Austrochloritis porteri (Cox, 1866)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.2201-4349.71.2019.1699 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BC469398-0572-492D-A29F-37F5BFF9199C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7565691 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03978791-FFAF-FFDA-FC5D-E8B9FBF6F870 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Austrochloritis porteri (Cox, 1866) |
status |
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Austrochloritis porteri (Cox, 1866) View in CoL
Helix porteri Cox, 1866: 373 View in CoL [publ. 5 Sep]; Hedley, 1890: 249–250, pl. 15.
Chloritis (Austrochloritis) porteri .—Pilsbry, 1891 (in 1890–1891): 263, pl. 58, figs 23–24; Pilsbry, 1894 (in 1893–95): 121, pl. 28, figs 1–4; Zilch, 1966: 299.
Austrochloritis porteri View in CoL .— Iredale, 1938: 94; Stanisic et al. 2010: 390.
Material examined
Type material. Neotype, herein designated, AM C.24556 from New South Wales, Upper Richmond River, Booyong, Pearces Ck , 28°45'00"S 153°26'53"E (leg. 1906) ( Fig. 1A View Figure 1 ). GoogleMaps
Non-type material. NEW SOUTH WALES: Upper Richmond River, Booyong , Pearces Ck, 28°45'00"S 153°26'53"E ( AM C.557014 ); GoogleMaps Upper Richmond River, 28°30'30"S 152°59'E ( AM C.334934–35 ); GoogleMaps Wilson River , tributary of Richmond River , Booyong , 28°44'53"S 153°26'53"E ( AM C.112291 ); GoogleMaps Richmond River ( AM C.33390 , AM C.339397 , AM C.334941 , AM C.334943 – 45 ); GoogleMaps 25 km NE of Kyogle, Wiangarie SF, off Forest Rd, 28°23'23"S 153°6'24"E ( AM C.339394 , AM C.339744 ); GoogleMaps Whian Whian SF, Red Scrub Flora Reserve , 28°38'12"S 153°19'48"E ( AM C.339391 , AM C.339745 ); GoogleMaps Whian Whian SF , Terania Ck, Mackays Rd, 28°35'S 153°19'E ( AM C.339395–96 , AM C.339743 ); GoogleMaps E of Mullumbimby , Huonbrook , upper Coopers Ck, 28°33'S 153°21'E ( AM C.334959 ); GoogleMaps Mt Warning , track to summit, 50–100m from carpark, 28°23'55"S 153°16'59"E ( AM C.463198 , AM C.463214 ); GoogleMaps Mt Warning , 28°24'S 153°16'11"E ( AM C.136825 ); GoogleMaps banks of the Richmond River at Casino, 28°52'S 153°03'E ( AM C.137773 ); GoogleMaps SE of Lismore, near Alstonville, Victoria Park, 28°54'S 153°24'30"E ( AM C.363835 ); GoogleMaps Byron Bay, 28°39'S 153°37'E ( AM C.31218 , AM C.339398 ); GoogleMaps E of Lismore, Wollongbar , 28°49'S 153°24'E ( AM C.334946 ); GoogleMaps SW of Murwillumbah , Byangum , 28°21'30"S 153°21'37"E ( AM C.334948 , C.334950 ); GoogleMaps Tweed River , 28°18'S 153°27'E ( AM C.55539 ) GoogleMaps . QUEENSLAND: Lamington NP, Binna Burra, Bellbird Circuit, 28°12'S 153°11'E ( AM C.363837 , AM C.444258 , AM C.363842 – 43 , AM C.512604 ); GoogleMaps Lamington NP, Binna Burra Guest House , 28°11'46"S 153°11'20"E ( AM C.363837 , AM C.363842–43 , AM C.444258 ); GoogleMaps Lamington NP, O’Reilly’s Camp Ground , 28°13'54"S 153°08'01"E ( AM C.129249 ); GoogleMaps Numinbah Valley Rd, 1 km S of Natural Arch, 28°14'21"S 153°14'17"E ( AM C.474737 ); GoogleMaps NW of Murwillumbah, nr Springbrook, 28°14'07"S 153°16'38"E ( AM C.444266 ); GoogleMaps Currumbin Valley , 28°08'S 153°29'E ( AM C.444267 ); GoogleMaps Currumbin , 4 miles W of coast, 28°8'S 153°25'19"E ( AM C.363858 ); GoogleMaps Collins Gap , Mt Lindsay Hwy, 28°20'S 152°42'E ( AM C.444259 ); GoogleMaps Natural Bridge NP, 28°13'S 153°14'E ( AM C.129279 ) GoogleMaps .
Nomenclatural and taxonomic remarks
The original type material could not be traced in the AM, nor in the QM, NMV, ZMB, SMF, NHMUK, and is considered lost. Cox’s types have generally been deposited in the collection of the Australian Museum. Indeed, other historic shell material collected by both Porter and Macgillivray in northern NSW in or before 1866 is still extant in this collection. Repeated efforts by various persons (Alan Solem, John Stanisic, ourselves) to find type material at the AM or other institutions have been unsuccessful. No types are known or suspected to be kept in other museums. Zilch (1966) did not report any types to be held by the SMF.
The original description was based on material collected by two different collectors at two separate sites: “Upper Clarence River at Guy Faux Station (Porter)”and “Upper Richmond River, at Cowlong […] (Macgillivray)”. Using contemporary georeferenced materials, we have located these two sites with reasonable precision. The first site is Guy Fawkes Station, N of Ebor and W of Point Lookout within the uppermost Clarence River catchment (c. 30°21'00"S 152°22'12"E). The second is NE of Lismore, S of Booyong (c. 28°46'12"S 153°25'12"E) ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Both locations are about 230 km apart from each other. Since the type material was collected in 1866, the original forest cover that existed at this time has largely been destroyed through clearing for agriculture. However, we have examined material from as close to these two locations as possible and found that the Austrochloritis species found near one (Guy Fawkes) is not identical with that found near the other site (Cowlong) even though they are both similar in external appearance. It is not impossible to identify A. porteri among these two species based on the diagnosis given in the original description. In order to remove the uncertain identity of Helix porteri Cox, 1866 , to stabilize this taxonomic name and to fix the type locality, we here designate a neotype in accordance with Art. 75 of The Code ( ICZN, 1999) and provide an updated diagnosis.
Hedley (1890) and Pilsbry (1894) published descriptions and figures of the digestive and reproductive anatomy and attributed these to A. porteri . Hedley’s (1890) material originated from near Brisbane, which is not very close to any of the two original locations. The whereabouts of Pilsbry’s (1894) material have remained uncertain. Stanisic et al. (2010) reported the species to be distributed from SE of Lismore (Victoria Park, NSW) to W of Gold Coast (Springbrook, Qld). This distribution incorporates the second site mentioned in the original description (Cowlong), but not the first. By contrast, the species occurring at the first site, Guy Fawkes Station, has subsequently been described as A. speculoris Shea & Griffiths, 2010 (see below). To conserve the subsequent use of these two species names, we chose the neotype to come from close to site 2 (Cowlong).
Description
Shell ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 A–C, Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ). Large (D = 14–24 (average 17.8) mm, H = 10–15 (average 12) mm; for n = 34 lots), subglobose to turbinate in shape with a low to moderately raised spire, with on average 4.25 rounded to sub-angulate whorl that increase in diameter, sutures moderately impressed; protoconch sculpture of scattered pustules and rugose pustulose radial ridges; teleoconch sculpture of low irregular growth lines with microsculpture of small crowded pustules, periostracal sculpture of crowded short curved setae, microsculpture of wavy periostracal ridgelets; end of last whorl descending below whorl plane; aperture moderately tilted from axis of coiling, with moderately thickened and reflected white outer lip with sulcus behind, columella slope about 45°; umbilicus narrow and partially covered by reflected columella, V-shaped in profile; shell colour from pale reddish brown to dark reddish brown, with or without a narrow reddish brown spiral colour band at whorl periphery.
General anatomy. A retractable head wart is present at the inner bases of the ocular tentacles.Animal head-foot dark grey.
Reproductive anatomy ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ). Penis cylindrical, no penial sheath, inner penial wall with corrugated interlocking longitudinal pilasters, distally giving rise to longitudinal rows of interlocking pilasters; epiphallus cylindrical, about 1.5 to 2 times as long as penis, distal end with well-developed epiphallic flagellum, broad at base, epiphallus tapering to very narrow toward apex, opening into penial lumen through a conical longitudinally grooved (Victoria Park and Binna Burra; Figs4 D,F View Figure 4 ) to pustulose (Mt Warning; Fig. 4 E View Figure 4 ), free verge, opening laterally; penial retractor attached to midepiphallus; vas deferens entering head of epiphallus through single pore just below base of epiphallic flagellum; vas deferens quite broad at its junction with apex of epiphallus but later tapering to a narrow tubule; vagina cylindrical, twice as long as penis, inner wall with prominent longitudinal anastomising pilasters usually thickened around vaginal entrance; free oviduct very short; bursa copulatrix long and broad, particularly at its base, folded or kinked several times, about as long as spermoviduct (Victoria Park and Binna Burra; Figs 4A,C View Figure 4 ) to 1.5 times longer (Mt Warning; Fig. 4B View Figure 4 ), with inflated bulb-like head, aligning with base of albumen gland; hermaphroditic duct inserting into head of talon.
Distribution and ecology
Lives in subtropical rainforests from the Richmond River valley of NE NSW north to the upper Nerang Creek valley of SE Qld. Mainly found at altitudes of up to 900 m on basaltic bedrock; found under logs, rocks and inside sheaths of fallen palm leaves ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ).
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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Genus |
Austrochloritis porteri (Cox, 1866)
Shea, Michael & Köhler, Frank 2019 |
Chloritis (Austrochloritis) porteri
Zilch, A. 1966: 299 |
Austrochloritis porteri
Stanisic, J. & M. Shea & D. Potter & O. Griffiths 2010: 390 |
Iredale, T. 1938: 94 |
Helix porteri
Hedley, C. 1890: 249 |