Craspedochiton cf. laqueatus ( Sowerby, 1842 )

Dell’Angelo, Bruno, Gori, Sandro, Baschieri, Leonardo & Bonfitto, Antonio, 2010, Chitons (Mollusca, Polyplacophora) from the Maldive islands, Zootaxa 2673 (1), pp. 1-38 : 22-23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2673.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D7EE78-FFC1-FF9C-FF7F-FF7BFC38B248

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Craspedochiton cf. laqueatus ( Sowerby, 1842 )
status

 

Craspedochiton cf. laqueatus ( Sowerby, 1842) View in CoL

( Figures 7H–Q View FIGURE 7 , 8A–J View FIGURE 8 , 9A–G View FIGURE 9 , 12L View FIGURE 12 , 13L–M View FIGURE 13 )

Chiton laqueatus Sowerby 1842: 104 .

Phacellozona laqueata: Leloup 1952: 6 View in CoL , textfigs 2–3, pl. 3. fig. 1.

Craspedochiton laqueatus View in CoL ; Pilsbry 1893: 285, pl. 39, figs 42–51, pl. 44, fig. 68; Strack 1993: 22, pl. 5, figs 4–5; Saito 1998: 156, figs 2J, 7; 2004: 89, figs 5 A–C; Anseeuw & Terryn 2004: 20, figs 60–61; Schwabe 2006: 21.

Non Acanthochites (Loboplax) laqueatus ; E.A. Smith 1903: 620.

Non Acanthochites (Loboplax) laqueatus ; Melvill 1909 /10: 119 (? = Craspedochiton moebiusi Thiele, 1909 View in CoL , fide Iredale 1914: 124).

Type: NHM 1988071/1, lectotype designated by Strack (1993: 23) ( Fig. 12M View FIGURE 12 ); NHM 1988071/2-5, paralectotypes ( Figs 12N–Q View FIGURE 12 ).

Type locality: Philippines, Island of Mindoro , Calapan, in coarse sand among small stones, in 9 fms .

Material examined: NHM 1988071/1-5, lectotype and 4 paralectotypes; M13: 2 valves (1 head and 1 intermediate); M23: 1 head valve; M26: 3 valves (1 head and 2 intermediate); M59: 5 spm (20 x 13.5 mm curled, 18.5 x 11.8 mm slightly curled, 16.7 x 11.5 mm slightly curled, 13.5 x 7.5 mm, Fig. 12L View FIGURE 12 , 9 x View FIGURE 9 5 View FIGURE 5 mm curled); M65: 3 valves (1 head and 2 intermediate); MLD01A: 1 intermediate valve; MLD02A: 9 valves (4 head and 5 intermediate); LB04: 1 head valve; LB05: 5 intermediate valves.

Description: Medium sized animal with a broad oval outline, with the anterior part of the perinotum moderately extended. Colour dirty white with large dark spots, verging to purplish, which can cover the whole valves too, perinotum of a reddish brown colour.

Head valve semicircular, wider than long, anterior margin concave between five distinct slightly elevated radial ribs that correspond to the slits of the articulamentum, posterior margin widely V-shaped. It is sculptured by long oval, flat granules, separated from each other, which become larger toward the outer margin. Intermediate valves broad and rather short, carinated, posterior margin straight with a slightly protruding apex, lateral areas scarcely elevated but clearly marked by a distinct diagonal ridge, which correspond to the slits in the articulamentum. The wedge-shaped jugal area is hardly raised and smooth except for an irregular pattern of hazy granules, with the side margins of the jugum partly sawed. The sculpture consists of densely arranged long oval to rectangular granules in the lateral areas, while granules are less closely arranged and of different size in the central areas, more or less radially directed. Tail valve oval, with a subcentral or slightly anterior mucro, anterior slope straight, posterior slope slightly convex. The antemucronal area is sculptured like the central areas of the intermediate valves, the postmucronal area resembles the lateral areas of the intermediate valves, in both cases the granules are roughly defined and coalescent, and more irregular in shape and size. The aesthetes, inconsistent in number, are arranged in an irregular pattern on the granules. In the small and well separated granules of the head valve can occur 2–3 megalaesthetes and 8–15 micraesthetes.

Articulamentum white and thick. The slits are deep and slightly elevated dorsally, forming a channel. Slit formula: 5/1/5. The teeth are broad and roughed dorsally. Apophyses rounded in the intermediate valves, more rectangular with rounded edges in the tail valve, widely separated by an unconnected sinus.

The anteriorly extended perinotum is dorsally covered with dense, short, smooth, distally curved spines, ca. 35–37.5 x 15–17.5 µ m ( Fig. 8F View FIGURE 8 ), and with dispersed long, slender, curved spicules. There are inconspicuous tufts of a few short, straight, finely striated needles, ca. 440–500 µm in length ( Fig. 8E View FIGURE 8 ). Marginally the perinotum is beset with slender, straight or slightly curved, smooth or finely striated spicules, 460–700 µm in length ( Fig. 8G View FIGURE 8 ). The hyponotum is covered with rectangular scales, strongly ribbed, with the size variable, ca. 90 x 68 µm in the anterior portion, with 18–19 ribs ( Fig. 8H View FIGURE 8 ), ca. 95 x 55 µm in the middle portion, with 16–17 ribs ( Fig. 8I View FIGURE 8 ), ca. 100 x 48 µm in the posterior portion, with 14–16 ribs ( Fig. 8J View FIGURE 8 ). The size of the scales is variable, and these measurements are medium-sized, but the spines become more slender and have fewer ribs on their posterior side. The ribs are very irregular, and it is possible to highlight in many scales a pronounced median rib, giving a characteristic appearance to the scale.

