Diaphana hiemalis ( Couthouy, 1839 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3774.6.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1C4C791C-09D7-4711-9D05-1ABE3DB24916 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6128200 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/252DDC3C-3520-680F-7D8B-FE4AFB945B61 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Diaphana hiemalis ( Couthouy, 1839 ) |
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Diaphana hiemalis ( Couthouy, 1839) View in CoL
( Figs 3 View FIGURE 3 A–F, 4 A–C)
Bulla hiemalis Couthouy 1839: 180 , 181, pl. 4 fig. 5.
Diaphana hiemalis View in CoL — G. O. Sars 1878: 291, tab. 18, fig. 3. Schiøtte 1998: 118, figs 16 D, 19 C–D, 23. Høisaeter et al. 2001: 250. Sneli et al. 2005: 96. Kantor & Sysoev 2006: 250, pl. 124 fig. F. Høisaeter 2009: 78. Chaban & Chernyshev 2013: 159, figs 3 A–J, 5 A.
Diaphana globosa View in CoL - G. O. Sars 1878: 290, pl. 18 figs 3 c, 4, pl. XI, fig. 12. Pilsbry 1893: 286, pl. 26 fig. 75. Thompson 1988: 29.
Diaphana minuta View in CoL — Lemche 1948, in part.
Diaphana tibai Habe 1976: 152 View in CoL , pl. 1 fig. 11 (based on Schiøtte 1998).
Diagnosis. Shell external, whitish transparent, smooth, apex involute. Body white. Foot posteriorly bifurcated, cephalic shield with tentacular lobes. Rachidian tooth denticulate, not asymmetrical, lateral teeth with minute denticulation, teeth on left side smaller than on the right.
Type locality. Massachusetts Bay, inside cod stomachs from off Provincetown, Cape Cod, USA.
Material examined. Vadsø, Norway, 1 spc (dissected), ZMBN 82156, H = 6.4 mm. Ålesund, Norway, 1 spc (dissected), ZMBN 82160, H =?. Fensfjorden, 60°48’03’’ N, 0 5°05’48’’ E, Norway, 1 spc (dissected), ZMBN 82171, H = 2.0 mm. Fensfjorden, 60°40’45’’ N, 0 5°26’45’’ E, Norway, ZMBN 82167, H = 2.7 mm. Fensfjorden, 60°49’54’’ N, 0 5°03’15’’ E, Norway, 1 spc (dissected), ZMBN 82175, H = 2.1 mm. Raunefjorden, Norway, 1 spc (dissected), ZMBN 62056, H = 3.5 mm. Bergen, Norway, 1 sh, ZMBN 28711, H = 2.5 mm. Lofoten, Norway, 1 sh, ZMBN 68048, H = 2.4 mm. 60°08'27.6’’ N 06°16'22.8’’ E, Mauranger Nordrepollen, Norway, 1 spc (dissected), ZMBN 90609, H = 3.8 mm. 67°39'30’’ N, 11°36'42’’ W, NE off Iceland, 1 spc, ZMBN 85951, H = 4.11 mm.
Shell ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 C–F): Maximum H = 6.4 mm. External, thin; transparent; globose in shape, aperture wide with thin parietal callus, apex involute, umbilicated; shell surface smooth, faint spiral lines visible.
Animal ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A, B): Body white. Foot posteriorly bifurcated, anteriorly widened into two lobes. Cephalic shield with tentacular lobes posteriorly.
Radula ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A–C): Radular formula 12–15 x 1.1.1. Rachidian tooth with two large denticulated lobes separated by gap, lobes not asymmetrical. Lateral teeth long, inner edge denticulate. Radula asymmetrical with left laterals slightly smaller than the right laterals, one large denticle on tip of left laterals only.
Male reproductive system ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 D): Prostate with a thin and thick lobe emerging from penial sheath in a right angle.
Ecology. Occurs between 5–2725 m depth on mud, clay, sandy clay with stones, gravel, shells, foraminiferans, sand, muddy sand, silty sand, shell sand and mire ( Schiøtte 1998; Høisaeter, 2009; Chaban & Chernyshev 2013; present study). It is a characteristic species on clay bottoms below 400 m, most abundant between 750–2000 m ( Høisaeter 2009; 2010).
Distribution. Schiøtte (1998) refers its distribution as circumpolar, as far as Japan and Massachusetts and maybe in the Mediterranean Sea. Along the entire Norwegian coast, the continental slope, Faroes-Shetland Channel ( Høisaeter 2009) and the Faroes ( Sneli et al. 2005).
Remarks. Schiøtte (1998) redescribed this species, which, in spite of its involute spire and shell shape and reproductive system with shorter prostate branches, was formerly an accepted synonym of Diaphana minuta . Apparently, the radula of this species can depict some variation; typically the inner edges of the lateral teeth are denticulate but Chaban and Chernyshev (2013) reported specimens from NW Japan with smooth lateral teeth. Schiøtte (1998) lists Philine laevissima and Utriculopsis vitrea as synonyms but the confusion surrounding these two names have been recently discussed by Ohnheiser and Malaquias (2013) who considered these species names to be senior synonyms of the new name P. confusa Ohnheiser and Malaquias, 2013 .
ZMBN |
Museum of Zoology at the University of Bergen, Invertebrate Collection |
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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Diaphana hiemalis ( Couthouy, 1839 )
Ohnheiser, Lena Tina & Malaquias, Manuel António E. 2014 |
Diaphana hiemalis
Chaban 2013: 159 |
Hoisaeter 2009: 78 |
Kantor 2006: 250 |
Sneli 2005: 96 |
Hoisaeter 2001: 250 |
Schiotte 1998: 118 |
Sars 1878: 291 |
Diaphana globosa
Thompson 1988: 29 |
Pilsbry 1893: 286 |
Sars 1878: 290 |
Bulla hiemalis
Couthouy 1839: 180 |