Strobiligera campista, Fernandes & Pimenta, 2019

Fernandes, Maurício Romulo & Pimenta, Alexandre Dias, 2019, Taxonomic review of Inella and Strobiligera (Gastropoda: Triphoridae) from Brazil, Zootaxa 4613 (1), pp. 1-52 : 40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4613.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D3513C1F-B4F6-42EE-BF16-5495B62E9A90

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E33C87BD-C61C-FFC1-F4FA-649C739F71F8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Strobiligera campista
status

sp. nov.

Strobiligera campista View in CoL sp. nov.

Figure 23

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:FBE0B96F-3327-4D19-BDA0-B4EDA1FA970A

Type material. Holotype: MNRJ 32350 View Materials , iii/2007 . Paratypes: Brazil: Rio de Janeiro state: MNRJ 18640 View Materials , HAB 16- G5 [1]; MNRJ 19481 View Materials , type locality, 11/iv/2003 [5]; MNRJ 32349 View Materials , type locality, ix/2004 [1]; MNRJ 18950 View Materials , type locality, iii/2007 [1]; MNRJ 31122 View Materials , type locality, xi/2007 [1]; IBUFRJ 11701 [1], IBUFRJ 19580 [5], 22º 48ʹ S, 40º 45ʹ W, 106–110 m , 27/i/1998; MNRJ 32546 View Materials , 23 View Materials º 0 5ʹ S, 40º 58ʹ W, 100 m [1].

Type locality. 22º 42ʹ S, 40º 40ʹ W, 110–120 m, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil .

Etymology. This specific epithet refers to the citizens of Campos dos Goytacazes, in Rio de Janeiro state, because this species is apparently restricted to the Campos Basin (a sedimentary basin named for the above-mentioned city). Epithet as a noun in apposition.

Diagnosis. Light brown protoconch with 2.75 to 3 whorls, clearly distinct from the cream teleoconch; adapical spiral cord reaches nearly the same size as other spiral cords in the tenth/twelfth whorl of teleoconch; suture very shallow.

Description. Shell sinistral, elongated, conical, rectilinear profile, reaching 12.32 mm in length, 2.34 mm in width, length/width ratio 4.6 to 4.9. Protoconch globose, inflated, 0.51–0.65 mm in length, 0.45–0.53 mm in width of its last whorl; 2.75 to 3 convex protoconch whorls, clear distinction between protoconch and teleoconch; initial whorl dome-shaped, broad, smooth; remaining whorls with two spiral cords, with nearly the same strength, situated at 41% and 76% of last whorl height; micro-sculpture of subsutural axial wrinkles, more evident on the last whorl. Teleoconch with up to ~18 whorls; three spiral cords in the beginning, the median and abapical cords continuous with those of the protoconch; adapical cord narrower than other cords through most of teleoconch, but acquiring nearly the same size as other cords on the tenth/twelfth whorl; on the body whorl, distance between spiral cords is 1.2 times the width of cords; 14 to 16 nearly orthocline to opisthocline axial ribs; rounded (especially the adapical and median cords) to slightly elliptical (especially the abapical cord) nodules of a medium to moderately large size; distinct but shallow suture, with a small sutural cord; thick, smooth subperipheral cord, three smooth basal cords, the median one the narrowest of them; no supranumerical cords; ovate aperture, length/width ratio 1.2; anterior canal moderately short, directed downwards/backwards, and open, length/width ratio 0.9; posterior canal a small notch, not detached from the aperture. Light brown protoconch (first whorl sometimes translucent), cream teleoconch, spiral cords with nodules lighter than internodular spaces.

Remarks. Strobiligera campista sp. nov. mainly differs from S. dinea by shell color and by having a wider shell, but a smaller, less inflated protoconch (Fig. 23J). Strobiligera enopla ( Fig. 3X View FIGURE 3 ) has a completely white shell and a much reduced adapical spiral cord on the teleoconch, in addition to a bathymetric range (538–823 m; Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008) deeper than that of Strobiligera campista sp. nov. (100–149 m).

Geographical distribution. Brazil: Rio de Janeiro.

Bathymetric distribution. 100–149 m.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Family

Triphoridae

SubFamily

Triphorinae

Genus

Strobiligera

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF