Callochiton sp.

Dell’Angelo, Bruno, Gori, Sandro, Baschieri, Leonardo & Bonfitto, Antonio, 2010, Chitons (Mollusca, Polyplacophora) from the Maldive islands, Zootaxa 2673 (1), pp. 1-38 : 11-13

publication ID

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

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D7EE78-FFDE-FF86-FF7F-FD1BFBC4B6ED

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Callochiton sp.
status

 

Callochiton sp.

( Figures 4D–F View FIGURE 4 , 12 E–F View FIGURE 12 , 13A–B View FIGURE 13 , 14D View FIGURE 14 )

Material examined: NHM 1903.4.11.71: 1 spm from S. Nilandu Atoll, Maldive Is., 1–36 fms, coll. J.S. Gardiner (labelled Callochiton platessa Gould, 1846 ).

Description: Animal of 6.6 mm length, curled, valves slightly beaked, girdle of moderate width. Tegmentum uniformly light yellowish–red. Girdle of slightly clearer colour, with rather broad, transverse, blackish bands at the sutures of valves i–ii and vii–viii.

Head valve semicircular, with the posterior margin un-notched in the middle. Intermediate valves rectangular, posterior margin concave on both sides of the slightly beaked apex, lateral areas raised. Tail valve semicircular, mucro not elevated and situated subcentrally or somewhat anteriorly, postmucronal slope straight.

Tegmentum sculptured with elongate microgranules, radially arranged in the head valve, the lateral areas of intermediate valves, and the postmucronal area of the tail valve, longitudinally arranged in the central area of intermediate valves and in the antemucronal area of the tail valve ( Fig. 4F View FIGURE 4 ), the rows anteriorly diverging towards the sides. Central areas and antemucronal area with five distinct, deep and broad longitudinal grooves, which become larger towards the lateral margins. Ocelli easily perceptible, numerous and evenly dispersed over the whole head valve, lateral areas of intermediate valves, and postmucronal area of the tail valve, except for a narrow zone along the posterior margin of the head valve and lateral areas of intermediate valves.

Girdle dorsally densely covered with long, imbricated, inwardly directed, fusiform and smooth spicules, ca. 100 µm in length ( Fig. 4F View FIGURE 4 ), with the upper ends rounded.

Remarks: The description is based on the specimen collected by J.S. Gardiner, and reported in Smith (1903) as Callochiton platessa Gould ; we were not allowed to dismount the specimen for further analysis by SEM, and our description is consequently not complete.

E.A. Smith (1903) listed Callochiton platessa Gould , ranging from E. Australia to Polynesia (table on p. 596). According to Kaas & Van Belle (1998: 146) the species is now regarded as a synonym of Ischnochiton versicolor (Sowerby, 1840) , while Callochiton platessa auct. (non Gould, 1852) is considered to be Callochiton crocinus ( Reeve, 1847) , a species living in Australia and New Zealand ( Kaas & Van Belle 1985). C. crocinus is characterized by its larger size (up to 47 mm length), the valves not beaked, and the absence of pits in pleural areas (even if few small pits may be present on valves vi–viii in var. fossa Ashby, 1922 ). These characters don’t agree with those of our specimen, which also do not seem to fully agree with other named Indian Ocean Callochiton species : Callochiton vanninii Ferreira, 1983 (from Somalia, Madagascar, Red Sea and Bahrain), C. levatus Kaas & Van Belle, 1998 (from Madagascar, Réunion, Mauritius and Chagos Archipelago) and C. christamariae Schwabe, 2003 (from Mauritius) have the pleural areas of the intermediate valves and the antemucronal area of the tail valve lacking any sulci ( Kaas & Van Belle 1985; Schwabe 2003).

Callochiton clausadeae Kaas & Van Belle, 1985 (from Madagascar, Mauritius, Réunion, and the Maldive Islands) has a coarser microgranulation of the tegmentum with roundish granules, and a different layout of the more numerous and longer sulci on the pleural areas of the intermediate valves and the antemucronal area of the tail valve ( Kaas & Van Belle 1985).

Callochiton sulcatus Nierstrasz, 1905 (from Indonesia, only known for the lectotype) has a similar, if not identical, arrangement of sulci (compare to Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 in Schwabe & Ruthensteiner 2001) in relation to the diagonal ridge, but it differs from the Maldive species by its greater size (10.5 mm), the barely visible ocelli (easily perceptible in our species), the presence of several growth lines in the head valve, the lateral areas of the intermediate valves and the postmucronal area of the tail valve (not present in our species), and the length of dorsal girdle spicules (120–275 µm, instead of about 100 µm in our species). Moreover C. sulcatus is very similar to other two Indonesian species, C. subsulcatus Kaas & Van Belle, 1985 and C. schilfi Schwabe & Ruthensteiner, 2001 . The main characters of these species are reported by Schwabe & Ruthensteiner (2001: Table 1).

On the basis of the preceeding analysis, the attribution of this specimen to some previously known Callochiton species from the Indian Ocean, or to a new species is not possible on a single specimen, and requires both additional material for comparison and the examination of the type material of the others Callochiton species. The specimen collected by J.S. Gardiner at the Maldives remains therefore undetermined, as Callochiton sp. but it is possible, with certainty, to exclude the species Callochiton platessa Gould, 1846 from the chiton fauna of the Maldive Islands.

Distribution: Callochiton sp. is known only from the Maldive Islands.

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF