Ampelita milloti Fischer-Piette, 1952
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5733/afin.054.0101 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7649551 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BC1F3C-E533-D90C-078A-FB1D476DB3A9 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ampelita milloti Fischer-Piette, 1952 |
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Ampelita milloti Fischer-Piette, 1952 View in CoL View at ENA
Figs 17C, 17D View Fig , 18 View Fig , 25E View Fig
Ampelita milloti: Fischer-Piette 1952: 34 , pl. 3, figs 31–34; Fischer-Piette et al. 1994: 123, pl. 15, figs 1–4. Type loc.: ‘ Gorge de Salapango [= Salapanga], Bemaraha’, Madagascar.
Morphological notes:
External features ( Fig. 25E View Fig ): Head-foot uniformly dark, charcoal-grey to black; skin texture uniformly granular throughout; lining of mantle cavity heavily pigmented with black and patterned with pale circular blotches (observations based on a single livecollected individual).
Distal genitalia: The single preserved specimen available (shell diameter 19.2 mm) possessed an immature reproductive tract. The distal genitalia were thus poorly developed and inadequate for comparative study. From what could be seen of the penis, it appeared similar to that of A. namerokoensis .
Locality data: Antsingimavo: st’ns 4/06, 8/06 (all subfossil). Tsingy Beanka : st’ns 12/06, 14/06, 16/06, 18/06, 02/09, 06/09, 07/09, 08/09, 01/10, 06/10, 07/10, 08/10, 09/10. Tsingy de Bemaraha: st’ns 07/95, 10/95, 14/95, 18/95, 19/95, 9/96, 10/96, 12/96. South bank of Tsiribihina River: st’ns 01/99LP, 02/99LP.
Distribution: Evidently a narrowly endemic species, currently known only from the south bank of Tsiribihina River, Tsingy de Bemaraha and Tsingy Beanka . Subfossil at Antsingimavo where it now appears to be locally extinct.
Habitat: Living specimens are most commonly found amongst limestone rocks and in leaf-litter. In Tsingy Beanka , it occurs predominantly in the taller, moister forests of the southern part.
Remarks: Shell lenticular, of moderate size (max. diameter <33 mm), with a very low spire and sharply angled periphery; last whorl descending at most slightly just prior to aperture; uniformly tan-brown with a yellow to white band around umbilicus. Specimens from Tsingy Beanka are noticeably smaller than those from Bemaraha and Antsingimavo (maximum adult diameter 20–25 vs 28–32 mm).
Resembles A. namerokoensis (below) in size and shape, but easily separated from that species due to the almost complete absence of microscopic spiral striae (some traces may be visible on the base). Instead the microsculpture of A. milloti comprises irregular, elongate granules aligned in a roughly radial (collabral) pattern ( Fig. 17D View Fig ). Furthermore, A. milloti attains a somewhat larger size and has a wider umbilicus than A. namerokoensis , and its protoconch is larger (diameter approx. 4.4 vs approx. 3.5 mm) and bears distinct close-set axial riblets ( Fig. 17C View Fig ), whereas that of A. namerokoensis is more or less smooth ( Fig. 17E View Fig ). Features separating A. milloti from A. beanka are discussed above.
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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