Laevilitorina pepita González-Wevar & Rosenfeld, 2023

Rosenfeld, Sebastián, Segovia, Nicolás I, Maturana, Claudia S, Aldea, Cristián, Saucède, Thomas, Brickle, Paul, Spencer, Hamish G, Poulin, Elie & González-Wevar, Claudio A, 2023, A revision of the higher latitude periwinkle species Laevilitorina caliginosa sensu lato, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 202 (1), pp. 1-18 : 8

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad171

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EDB799C-B7FE-40B0-BFEF-30D3E0AE2A6F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14372341

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/533E87C5-FFAE-FFC9-FFF8-4BB4FCAFF134

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Laevilitorina pepita González-Wevar & Rosenfeld
status

sp. nov.

Laevilitorina pepita González-Wevar & Rosenfeld View in CoL sp. nov.

( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 )

Laevilitorina caliginosa View in CoL L3 – González-Wevar et al. 2022: 1527.

Zoobank registration: zoobank.org:act: C823DE09-7B80-427F-A2E9-2CE096719C69.

Holotype: MNHNCL MOL-205429 , ~ 25 km north of Punta Arenas (− 52.987406°S, − 70.812342°W), Strait of Magellan, 21 June 2015, collected by Claudio González-Wevar and Sebastián Rosenfeld. GoogleMaps

Paratypes: MNHNCL MOL-205430 ; MNHNCL MOL-205431 ; MNHNCL MOL-205432 ; MNHNCL MOL-205433 .

Description

Shell: Small (maximum length 3.8 mm), fusiform with rounded to convex whorls, suture impressed, concave spire profile, apex blunt. Aperture ovoid, between 66% and 73% of total H ( Fig. 4A–C View Figure 4 ; Supporting Information, Table S3). Multiple fine growth lines, sometimes with soft spiral colour bands on the last whorl ( Fig. 4A View Figure 4 ). Columella smooth, inner lip barely reflected over narrow umbilicus, outer lip thin, simple, and with no evidence of thickening. Teleoconch opaque, but last whorl slightly translucent. Colour very variable: creamy, pale brown, brown, and olive green. Some individuals have small white spots, irregular in size and position. Operculum corneous. Mature H 2.4–3.8 mm (H/B = 1.01–1.09, SH = 1.39–1.54) (Supporting Information, Table S3).

External anatomy: Ventral area of foot orange, cephalic area black.

Radula: Rachidian: seven cusps, central cusp long, rectangular and pointed ( Fig. 4D, E View Figure 4 ). First pair of flanking cusps pointed; outer cusps much smaller, pointed or rounded. Lateral: five or six cusps, main cusp rectangular and pointed, accompanied by one smaller pointed outer cusp and three continuously smaller inner cusps. Inner marginal: six cusps, main cusp pointed and rectangular ( Fig. 4F View Figure 4 ), accompanied by one smaller pointed outer cusp and four pointed inner cusps of similar size. Outer marginal: seven or eight thin and pointed cusps.

Holotype dimensions: Length 3.73 mm, width 3.17 mm.

Depositories: Holotype MNHNCL MOL-205429 . Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Chile. Type locality: Chabunco (− 52.987406°S, − 70.812342°W), Strait of Magellan, Chile ( Fig. 4G View Figure 4 ). GoogleMaps

Habitat: Rocky intertidal to subtidal shores at the northern side of the Strait of Magellan ( Fig. 4G View Figure 4 ).

Material studied: Faro San Isidro   GoogleMaps , Strait of Magellan   GoogleMaps (− 53.785572°S, − 70.973522°W), n = 30; Port Famine   GoogleMaps , Strait of Magellan   GoogleMaps (− 53.699404°S, − 70.931500°W), n = 80; Punta Carrera, Strait of Magellan   GoogleMaps (− 53.586367°S, − 70.923372°W), n = 50; Leñadura, Strait of Magellan   GoogleMaps (− 53.213428°S, − 70.938350°W), n = 20; Chabunco, Strait of Magellan   GoogleMaps (− 52.987406°S, − 70.812342°W), n = 60; Possession Bay, Strait of Magellan (− 52.232083°S, − 69.297419°W), n = 20.

Etymology: The morphology of L. pepita resembles a small seed = ‘pepita’ in Spanish.

Remarks: Among the Strait of Magellan species, L. pepita exhibits the most distinct morphology and coloration ( Fig. 4A–C View Figure 4 ). This taxon exhibits a great variability of shell coloration, with the presence of spiral colour bands. It has a very short spire, and the last whorl is more globose than in the other South American Laevilitorina species. The radula of L. pepita is similar to that of L. magellanica , but the latter may exhibit denticles on the main cusps of the lateral and marginal teeth. This species, like L. magellanica , inhabits the intertidal zone and is also found in empty shells of the barnacle Notochthalamus scabrosus (Darwin, 1854).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

SubClass

Caenogastropoda

Order

Littorinimorpha

Family

Littorinidae

SubFamily

Laevilitorininae

Genus

Laevilitorina

Loc

Laevilitorina pepita González-Wevar & Rosenfeld

Rosenfeld, Sebastián, Segovia, Nicolás I, Maturana, Claudia S, Aldea, Cristián, Saucède, Thomas, Brickle, Paul, Spencer, Hamish G, Poulin, Elie & González-Wevar, Claudio A 2023
2023
Loc

Laevilitorina caliginosa

Gonzalez-Wevar CA & Segovia NI & Rosenfeld S 2022: 1527
2022
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