Simulamerelina lepteseiras, Amati & Giulio & Oliverio, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/zoosystema2023v45a25 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:054D312B-C54B-459D-8A47-AC9CB681D7D4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10455639 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7E3425DF-8342-4367-A382-AB0FA931D123 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:7E3425DF-8342-4367-A382-AB0FA931D123 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Simulamerelina lepteseiras |
status |
sp. nov. |
Simulamerelina lepteseiras n. sp.
( Figs 41 View FIG ; 52B View FIG ; 53R View FIG ; Tables 7 View TABLE ; 8 View TABLE ; 9 View TABLE )
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:7E3425DF-8342-4367-A382-AB0FA931D123
TYPE MATERIAL. — Holotype. Tuamotu • dd (height 1.47 mm, width 0.88 mm, Figs 41 View FIG ; 53R View FIG ); Moruroa ; 21°46’37”S, 138°53’31”W; beached; on the sea-line; MNHN-IM-2000-38727 . GoogleMaps
TYPE LOCALITY. — Tuamotu. Moruroa, 21°46’37”S, 138°53’31”W; on the sea-line.
OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Tuamotu • 1 dd (photograph only); Ana’a, Tukuhora; 17°20’41”S, 145°31’26”W; 1-2 m; lagoon; coll. JL GoogleMaps • 1 dd (photograph only); Rangiroa, Tiputa; 14°58’15”S, 147°37’33”W; beached; coll. JL. GoogleMaps
Gambier • 1 dd (photograph only);Totegegi; 23°5’2”S, 134°52’58”W; 1-2 m; beached sediment; coll. JL. GoogleMaps
DISTRIBUTION AND SYMPATRY. — Simulamerelina lepteseiras n. sp. is known from the South Pacific Ocean in the Tuamotu (Moruroa, Rangiroa, Ana’a) and Gambier ( Fig. 52B View FIG ).
S. lepteseiras n. sp. is sympatric with S. australes n. sp. and S. gracilis n. sp. in the Tuamotu (Moruroa) ( Table 9 View TABLE ).
ETYMOLOGY. — For the thin basal cords, from the Greek ΛΕΠΤά (meaning thin), and σΕΙΡάς (meaning cords).
DIAGNOSIS. — Simulamerelina with small shell for the genus (<1.50 mm), pupoid, moderately robust. Protoconch paucispiral. Teleoconch with axial and spiral sculpture of the same strength. Axial ribs interrupted before reaching the base. Nine spiral cordlets on last whorl, four above the aperture, the second cordlet strongest, acute. Entire surface covered by dense evenly spaced spiral threads. Start of 3 spiral cordlets after protoconch-teleoconch boundary. Colouration uniform white.
DESCRIPTION OF HOLOTYPE
Shell ( Figs 41 View FIG A-C, F; 53R)
Small for the genus, height 1.47 mm, width 0.88 mm height/ width ratio 1.67, elongate ovate.
Protoconch ( Fig. 41D, E, G View FIG )
Paucispiral with barely twisted nucleus, of 1.35 convex whorls, height 0.237 mm, nucleus diameter 0.087 mm, first half whorl diameter 0.175 mm, maximum diameter 0.275 mm. Sculpture of one adapical spiral keel, and sparse microgranules on the whole surface. Protoconch-teleoconch boundary well marked.
Teleoconch
Of 2.9 convex whorls, suture scarcely impressed. Axial sculpture on the last whorl of 12 orthocline or slightly opisthocline ribs, thinner than the interspaces and sharply interrupted before reaching the base. Spiral sculpture of 9 equidistant spiral cordlets on the last whorl, 4 above the aperture, of same strength as axials, cordlet II acute; cordlets II, III, IV starting immediately after protoconch-teleoconch boundary.Subsutural cordlet I very weak, gradually forming after one whorl. Basal cordlets weaker and with wide interspaces. Microsculpture ( Fig. 41H View FIG ) of dense spiral threads, more marked and spaced in the interspaces. Umbilical fissure absent. Aperture oval, height 0.65 mm, height/aperture height ratio 2.26, peristome duplicated, outer lip broad, internally smooth, externally thickened by a strong opisthocline and flexuose varix.
Colour
Colouration uniform white.
Operculum and soft parts
Unknown.
VARIABILITY
Minimum and maximum dimensions: height 1.4-1.5 mm, width 0.68-0.86 mm. Number of spiral cords on last whorls 8-9 (4 above aperture) (See Table 8 View TABLE and Appendix 19).
REMARKS Simulamerelina novemstriata Faber & Moolenbeek, 2004 from the Cayman Islands ( Faber & Moolenbeek 2004: 61, 62, fig. 2), differs from S. lepteseiras n. sp. in its more slender shell, with a higher height/width ratio (1.88 vs 1.67-1.77 in S. lepteseiras n. sp.); the two spiral cordlets starting after the protoconch-teleoconch boundary vs three in S. lepteseiras n. sp.; the broader and closer basal spiral cordlets; the more numerous axial ribs (17 vs 12 in S. lepteseiras n. sp.); the proportionally smaller aperture (height/ aperture height ratio 2.77 vs 2.20-2.26 in S. lepteseiras n. sp.). See under S. micrometrica n. sp. for detailed comparison.
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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