Amplirhagada tealei, Köhler & Johnson, 2012

Köhler, Frank & Johnson, Michael S., 2012, Species limits in molecular phylogenies: a cautionary tale from Australian land snails (Camaenidae: Amplirhagada Iredale, 1933), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society (Zool. J. Linn. Soc.) 165 (2), pp. 337-362 : 359-360

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00810.x

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E2EB4980-AEC2-4312-937C-934E29941C94

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10543008

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D2543F71-FC23-FF99-BB83-FCFB5D5AC46E

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Amplirhagada tealei
status

sp. nov.

AMPLIRHAGADA TEALEI View in CoL SP. NOV.

FIGURES 21C View Figure 21 , 24 View Figure 24 , 25 View Figure 25

Type locality: Western Australia, near coast of Kimberley mainland, about 1.6 km east of Cape Brewster , 15°06′59.4″S, 124°55′27.0″E GoogleMaps .

Material examined ( Table 1): Holotype WAM S42950 View Materials (dissected specimen) . Paratypes WAM S42951 View Materials (three preserved specimens; Fig. 21C View Figure 21 ), AM C.470994 (two preserved bodies) ( Table 1) .

Etymology: For Roy Teale, who collected the material and has contributed substantially to the collection of Western Australian camaenids; noun in the genitive case.

Description: Shell ( Fig. 21C View Figure 21 ) dome shaped, broad with comparatively low spire, angulated periphery, flattened whorls, shallow suture (H = 15.1 ± 0.8, D = 22.4 ± 0.5, W = 4.7 ± 0.1, average ± SD of three shells); colour brownish, diffuse brown, sub-sutural and mid-whorl bands may be present, darker near lip; outer lip light purplish; teleoconch with regular axial growth lines. Umbilicus completely concealed by columellar reflection. Aperture simple, well expanded, slightly reflected, with weak basal node. Genital anatomy ( Figs 24 View Figure 24 , 25 View Figure 25 ). Penis long, tubular, straight; vas deferens entering penial sheath near apical end, penial retractor muscle short; penial verge long (> 1/3 length of penial chamber), elongated; inner penial wall with large, conical, corrugated main pilaster, comprising entire length of penial wall, broadest near anterior end, tapering in thickness and development described elsewhere ( Köhler, 2010a, 2011a, b). The penial wall sculpture is typical, consisting of dense longitudinal pilasters that cover the entire surface of the inner penial wall and a long corrugated main pilaster extending the entire whorl and being broadest close to the anterior end.

Distribution: Known from the type locality, the coastal portion of Prince Regent Reserve only ( Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ).

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Special thanks are due to Martin Püschel for producing, as usual, excellent drawings of genital organs. The study was made possible through grants from the Department of Environment and Conservation, Western Australia, and from the Australian Government (ABRS RF 211-10) to F.K. Thanks are also due to two anonymous reviewers for carefully reading the submitted manuscript.

posteriorly; entire inner penial wall covered with narrow, regular longitudinal pilasters, slightly corrugated near anterior end. No pustulation. Vagina moderate in length (shorter than penis), tubular; bursa copulatrix moderately long, tubular, extending to anterior end of spermoviduct, with inflated head.

Comparative remarks: Differs from all species described herein by its dome-shaped, globular shell, which is similar that of a number of other species

WAM

Western Australian Museum

AM

Australian Museum

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