Craspedochiton, Shuttleworth, 1853
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4772.3.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F546A223-59A0-4DA1-9102-AD7BC482105F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3844023 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D21D39-FF93-397B-FF7B-FF2AFF15DFD7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Craspedochiton |
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Craspedochiton View in CoL sp.
( Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 )
Craspedochiton (Notoplax) involutus ; Selli 1973, p. 257, pl. 11, figs 6–7.
Material examined. Eritrea, Massawa North (Abd-el-Cader): 2 valves (1 intermediate, width 3.3 mm, and 1 tail, width 3.7 mm), described and illustrated by Selli, 1973 ( Fig. 21A View FIGURE 21 , not seen at MGGC) . Egypt, Hurghada : St. 14bis: 1 intermediate valve, width 1,4 mm ( Figs 21 View FIGURE 21 B–C) ( MZB 50561) ; St. 16: 1 intermediate valve, width 3 mm ( Figs 21 View FIGURE 21 D–E) ( MZB 50562) .
Remarks. Selli (1973) recorded Craspedochiton from Massawa based on one intermediate and one posterior valve ( Fig. 21A View FIGURE 21 ). The attribution of this material to Craspedochiton (Notoplax) involutus was based on the similarity of the shape of the valves figured by Pilsbry (1893, vol. XV: 35, pl. 1, figs 27–35). Craspedochiton involutus was synonymised with C. productus (Carpenter in Pilsbry, 1892) by Kaas (1989), a species characterised by having intermediate and tail valves of trapezoidal shape. These valves of Craspedochiton productus differ significantly from those figured by Selli (compare with the valves of a specimen of C. productus from S. Africa figured by Dell’Angelo et al. 2014: figs 8A–F). A search for Selli’s (1973) material in MGGC was unsuccessful and we consider that this material is probably lost. We suspect that the intermediate valve (worn and without any diagnostic feature) might not belong to Craspedochiton . The only extant species of Craspedochiton present in the Red Sea is C. laqueatus ( Sowerby, 1842) ( Strack 1993; Anseeuw & Terryn 2004), a widespread Indo-Pacific species known from the northern Red Sea to the Philippines, whose type material was recently figured by Dell’Angelo et al. (2010a: figs 10A–F, 12M–Q). The valves figured by Selli (1973) differ from those of C. laqueatus in the shape of the valves and the position of the mucro (“somewhat anteriorly” in C. laqueatus, Strack 1993 vs much more posteriorly in in Selli’s figures).
We have collected two small and eroded intermediate fossil valves ( Figs 21 View FIGURE 21 B–E), without any diagnostic feature, of which only the presence of large granules could justify the attribution to the genus Craspedochiton .
For the reasons discussed above, and considering that we could not find the specimens figured by Selli in MGGC, species identification for the valves here discussed is impossible. Craspedochiton species from the Indian Ocean are a difficult group to understand, due to scarcity of the material available, the high variability of the species, and the often inadequate original description (see discussions by Kaas (1979) and Schwabe & Els (2019) on C. isipingoensis ( Sykes, 1901) , by Schwabe (2006) on C. tetrica (Carpenter in Pilsbry, 1893)) ..
Distribution. Late Pleistocene: Eritrea, Massawa North (Abd-el-Cader); Egypt (Hurghada: Selli 1973; this study).
MZB |
Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense |
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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Loricata |
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Acanthochitonina |
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