Preparation of the radula for this study was not very successful ( Figs 8A–D View FIGURE 8 ), and the teeth are not well discernible. It is possible to see a large, broad central tooth, with an indication of a slight cusp at the apex ( Fig. 8C View FIGURE 8 ), the first lateral tooth with a thin posterodorsal corner, and the second lateral tooth with a tricuspid blade, with the central denticle being largest ( Fig. 8B View FIGURE 8 ).

Remarks: The Craspedochiton species in Indian Ocean are a very difficult group to understand, based on the scarcity of the material available, the high variability of the species, and the often inadequate original description of the relevant species. The considerations made by Kaas (1979) in his discussion on C. isipingoensis (Sykes, 1901) and by Schwabe (2006) in his discussion of C. tetrica (Carpenter in Pilsbry, 1893), are representative for these problematic aspects.

The only Craspedochiton species reported for the Maldives Islands is C. laqueatus ( Sowerby, 1842) , [E.A. Smith (1903); Melvill (1909 /10)], but Iredale (1914: 124) showed that the specimens of C. laqueatus reported by Melvill from the Amirantes were wrongly identified, and assigned them with some doubts to C. moebiusi Thiele, 1909 . The description of E.A. Smith of the Maldive’s specimen is not sufficient to identify the species with certainty, but he reports the tail valve with “insertion plate thickish, with nine slits”, and this is different from C. laqueatus (5 slits). In addition, E.A. Smith considered C. tetrica as a synonym of C. laqueatus , and these two species are considered to be different now (Schwabe 2006), so it is difficult to say which Craspedochiton species he had in hand when he described the Maldive’s material.

We examined and illustrate for comparison the type material of C. laqueatus ( NHM 1988071 /1-5, Fig. 14A View FIGURE 14 ) :

- the lectotype NHM 1988071/1 ( Fig. 12M View FIGURE 12 ), 17.4 x 11.2 mm, the specimen illustrated by Reeve (1847: pl. 20, Fig. 135);

- the paralectotype NHM 1988071/2, the largest specimen, 17.5 x 11.3 mm, Fig. 12N View FIGURE 12 , with 3 valves detached (head, intermediate ii and tail, Figs 10A–C, 10E–F View FIGURE 10 );

- the paralectotypes no. 1988071/3-5, respectively 11.3 x 6,7 mm, 13.2 x 8.6 mm, and 16 x 10.5 mm ( Figs 12O–Q View FIGURE 12 ).

Our material has valve’s characteristics that agree with those of C. laqueatus , and not of C. tetrica (compare Fig. 7N View FIGURE 7 to Fig. 10E View FIGURE 10 ) while there are some differences in the girdle structures, especially in the ventral formations, as described by Strack (1993) and Saito (1998). It was not possible to study by SEM the girdle formations of the type material of C. laqueatus , the only available image of the hyponotum scales, obtained without cleaning and coating the type material ( Fig. 10D View FIGURE 10 ), shows a rectangular scale, strongly ribbed, 70 x 38 µm, with 17–18 ribs, smaller but similar in shape and sculpture to those of our Maldive’s material. For all these reasons, we identify our specimens as C. cf. laqueatus , waiting for more material and a better knowledge of the Craspedochiton species of the Indian Ocean.

The great variability of the hyponotum formations had rather limited previous documentation, i.e. by Leloup (1952), Strack (1993) and Saito (1998) for C. laqueatus , and by Schwabe (2006) for C. tetrica . But Leloup (1952: 7) also confirmed the great variability of these structures: “ Les deux specimens de Tuticorin montrent quelques différences: ... La ceinture montre , à la face inférieure, chez le premier des écailles de différentes grandeurs dont certaines très grandes; le second a les écailles moyennes et assez semblables de dimensions ”. A revision of Indo-West Pacific Craspedochiton species is absolutely necessary.

The characteristics of the available head and intermediate valves agree with those of C. laqueatus , also if a certain degree of variability is visible, for example the elevation of radial ribs in the head valves and the shape and layout of the granules.

Distribution: Craspedochiton laqueatus is seemingly a widespread Indo-Pacific species known from the northern Red Sea to the Philippines, but exact occurence needs a revision.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Polyplacophora

Order

Chitonida

Family

Acanthochitonidae

Genus

Craspedochiton

Loc

Craspedochiton cf. laqueatus ( Sowerby, 1842 )

Dell’Angelo, Bruno, Gori, Sandro, Baschieri, Leonardo & Bonfitto, Antonio 2010
2010
Loc

Craspedochiton laqueatus

Anseeuw, B. & Terryn, Y. 2004: 20
Saito, H. 1998: 156
Strack, H. L. 1993: 22
1993
Loc

Phacellozona laqueata:

Leloup, E. 1952: 6
1952
Loc

Acanthochites (Loboplax) laqueatus

Iredale, T. 1914: 124
1914
Loc

Acanthochites (Loboplax) laqueatus

Smith, E. A. 1903: 620
1903
Loc

Chiton laqueatus

Sowerby, G. B. II 1842: 104
1842
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