Chondrocyclus alabastris ( Craven, 1880 )

Cole, Mary L., 2019, Revision of Chondrocyclus s. l. (Mollusca: Cyclophoridae), with description of a new genus and twelve new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 569, pp. 1-92 : 12-18

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2019.569

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:79BE13FC-B840-4C39-8D25-3328BDCC44D2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14765321

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/101687E3-D55B-FFD9-FDDD-AA61FDFED700

treatment provided by

Plazi (2019-10-24 05:08:47, last updated 2025-01-29 14:41:16)

scientific name

Chondrocyclus alabastris ( Craven, 1880 )
status

 

Chondrocyclus alabastris ( Craven, 1880) View in CoL

Figs 6–7 View Fig View Fig , 8 View Fig A–B, 9

Cyclotus alabastris Craven, 1880: 619 View in CoL (type loc.: Cape Recif, Algoa Bay [Craven]).

Cyclophorus (Maizania) alabastris – Kobelt 1902: 149 View in CoL .

Chondrocyclus alabastris – Connolly 1929: 238 View in CoL ; 1939: 539.

Diagnosis

Shell small, very depressed, lenticular; protoconch mammillate and tilted; periostracum with axial costae developing at the periphery elongated triangular flanges usually with serrated edges; operculum flattened, exterior portion shallowly concave, with step-shaped multispiral lamella terminating in solid fringe reflexed over peristome; radula with two large cusps on second lateral tooth.

Etymology

From ‘alabaster’, an almost transparent white stone. In his description Craven (1880) describes the species as “semitransparent, of a pure white colour”.

Type material examined

Syntypes

SOUTH AFRICA – Eastern Cape • 7 specimens; syntypes of Cyclotus alabastris Craven, 1880 ; Cape Colony, Algoa Bay , Cape Recif; A.E. Craven leg.; on Sand-Hills; 27 Feb. 1875; NHMUK 1891.3.7.42- 47. ( Fig. 6A View Fig )

