Diaphana sp.
publication ID |
978-2-85653-614-8 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087B2-FFD8-BE12-FF01-758DF6E9F96E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Diaphana sp. |
status |
|
Figs 28A, 29
MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Loyalty Ridge. BIOGEOCAL: stn CP 260, 21°00’S, 166°58’E, 1820-1980 m, 1 lv, destroyed.
DISTRIBUTION. — Collected only in New Caledonia (Fig. 29), in 1820-1980 m .
DESCRIPTION. — Shell morphology. The single shell collected was partially broken and subsequently destroyed; length about 3 mm, width about 2 mm. Aperture as long as the shell, wider anteriorly and narrower posteriorly. Columella simple. Umbilicus wide and deep. Surface smooth, with no sculpture. Colour uniform whitish.
Anatomy. The radular formula is 8 x 1.0. 1 in the single specimen examined. Rachidian teeth plate-like. Lateral teeth with an elongate base and numerous denticles on the single, curved cusp (Fig. 28A).
REMARKS. — SchiØtte (1998) revised the genus Diaphana and concluded that there are 20 valid species, only one of them, Diaphana brazieri Angas, 1877 , found in the tropical Indo-Pacific. Diaphana brazieri differs from Diaphana sp. in having a more elongate shell with a smooth surface.
Diaphana sp. appears to be a distinct species but it is not named here because of the lack of a complete shell. The single collected shell, which was already damaged, was destroyed during the examination process, but the specimen is assigned to the genus Diaphana because of the presence of a radula with a single long and denticulate lateral tooth, and a rachidian tooth.
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.