Nanocochlea damperensis, Ponder & Clark & Eberhard & Studdert, 2005

Ponder, W. F., Clark, S. A., Eberhard, S. & Studdert, J. B., 2005, A radiation of hydrobiid snails in the caves and streams at Precipitous Bluff southwest Tasmania, Australia (Mollusca: Caenogastropoda: Rissooidea: Hydrobiidae s. l.),, Zootaxa 1074 (1), pp. 1-66 : 47-49

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1074.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8C36619A-8876-40C0-BA06-60AE4449DD49

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10533186

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB87BA-2D2C-A23C-E41F-FD607A42F905

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Nanocochlea damperensis
status

sp. nov.

Nanocochlea damperensis n. sp.

Figures 4D View FIGURE 4 ; 6K–M View FIGURE 6 ; 8G View FIGURE 8 ; 14E–G View FIGURE 14 ; 15G–H View FIGURE 15 ; 16D–F View FIGURE 16 ; 17G–K View FIGURE 17 ; 18B View FIGURE 18 .

Type material

Holotype: AMS C.439399, first crossing, Damper Ck, stn PBs­1A, 29 MAR 1994.

Paratypes: AMS C.203685, same data, 20+ dry, 20+ wet ; QVM, 9:20543 (5 wet); AMS C.439400, same data (1 dry figured paratype) .

Other material examined (all AMS)

Damper Creek: C.203673, 10m outside Damper Cave, stn PBs­2A (22 dry, 20+ wet); C.201282, near New River Lagoon, E side, Limestone Ck, where track crosses creek, JW 49, 15 FEB 1988; 20+ dry, 20 wet; figured specimen from same lot, C.343820.

Bauhaus: C.303685, cave entrance.

Etymology Named after Damper Creek.

Description

Shell ( Figs. 6K–M View FIGURE 6 ; 14E–G View FIGURE 14 ; 15G, H View FIGURE 15 ). Length up to 2.3 mm; conical (SW/SL 0.50–0.69, mean 0.61, n = 63); spire moderate to tall, convex in outline; last whorl evenly rounded; suture indented/impressed. Protoconch microsculpture of small shallow pits and pustules. Teleoconch up to 3.3 whorls in adult; umbilicus present only in juveniles; aperture oval to pear­shaped; moderate size, shorter than spire (AL/SL 0.37–0.47, mean 0.42, n = 63); outer lip, orthocline, weakly thickened in adult, straight to slightly convex, without reflection; notch usually present in posterior corner of aperture; outer lip orthocline to weakly opisthocline; inner lip thin and narrow, in partial contact or narrowly separated from parietal wall.

Dimensions. See Table 12.

Operculum ( Fig. 16D–F View FIGURE 16 ). Inner surface with or without white smear and, in some, 3– 5 weak ridges (reduced pegs).

Eyes. Slightly pigmented.

Pallial cavity ( Fig. 8G View FIGURE 8 ). Ctenidium narrow; 12–13 very small filaments; osphradium between posterior end and middle of ctenidium; hypobranchial gland thick to moderately developed; renal organ extends forward ca. ½ into pallial cavity; pericardium more than ½ in pallial roof.

Radula ( Fig. 17G–K View FIGURE 17 ). Central teeth: dorsal edge with moderate to deep indentation; 4–5 lateral cusps, median cusp narrow, sharply pointed, about twice as long as adjacent cusps. Lateral teeth: dorsal edge with shallow indentation; with 5–6 cusps on outer and 4– 6 on inner side; median cusp narrow, sharply pointed, less than, to about twice as long as, adjacent cusps; ratio of cutting edge to shaft about ¼; basal projection pointed. Marginal teeth: Inner with 20–27 cusps; outer with 20–26 cusps.

Stomach. Stomach with posterior chamber a little smaller than anterior chamber.

Male genital system. Testis of 1.0–1.25 whorls; oval to kidney­shaped; oval in section. Pallial vas deferens straight to slightly undulating at prostate; straight between prostate and penis and at base of penis. Penis ( Fig. 4D View FIGURE 4 ) with weak swelling in mid­distal portion; distal end long, papilla­like; medial section parallel sided; of medium length; penial duct in medial section strongly undulating; base of penis moderately wide; with moderate folds; penial duct straight to undulating.

Female genital system ( Fig. 18B View FIGURE 18 ). Ovary of 1.0 whorls; oviduct extends to posterior edge of bursa copulatrix or slightly less; joins bursal duct just in front of posterior pallial wall. Bursa copulatrix of medium size, not extending to posterior pallial wall; globular; with bursal duct arising from middle of anterior edge of bursa; straight. Seminal receptacle at middle of inner wall of bursa copulatrix; ovoid or pyriform. More than ½ of albumen gland in front of posterior pallial wall; capsule gland up to? length of albumen gland; oval to compressed oval in section; anterior end blunt; ventral channel with indistinct to distinct vestibule; genital opening overlapping anterior end of capsule gland.

Distribution and habitat

Found in Damper Creek near the entrance to Damper Cave but was not found in samples from inside Damper Cave (in the same creek). A sample of mainly empty shells from seepages at the entrance of Bauhaus cave ( Fig. 15G, H View FIGURE 15 ) is also attributed to this species and a single dead shell (AMS C. 203714) from inside Bauhaus (Persephone Pot) is presumably washed in from a surface seepage. Specimens from the lower end of Limestone Creek on the eastern side of New River Lagoon are also attributed to this species (see remarks). The site in this creek is approximately 1.7 km S of the lower end of Damper Ck, although about 3.5 km separate the two locations where the samples were collected.

Remarks

Nanocochlea damperensis differs from the other Nanocochlea described to date in its broadly pupiform shell shape. Specimens from Limestone Creek are almost identical to the type material, although have more ctenidial filaments (14–17), 5–6 lateral cusps on the central teeth and the pallial vas deferens undulates rather than being straight. Other anatomical differences are the seminal receptacle is ovoid, not globular, the capsule gland has a terminal opening in some specimens and most specimens lack a distinct white smear on the operculum. Given their close geographic proximity and overall similarity, these two populations are considered to be conspecific pending more detailed investigation.

The very weak (rudimentary) multiple pegs on the operculum of this species resemble those seen in P. conica and P. arthurclarkei and have not been observed in other taxa included in Nanocochlea .

The shell­shape of this species resembles that of some taxa included in Austropyrgus (see Clark et al. 2003). Members of that genus have distinct pegs on the operculum, lack an S­shaped rectum and have three or more basal cusps on the central teeth.

QVM

Queen Victoria Museum

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