Other material examined

SOUTH AFRICA – Eastern Cape • 8 specimens; Port Elizabeth, The Island Nature Reserve, indigenous Southern Coastal forest in south facing valley; 33.9867°S, 25.3715°E; 18 Sep. 2008; M. Cole leg.; ELM D15931 GoogleMaps 36 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; 27 May 2011; M. Cole leg.; ELM D16885 GoogleMaps 7 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03640 GoogleMaps 3 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; NHMUK 20120270 About NHMUK GoogleMaps 2 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; NMW.Z.2012.065.00003 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; Port Elizabeth, Settlers Park , indigenous riverine forest; 33.9703° S, 25.6123°E; 16 Mar. 2005; A. Moussalli and D. Stuart-Fox leg.; in leaf-litter; NMSA W4602 About NMSA GoogleMaps 5 specimens; Van Stadens River gorge, west of Port Elizabeth , tall forest on steep slope with stream running down to river; 33.9120°S, 25.2051°E; 22 Sep. 2008; M. Cole leg.; ELM D15969 GoogleMaps 16 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; 27 Sep. 2011; M. Cole leg.; ELM D16882 GoogleMaps 2 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03638 GoogleMaps 3 specimens; Loerie Restcamp, near PPC quarry; 33.7971°S, 24.9654°E; 22 Sep. 2008; M. Cole leg.; ELM D15924 GoogleMaps 24 specimens; Maitland Nature Reserve , 2 km from mouth on east side of river, forest on steep slope; 33.9774°S, 25.3121°E; 26 Sep. 2011; M. Cole, D. Herbert and L. Davis leg.; ELM D16881 GoogleMaps 2 specimens; Ningi, (formerly Yellowwoods Farm), on west side of Maitland River 4.5 km upstream of mouth, riverine forest with large Yellowwoods ; 33.9304° S; 25.2083° E; 27 Sep. 2011; M. Cole, D. Herbert and L. Davis leg.; ELM D16883 GoogleMaps 13 specimens; Ferndale, Patensie, Ratelkloof , valley of Noaga River ; 33.7164°S, 24.8503°E; 28 Sep. 2011; M. Cole, D. Herbert and L. Davis leg.; ELM D16884 GoogleMaps 5 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03639 GoogleMaps 53 specimens; Gamtoos River mouth, dune forest east of mouth; 33.9574° S, 25.0477°E; 40 m a.s.l.; 28 Sep. 2011; M. Cole, D. Herbert and L. Davis leg.; ELM D16886 GoogleMaps 8 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03641 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; Kap River , north bank, indigenous riverine forest on shady, south-facing slope; 33.4830°S, 27.0807° E; 30 m a.s.l.; 13 May 2011; M. Cole leg.; ELM D16887 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; same collection data as for preceding; 30 Dec. 2002; M. Cole leg.; ELM W03026 GoogleMaps 34 specimens; Olifantskop, Southern Mistbelt forest ; 33.3173° S, 26.4991°E; 9 Sep. 2011; M. Cole, D. Herbert and L. Davis leg.; ELM D16890 GoogleMaps 8 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03643 GoogleMaps 4 specimens; Van Stadens Pass , bottom of pass, west side of river, steep south facing slope; 33.9095°S, 25.1905°E; 16 Nov. 2012; M. and K. Cole, D. Herbert and L. Davis leg.; ELM D17016 GoogleMaps 4 specimens; Van Stadens Pass , near top of pass, steep north-facing slope; 33.9131° S, 25.2047° E; 163 m a.s.l.; 16 Nov. 2012; M. Cole leg.; ELM D17222 GoogleMaps 9 specimens; Berg River crossing, east bank, 9 km E of Loerie, 7.5 km N.W. of Van Stadens bridge; 33.8746°S, 25.1195°E; 17 Nov. 2012; M. and K. Cole, D. Herbert and L. Davis leg.; ELM D17026 GoogleMaps 6 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03668 GoogleMaps 48 specimens; Stinkhoutkloof, 11 km N. E of Loerie, 15 km N.W. of Van Stadens ; 33.7993°S, 25.0967°E; 17 Nov. 2012; M. and K. Cole, D. Herbert, L. Davis and Edwards family leg.; ELM D17034 GoogleMaps 6 specimens; Addo National Park, Zuurberg section, forest in valley of river, on 4 hour trail; 33.3403°S, 25.7362°E; 477 m a.s.l.; 19 Nov. 2012; M. and K. Cole leg.; ELM D17045 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03676 GoogleMaps 7 specimens; Port Elizabeth, Lovemore Heights, south facing slope, Southern Coastal forest ; 33.9928°S, 25.5121°E; 278 m a.s.l.; 18 Nov. 2012; M. and K. Cole leg.; ELM D17120 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03733 GoogleMaps 31 specimens; Grahamstown, Mountain Drive , south facing slope; 33.3281° S, 26.5006°E; 10 Mar. 2007; M. Bursey and V. Ndibo leg.; in leaf-litter; ELM D15286 GoogleMaps 36 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; 20 Nov. 2009; M. Cole leg.; ELM D16888 GoogleMaps 18 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03642 GoogleMaps 3 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; NHMUK 20120269 About NHMUK GoogleMaps 38 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; 33.3292° S, 26.4991° E; 6 Feb. 2011; R. Daniels leg.; ELM D16889 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W3690 View Materials GoogleMaps 2 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; NMW.Z.2012.065.00002 GoogleMaps 13 specimens; Grahamstown, Belmont Valley ; 33.3153°S, 26.5861° E; 1978; D. Herbert leg.; NMSA W581 About NMSA GoogleMaps 7 specimens; Paradise Kloof, 8 km SW of Grahamstown, runs down southwards into upper Howison’s Poort ( Palmiet River ) from the Coldspring Ridge ; 33.3444° S, 26.4466° E; 710 m a.s.l.; 28 Feb. 2013; M. Cole leg.; collected at top of kloof; ELM D17220 GoogleMaps 9 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03740 GoogleMaps 5 specimens; Coleridge, near Stones Hill, 8 km SE of Grahamstown, south facing slope, Southern Mistbelt Forest ; 33.3334° S, 26.6156° E; 2 Mar. 2013; M. and S. Cole leg.; ELM D17221 GoogleMaps 2 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03741 GoogleMaps .

Description

SHELL ( Fig. 6 View Fig B–D). Small, usually very depressed, lenticular, adult diameter 3.7–5.32 mm, height 1.92–2.86 mm, diameter:height 1.79–2.28 (n = 20) (from The Island Nature Reserve, Port Elizabeth, close to type locality). Variation in dimensions between populations is given in Table 1 View Table 1 . Spire little exserted, protoconch acutely mammillate and tilted. Embryonic shell ( Fig. 7A View Fig ) approx. 2.25 whorls, microscopically malleate, sculpture strongest on earliest part, junction between embryonic shell and teleoconch evident with development of costae on teleoconch. Teleoconch comprising 2.5 whorls, convex, rapidly increasing, suture deeply impressed. Aperture circular, last whorl descending near aperture, peristome simple, continuous and free. Umbilicus wide and deep, exposing all the whorls. Periostracum glossy, honey-brown and lacquer-like with lamellate axial costae at regular intervals, 67– 97 on last whorl (average 80; n = 47), their edges scalloped or serrated in the majority of populations ( Fig. 8A View Fig ) and expanded into elongated flanges at periphery, flanges smooth with a spine-tip in populations from around Grahamstown ( Fig. 8B View Fig ); intervals between costae with 3–6 microscopic axial threads. Shell translucent honey brown when fresh.

LIVING ANIMAL. Dark grey.

OPERCULUM ( Fig. 7 View Fig C–E). Duplex outer portion shallowly concave, and consisting of a multispiral lamella with five whorls, at its growing edge the top edge of the lamellar blade is sloping, becoming perpendicular to the disc where it is attached; fringe of fused bristles emanates near top of vertical portion of lamellar blade on its outer surface and curves upwards and outwards forming a shallow furrow between fringe and lamellar blade, a second very short fringe emanates from lower down on the lamellar blade; top edge of lamella does not project above level of fringe; fringe of each whorl fused to lamella of following whorl. Fringe overlaps disc slightly, but operculum can be withdrawn into aperture.

RADULA ( Fig. 7F View Fig ). Rachidian with five cusps, central approx. twice as long as two on either side of it; first lateral tooth with four cusps and sometimes a vestigial fifth, first three cusps (from centre) gradually increasing in size and fourth considerably smaller; second lateral tooth with two large cusps and two small cusps towards outside.

PENIS ( Fig. 7 View Fig G–H). Shaft more or less straight-sided and slightly flattened, with numerous annular rugae, intromittent organ short.

Distribution and habitat

Endemic to the Eastern Cape, centered around Port Elizabeth and including the Albany district ( Fig. 9 View Fig ). Found in a wider variety of vegetation types than other Chondrocyclus species: Algoa Dune Strandveld, Albany Coastal Forest, Southern Mistbelt Forest, Great Fish Thicket ( von Maltitz et al. 2003; Hoare et al. 2006; Mucina et al. 2006); in leaf-litter.

Remarks

There is variation in size of shells between populations ( Table 1 View Table 1 ), an observation also recorded by Connolly (1939). Shells in some populations are among the largest recorded in the genus (the only other species attaining a similar size is C. amathole sp. nov.). However, the types ( Fig. 6A View Fig ) from Cape Receife, populations at The Island Nature Reserve (40 km west of type locality) and at Gamtoos River mouth are smaller on average and the population at Gamtoos mouth has a distinctly less depressed shape than is typical for the species. Its diameter/height proportions resemble those of relatively less depressed species, e.g., C. convexiusculus , C. herberti sp. nov. and A. exsertus gen. et comb. nov.

There was a relatively large intraspecific divergence in C. alabastris ( Cole et al. 2019) and the species contained several very well-supported subclades ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). There was a distinct lineage in the mistbelt forest patches on the Rietberg ridge south of Grahamstown (Paradise Kloof and Coleridge in Fig. 1 View Fig ). This lineage exhibited a conspicuous variation from other populations of C. alabastris : the peripheral extensions of the axial lamellae were not serrated along the edges and each flange tapered gradually into a short spine tip ( Fig. 8B View Fig ). Specimens from these localities superficially resembled C. convexiusculus ( Fig. 8C View Fig ). However, the spines are longer in C. convexiusculus , emanating from a relatively short, broad triangular proximal portion while in C. alabastris the triangular flanges taper gradually into the short spine tip ( Fig. 8B View Fig ).

