Pontohoratia vinarskii Grego & Mumladze, 2020

Grego, Jozef, Mumladze, Levan, Falniowski, Andrzej, Osikowski, Artur, Rysiewska, Aleksandra, Palatov, Dimitry M. & Hofman, Sebastian, 2020, Revealing the stygobiotic and crenobiotic molluscan biodiversity hotspot in Caucasus: Part I. The phylogeny of stygobiotic Sadlerianinae Szarowska, 2006 (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Hydrobiidae) from Georgia with descriptions of five new genera and twenty-one new species, ZooKeys 955, pp. 1-77 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.955.51983

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C8EF4A4B-6F05-4621-B9B5-AE47FEE7C217

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/785C454A-73B0-4C37-AAB4-A9989B268236

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:785C454A-73B0-4C37-AAB4-A9989B268236

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Pontohoratia vinarskii Grego & Mumladze
status

sp. nov.

Pontohoratia vinarskii Grego & Mumladze sp. nov. Plates 19 View Plate 19 (1-5); 20(1, 2, 8, 9); Fig. 16A, B View Figure 16

Type locality.

Georgia • Samegrelo, Chkhorotsku, Letsurtsume, Letsurtsume Cave (ლეწურწუმეს მღვიმე); 42°32'21"N, 42°06'48"E; 180 m a.s.l; sandy sediment in the cave stream bottom.

Material.

Holotype: Georgia • 1 adult, dry; type locality; 02 May 2018; J. Grego, L. Mumladze and M. Olšavský leg.; ISU FM-T023-H. Paratypes: Georgia • same as for holotype; ISU FM-T023-P1/350 dry and 18 wet, P2/10 dry, SBMNH 633077/5 dry, NHMW 113377/3 dry, HNHM 104686/3 dry, NHMUK 20191341/3 dry, NHMB 563974/3 dry, SMF 358934/3 dry, ZMH 140638/3 dry, MNHN-IM-2016-7902, ZIN 1/505-2020/3 dry, coll. JG F1046/350 dry and 18 wet, JG F1047/10 dry, coll. Glöer /1 dry. Other material: Georgia • Samegrelo, Chkhorotsku, Garakha, Savekuo Cavern, mud sediments in the spring pond; 42°30'23"N, 42°08'46"E; 240 m a.s.l.; 12 June 2019; H. Reip leg.; coll. F. Walther/243 dry, coll. JG/20 dry.

Diagnosis.

The new species differs from P. smyri Vinarski, Palatov & Glöer, 2014 by its more elevated spire and by a proportionally smaller and more ovate aperture. The geographically close C. pichkhaiai sp. nov. and C. mapeli sp. nov. have similar shells, but both are flatter and have much smaller rounded apertures.

Description.

Shell: flat, discoid with elevated spire and flat apex. Diameter 1.31-1.58 mm. Umbilicus widely opened. The 2¾ whorls are separated by a deeply cut sulcus. Shell transparent whitish colour with smooth surface and almost invisible growth lines. Oval aperture with axis declined towards columella. Peristome smooth without any folds. Lateral profile of the labrum is slightly angled towards the body whorl at its upper side, where attached by a narrow furrow. Protoconch surface regularly weakly pitted on the nuclear portion and abapically smooth.

Operculum: orange coloured circular, translucent, with central nucleus, thickened at its centre, but without peg on its inner side.

Animal body: whitish, not pigmented, eyeless.

Holotype measurements: H-1.08 mm; W-1.47 mm; BH-0.87 mm; BW-1.00 mm; AH-0.63 mm; AW-0.55 mm; CA: -20°.

Anatomy: the penis (Fig. 16A, B View Figure 16 ) simple, broad and blunt, without any outgrowth.

Etymology.

Named after renowned Russian malacologist Maxim V. Vinarski, Saint-Petersburg State University, Russia, who contributed significantly to Eurasian freshwater Mollusca studies as well as to the study of southwestern Caucasus freshwater Mollusca.

Habitat.

Stygobiotic species. See habitat of Caucasopsis letsurtsume sp. nov.

Distribution.

Only known from the type locality.

Conservation status.

The number of known locations (2) is no more than 5 and EOO is smaller than 20 km2. There is no reason to suppose that AOO, EOO, number of locations, number of subpopulations or the number or mature individuals are declining however due to its extremely small EOO we assessed as Vulnerable (VU) D2.

Remarks.

The shell morphology of the new species within the type locality varies considerably from almost flat shells to specimens with elevated spired and a more conical shell shape. Similar variability in the shell shape had been observed in the sympatric Caucasopsis letsurtsume sp. nov. It is curious whether both extreme variabilities could have the same environmental driver in the locality or if it could be a result of a parasitism. Many individuals are densely covered by calcareous inorganic precipitates, and some of them resemble a grain of sand without a recognisable shell shape. The operculum may also be densely covered by inorganic incrustations (Plate 20 View Plate 20 (9)).