. Aperture oblong D-shaped. Selenizone at periphery, keels moderately strong, moderately elevated (usually low due to erosion); lunules distinct; slit open, margins converging. Radula (Fig. 20). Rachidian tooth trapezoid, apical cusp largest, 4–5 on each side in continuous arc. Lateral tooth 1 broadened, apical cusp slightly larger than 7–8 distal ones on cutting edge. Lateral teeth 3–4 similar, apical cusp largest, 3–5 along outer margin of cutting edge. Lateral tooth 4 reduced, apical cusp largest, three small ones on each side. Lateral tooth 5 enlarged by moderate broadening, apical cusp largest, about 12 small cusps along inner edge, approximately 8 not reaching apical cusp along outer edge. Inner marginal teeth with triangular tip, apical cusp largest, approximately 8 minor cusps on each side. Outer marginal teeth with indistinct separation of shaft and tip, tip with multiple fine bristles. Radular interlock of central field moderate. Operculum corneous, thin, round, multispiral, with central nucleus, covering approximately 70 % of aperture. Distribution. Western Pacific, 450–1650 m. Specimen records. Australia. N of Norfolk Island, Norfolk Ridge, 26.432 ˚S, 167.181 ˚E, 750–774 m (NMNZ M.301394, 7). Coral Sea. 21.317 ˚S, 157.967 ˚E, 970 m (MNHN, 1). New Caledonia. Grand Passage, 18.808 ˚S, 163.190 ˚E, 683 – 669 m (MNHN, 2). 18.900 ˚S, 163.317 ˚E, 525 m (MNHN, 1); Loyalty Basin, 20.983 ˚S, 166.983 ˚E, 1600–1640 m (MNHN, 3); 23.050 ˚S, 167.533 ˚E, 825–830 m (MNHN, 1); Loyalty Ridge, 24.767 ˚S, 170.117 ˚E, 850–855 m (MNHN, 1); Norfolk Ridge, 24.867 ˚S, 168.183 ˚E, 820–1220 m (MNHN, 1); Porthos Bank, Norfolk Ridge, 25.333 ˚S, 168.950 ˚E, 680–980 m (NORFOLK 2 DW 2068, MNHN, 1). New Zealand. Graveyard Seamount Complex, Chatham Rise, 42.766 ˚S, 179.989 ˚W, 757–875 m (NMNZ M.174849, 1). Fiji. 17.300 ˚S, 179.550 ˚W, 820–863 m (MNHN, 1). Tonga. 20.633 ˚S, 178.050 ˚W, 476–478 m (MNHN, 1). Tongatapu, 21.083 ˚S, 175.367 ˚W, 456–510 m (MNHN, 1). French Polynesia. E of Rapa, Austral Islands, 27.618 ˚S, 144.257 ˚W, 800–850 m (MNHN, 1). Remarks. Anatoma japonica (A. Adams, 1862) from the Indian Ocean and Indo-Pacific has a wider sutsel on whorl 2 (0.5–1 × vs. 0× width of selenizone), has stronger axial than spiral sculpture, and has a narrower selenizone. Anatoma maxima from the Indo-Malayan Archipelago has coarser sculpture (14 vs. 25 spirals on shoulder at apertural margin; distinct vs. indistinct axials) in which axials and spirals form points at intersections, a less rapid expansion of the whorls (1.4 vs. 1.8), and a wider sutsel at the apertural margin showing 2–3 spiral threads. Anatoma rainesi from the Eastern and Western Pacific has a sutsel on the early whorls, has strong axial cords on teleoconch I, and the selenizone is closer to the periphery of the shell. Anatoma rapaensis Geiger, 2008 from French Polynesia shares the overall discoidal shape with no sutsel, but the protoconch lacks an apertural varix, the teleoconch I is shorter (0.2 vs.> 0.75 whorl, the axial sculpture is more pronounced forming sharp points at the intersection with the spirals. Anatoma regia (Mestayer, 1916) from New Zealand has a narrower but still noticeable sutsel on early whorls, has a narrower selenizone, and its axial sculpture is stronger than the spiral sculpture. Anatoma disciformis (Golikov & Sirenko, 1980) from the boreal north Pacific has an overall taller shell, a protoconch with strong flocculent sculpture, and much stronger axial cords. Anatoma tenuis (Jeffreys, 1877) from the temperate north Atlantic has a shorter teleoconch I (0.4 vs. 0.75 whorl), and has stronger axial than spiral sculpture. The number of axials on teleoconch I is difficult to count due to erosion of the early parts of the whorl. The condition of the umbilicus is quite variable in the limited number of specimens available. The more open condition is found in smaller specimens, while the callus closing the umbilicus is encountered in the largest specimens, which suggest an ontogenetic change. Other conchological characters all suggest that the specimens belong to a single species. The radula of A. megascutula shows an unusual arrangement in the central field. Lateral teeth 1–3 are not similar to one another, lateral tooth 1 is much broadened, and lateral tooth 4 is not as reduced as in most other species. : Published as part of Geiger, Daniel L. & Marshall, Bruce A., 2012, New species of Scissurellidae, Anatomidae, and Larocheidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Vetigastropoda) from New Zealand and beyond, pp. 1-33 in Zootaxa 3344 on pages 24-26, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.281437 Text North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Austral Pacific Indian New Zealand Tonga ENVELOPE(7.990,7.990,63.065,63.065) Rapa ENVELOPE(15.539,15.539,69.033,69.033) Geiger ENVELOPE(-62.900,-62.900,-64.300,-64.300)