The lamellar blade of the outer portion of the operculum of C. alabastris is relatively lower and hence the operculum is less concave than that of C. convexiusculus , and has a very short fringe below the long fringe, absent in C. convexiusculus .

Cole M. L., Raheem D. C. & Villet M. H. 2019. Molecular phylogeny of Chondrocyclus (Gastropoda: Cyclophoridae), a widespread genus of sedentary, restricted-range snails. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 131: 193 - 210. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. ympev. 2018.09.018

Connolly M. 1929. New non-marine mollusca from South Africa. Annals of the Natal Museum 6: 238.

Connolly M. 1939. A monographic survey of South African non-marine Mollusca. Annals of the South African Museum 33: 1 - 660.

Craven A. E. 1880. Description of three new species of land-shells from Cape Colony and Natal. Proceedings of the Zoological Society 1880: 618 - 619.

Hoare D. B., Mucina L., Rutherford M. C., Vlok J. H. J., Euston-Brown D. I. W., Palmer A. R., Powrie L. W., Lechmere-Oertel R. G., Proches, S. M., Dold A. P. & Ward R. A. 2006. Albany Thicket biome. In: Mucina L. & Rutherford M. C. (eds) The Vegetation of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland. Strelitzia 19: 540 - 567. South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria.

Kobelt W. 1902. Cyclophoridae. Das Tierreich 16 (I-XXXIX): 1 - 662. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 1227

Pfeiffer L. 1855. Descriptions of a new genus and twenty-three new species of Pneumonopoma, from the collection of H. Cuming, Esq. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 23: 101 - 108.

von Maltitz G., Mucina L., Geldenhuys C., Lawes M., Eeley H., Adie H., Vink D., Fleming G. & Bailey C. 2003. Classification System for South African Indigenous Forests. CSIR, Pretoria.

Gallery Image

Fig. 6. Chondrocyclus alabastris (Craven, 1880). A. Syntype (NHMUK 1891.3.7.42). B. Aperture view (ELM D16882). C. Dorsal view (ELM W3640). D. Ventral view (ELM W3640). Scale bars: A = 3 mm; B–D = 2 mm.

Gallery Image

Fig. 7. Chondrocyclus alabastris (Craven, 1880). A. Protoconch (ELM D16888). B. Detail of axial lamellae of periostracum (ELM W3639). C–E. Operculum (ELM W3640). F. Portion of radula (ELM W3640). G. Penis, lateral view, showing position (ELM W3638). H. Penis, dorsal view (ELM W3642). Scale bars: A = 200 µm; B, G–H = 1 mm; C–E = 500 µm; F = 50 µm.

Gallery Image

Fig. 8. Close-up of periostracum of species of the Southern-Eastern Cape clade and Chondrocyclus convexiusculus (Pfeiffer, 1855), showing variation in detail of flanges at periphery. A. C. alabastris (Craven, 1880) (serratededge typical) (ELMW3640). B. C. alabastris, Grahamstownarea (ELMW3690). C. C. convexiusculus (ELM W3636). D. C. herberti sp. nov. (ELM W3691). Scale bar = 500 µm.

Gallery Image

Fig. 9. Distribution map of Chondrocyclus species in the Southern-Eastern Cape clade in the southern Cape area of the Western Cape province and the western half of the Eastern Cape province. T indicates type localities. Major cities and rivers are labelled.

Gallery Image

Fig. 1. Bayesian Inference majority consensus tree of the “taxa complete” concatenated CO1-16S sequence dataset for Chondrocyclus s.l. Ancey, 1898 (84 sequences) and seven other caenogastropods with the tree rooted on Pomacea insularum (d’Orbigny, 1837) (modified from Cole et al. 2019). Colours indicate major clades of Chondrocyclus Ancey, 1898 and correspond with colours used in maps. Support values are given as posterior probabilities for Bayesian analysis above nodes (only values ≥ 0.95 are shown) and as bootstrap percentages for ML analysis below nodes (only values ≥ 65% are shown); maximal support (Bayesian = 1, ML = 100%) is indicated by an asterisk. Scale bar indicates substitutions per site.

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

ELM

East London Museum

NMW

Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien

NMSA

KwaZulu-Natal Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

SubClass

Caenogastropoda

Order

Architaenioglossa

Family

Cyclophoridae

Genus

Chondrocyclus