Amplirhagada alicunda, Köhler, 2011

Köhler, Frank, 2011, Descriptions of New Species of the Diverse and Endemic Land Snail Amplirhagada Iredale, 1933 from Rainforest Patches across the Kimberley, Western Australia (Pulmonata: Camaenidae), Records of the Australian Museum 63 (2), pp. 167-202 : 173-175

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.0067-1975.63.2011.1581

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1BCD4085-D2B9-400D-B504-8C85C30303D6

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0384503A-FFBD-3C56-FC74-FB0AFDC26AAA

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Amplirhagada alicunda
status

sp. nov.

Amplirhagada alicunda View in CoL n.sp.

Type locality. Western Australia, NW Kimberley, 27 km SE Walsh Point , ca. 16 km SSW of Mt. Connor, 13 km from coast; 14°41'45"S 126°04'04"E ( RFS 11-4 , coll. V. Kessner, 11 Jun 1987) ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ) GoogleMaps .

Type material. Holotype WAM S34710 View Materials (preserved specimen) (Pl. 1.3; Table 1) . Paratypes WAM S34711 View Materials (2 preserved specimens) , FMNH 220384 View Materials (2 preserved specimens) , AM C.472921 (10 dried shells), WAM S34712 View Materials (16 dried shells) , FMNH 220385 View Materials (25 dried shells) .

Etymology. Species epithet derived from “alicunde” (Latin = from somewhere, from any place), in reference to the remote type locality, far away from any named place.

Description

Shell (Pl. 1.3; Fig. 8 A–D View Figure 8 ). Broadly conical to semi-globose with elevated spire. Solid, not translucent. Periphery slightly compressed to slightly angulate; upper sector of whorl flattened, basal sectors rounded. Umbilicus 70–100% concealed by columellar reflection. Background colour crème to horn; peripheral band conspicuous, usually well developed, rather thin, clearly visible on most whorls; sub-sutural band broad, diffuse to well developed, brown, clearly visible on most whorls; outer and inner lip colour white, conspicuously contrasting shell colour. Protoconch 2.4 mm in diameter, comprising about one whorl, with very weak radially elongated pustulations. Teleoconch with faint, regular axial growth lines, evenly distributed across shell. Angle of aperture about 60 degrees; outer lip moderately thick, well rounded, slightly expanded, not reflected; basal node absent or weak. Parietal wall of inner lip very inconspicuous. Average shell size 16.0±1.4 × 20.2± 0.7 mm ( Table 1).

Radular and jaw morphology ( Fig. 8 E–G View Figure 8 ). Tooth formula C + 16–18 + 4 + 18–20 (n = 1). Jaw with 12 plates.

Genital morphology ( Figs 9–10 View Figure 9 View Figure 10 ). Penis straight, more or less of same length as anterior part of oviduct; distal part of penis proper narrow, proximal part inflated. Penial sheath delicate. Length of penial retractor muscle equivalent to about ¼ of length of penial complex. Penial verge extending about 1/10 of length of penial chamber, slender with pointed tip. Proximal part of inner penial wall entirely covered by extremely fine pustulation. Main stimulatory pilaster strongly enlarged, comprising proximal half of inner penial chamber, cone-shaped, sculptured by regularly spaced, lateral ridges that support dense rows of little hooks. Vas deferens entering penial sheath within proximal third of penial complex.Vagina moderately long, tubular; inner vaginal wall and inner wall of bursa copulatrix with continuous, well-developed, smooth longitudinal pilasters. Bursa copulatrix short, reaching base of spermoviduct. Free oviduct rather straight comprising less than half of length of anterior part of oviduct. Spermoviduct longer than anterior part of oviduct.

Aestivation strategy and ecology. Free sealer, inhabits locally restricted vine thicket.

Remarks. Anatomical description based on dissection of one specimen. Listed by Solem (1991) as “ Amplirhagada NSP 19”. Shell similar to other relatively large, broadly conical species with spiral bands, such as A. combeana Iredale, 1938 and A. mitchelliana Solem, 1981 but anatomy of inner penial wall clearly different.

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

WAM

Western Australian Museum

AM

Australian Museum

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