Caecum subquadratum Carpenter, 1859
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5733/afin.056.0109 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2A9621F0-009E-4A25-A093-DD322B9EC120 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7675536 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D6171E5C-FFE4-FFB0-27BB-BF9B839C3514 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Caecum subquadratum Carpenter, 1859 |
status |
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Caecum subquadratum Carpenter, 1859 View in CoL
Figs 1A–I View Fig , 3 View Fig , 21E View Fig , 22A–C View Fig , 23A–C View Fig , 26G–I View Fig
Caecum subquadratum Carpenter, 1859: 433 View in CoL .
Caecum subquadratum: Tryon 1886: 216 View in CoL .
Caecum subquadratum: Hedley 1914: 293 View in CoL , pl. 18, fig. 67.
Caecum subquadratum: Pizzini & Raines 2011: 28 View in CoL , fig. 3H.
Type locality: SOUTH AFRICA: Port Elizabeth , here amended (see under remarks) .
Type material examined: Lectotype herein selected (NHMUK 1858.12.9.13, Fig. 21E View Fig ), glued on a small glass slide labelled by the author with white ink and a paper label, specifying the origin from Bean’s colln ( Fig. 21F View Fig ).
Material examined: SOUTH AFRICA: Western Cape: 4 lv and 35 sh, Langebaan Lagoon, Saldanha Bay , xii.1987 ( JPM) ; 1 lv and 4 sh (1 juv), Saldanha Bay, Langebaan Lagoon , grit washed up on sandy beach, leg. J.P. Marais xii.1987 ( NMSA E1489 About NMSA ) ; 1 lv and 1 sh, Hermanus (between False Bay and Cape Agulhas), v.1990 ( JPM) ; 1 lv with operculum in a small glass vial, Walker’s Bay , W of Knysna, iii.1991 ( JPM) ; 1 lv and 1 sh, Walker’s Point , W of Knysna, leg. J.P. Marais iii.1991 ( NMSA S3729 About NMSA ) ; KwaZulu-Natal: 1 sh, Leisure Bay, Port Edward , beach, iii.1986 ( JPM) .
Original description: “33? Caecum subquadratum , n. s.
? Caecum (Fartulum) t. elongata, minima, laevi, haud nitente; apertura haud contracta; septo submamillato, subungulato; margine laterali extante, supra satis convexo, lateribus rectis, parallelis; apice obtusissimo, lato, ad latus quadrato: operculo? ... Long..068, lat..009–.012”
Additional description: Tube cylindrical, slender, slightly arched, whitish to transparent, in beached specimens often with alternating white and semitransparent bands, without sculpture. Aperture simple, sometimes with a barely visible swelling. Surface dull, smooth, featureless. Septum opaque, dome-shaped, very protruding. Mucro nail-like, rotated toward the right side, as high as the septum. When viewed from the right side the septum shows a subquadrate outline, while in ventral view it is bigibbous. Periostracum colourless. Juveniles are similar to the adults, and are distinguished by the subcylindrical and more arched tube, and by the less protruding septum and proportionally higher mucro which shows a more rounded lateral outline. Larval stage unknown. Operculum thin, corneous, circular, multispiral, composed of a central nucleus surrounded by a tight spiral of 4–5 whorls. External side slightly concave, internal side with a raised central disk ( Fig. 1C View Fig ).
Length: 1.6–1.9 mm.
Distribution: Southwestern to eastern coast of South Africa, from Saldanha to Port Edward ( Fig. 3 View Fig ).
Remarks:Although the type locality of this species seems to be clearly indicated, i.e. Port Elizabeth, both the synopsis at the end of Carpenter’s paper (1859: 443) and the original label of the lectotype refer to Australia ( Fig. 21F View Fig ). However, there is no toponym that refers to a Port Elizabeth in Australia. Conversely, a well-known Port Elizabeth exists in South Africa, hence one can suspect some confusion by Carpenter. Nevertheless in the introduction of his paper, Carpenter (1858: 417) clearly states that he could not find any Caecum species “at the Cape, or at Port Natal [today Durban]”, so one can deduce that he did not examine any Caecidae from South Africa. Moreover, C. subquadratum is the only Australian species reported in his paper. This ambiguity was also noticed by Hedley (1914), who reported a drawing of the lectotype but no Australian records. Furthermore, there is no specimen in either the AMS or WAM collections ascribable to subquadratum . Despite the uncertainty of the type locality, C. subquadratum is a welldefined species, characterized by a slender, cylindrical tube and by the squared profile of the septum in lateral view, while in ventral view it is more or less bimamillated. South African specimens perfectly fit the lectotype, except for the length of the tube. In fact, some populations are notably longer than the lectotype, suggesting that it is a subadult shell. On the basis of the available information the type locality of C. subquadratum is here amended as: SOUTH AFRICA: Port Elizabeth.
NMSA |
KwaZulu-Natal Museum |
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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Caecum subquadratum Carpenter, 1859
Vannozzi, Angelo, Pizzini, Mauro & Raines, Bret 2015 |
Caecum subquadratum: Pizzini & Raines 2011: 28
PIZZINI, M. & RAINES, B. 2011: 28 |
Caecum subquadratum:
TRYON, G. W. 1886: 216 |
Caecum subquadratum
CARPENTER, P. P. 1859: 433 |