Angustopila tonkinospiroides Pall-Gergely & Vermeulen, 2023

Pall-Gergely, Barna, Hunyadi, Andras, Vermeulen, Jaap J., Grego, Jozef, Sutcharit, Chirasak, Reischuetz, Alexander, Dumrongrojwattana, Pongrat, Botta-Dukat, Zoltan, Oerstan, Aydin, Fekete, Judit & Jochum, Adrienne, 2023, Five times over: 42 new Angustopila species highlight Southeast Asia's rich biodiversity (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora, Hypselostomatidae), ZooKeys 1147, pp. 1-177 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1147.93824

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9BB9881B-0076-473D-8E53-155D37CA1F50

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/74271797-1383-4115-AADB-1436FBB11313

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:74271797-1383-4115-AADB-1436FBB11313

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Angustopila tonkinospiroides Pall-Gergely & Vermeulen
status

sp. nov.

Angustopila tonkinospiroides Pall-Gergely & Vermeulen sp. nov.

Fig. 23 View Figure 23

Type material.

Holotype: Vietnam • 1 empty shell (H: 1.07 mm, D: 0.88 mm); Quang Ninh Province, Halong Bay area, Dao Bo Hon, Song Sot Cave, drift material washed together over sinkhole in cave; 20°50.83'N, 107°05.67'E; 2 Oct. 1998; J.J. Vermeulen & A.J. Whitten leg.; HNHM 100179.

Paratypes: Vietnam • 400 shells; same data as for holotype; JJV 17655 (ex JJV 6263) • 10 shells; same data as for holotype; coll. HA • 31 shells; Haiphong Province, Cat Ba Island, Cave Minh Chou, inside cave, cave with freshwater stream flowing into the sea, much disturbed by water extraction and concrete paths; 20°45.21'N, 107°0.75'E; 50 m a.s.l.; 5 Jun. 2017; J.J. Vermeulen & K. Anker leg.; JJV 18885 (ex JJV 16610).

Diagnosis.

A medium-sized to large, toothless Angustopila species with a conical spire, wide penultimate whorl, and a narrow, subovate-shaped umbilicus.

Description.

Shell normal- to large-sized for the genus, (much) higher than wide; pale grey; shell shape conical, penultimate whorl is the widest in standard apertural view; protoconch consists of 1.5 whorls, with spiral striation preceding the first teleoconch whorl; teleoconch finely ornamented with usually weak, irregularly spaced radial growth lines crossed by fine rows of somewhat stronger, equidistantly-spaced spiral threads (ca. 20 in standard apertural view); whorls 4.5-4.75, rounded, but rather irregular, with some traces of compression of the convex whorls from lateral/umbilical direction; aperture slightly curved and oblique to shell axis from lateral view; umbilicus narrow, eccentrically teardrop-shaped due to unusual coiling of body whorl, concentric spiral striation intensified around umbilicus; aperture subovate with straight parietal side; peristome slightly expanded, not reflected, rather sharp; parietal callus slightly protruding, detached from penultimate whorl; aperture toothless, a fine swelling discernible just behind peristome, running parallel with it.

Measurements (in mm).

H = 0.98-1.16, D = 0.85-0.95, H/D*100 = 104.3-128.9 (n = 14), RUD = 22.7-28.9 (n = 4).

Differential diagnosis.

The irregularly growing whorls, the higher than wide, rather large shell, the toothless aperture and the teardrop-shaped umbilicus distinguishes this species from its congeners. Angustopila thersites sp. nov. is smaller, and has a concave-conical, more irregularly increasing shell. Angustopila fratermajor sp. nov. is smaller, has a parietal tooth, and possesses a wider umbilicus. Tonkinospira species are usually larger, depressed-conical in shape and have denser spiral striation on both the protoconch and teleoconch.

Etymology.

First we considered this species to belong to the genus Tonkinospira. Due to the tonkinospirid aspects (i.e., large conical shell, regularly growing whorls, superficial microstructure and lack of apertural dentition), the specific epithet reflects this similarity.

Distribution.

This new species is known from two sites in the Halong Bay area in northern Vietnam (Fig. 24 View Figure 24 ).