Cerithidea quoyii ( Hombron & Jacquinot, 1848 )

Reid, David G., 2014, The genus Cerithidea Swainson, 1840 (Gastropoda: Potamididae) in the Indo-West Pacific region, Zootaxa 3775 (1), pp. 1-65 : 37-39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3775.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D9FF6080-0316-4433-ABB8-7D6D6F2BF24B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3509505

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DA0723-651E-2860-D1A0-FB98FC848C92

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cerithidea quoyii ( Hombron & Jacquinot, 1848 )
status

 

Cerithidea quoyii ( Hombron & Jacquinot, 1848) View in CoL

( Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 D, 11, 12B–J)

Cerithium obtusum — Adams & Reeve, 1848: 43 –44, pl. 13, fig. 3a, b (not Lamarck, 1822).

Cerithium quoyii Hombron & Jacquinot, 1848 : pl. 23, figs 6, 7

( Singapour [ Singapore]; lectotype here designated

Hombron & Jacquinot 1848: pl. 23, fig. 6). Rousseau, 1854: 97.

Cerithidea quoyii View in CoL — Reid et al., 2013: figs 1 (phylogeny), 2 (map).

Cerithium truncatum — Reeve, 1860: 124 (not Gray in Griffith & Pidgeon, 1833; not Griffith & Pidgeon, 1834; description is a copy of Adams & Reeve, 1848: 43 –44).

Cerithidea quadrata G.B. Sowerby II, 1866 View in CoL : Cerithidea View in CoL sp. 5, pl. 1, fig. 5

( Malacca [ Melaka, Malaysia]; 3 syntypes NHMUK 20130228, Fig. 12D–G View FIGURE 12. B – J , seen ).

Tapparone-Canefri, 1874: 144 –145. Morlet, 1889: 144. Dautzenberg & Fischer, 1906: 410 – 411 (in part, includes C. dohrni View in CoL ). Van Benthem Jutting, 1956: 435 –436, fig. 107. Poutiers, 1998: 454, fig. (in part, includes C. dohrni View in CoL , C. andamanensis View in CoL ). Swennen et al., 2001: 111, fig. 294. Dharma, 2005: 92, pl. 21, fig. 4a, b. Ng et al., 2008: 72 (living animal). Reid et al., 2008: 680 –699, figs 1, 2 (phylogeny). Mujiono, 2009: 54, fig. 1G. Hamli et al., 2013: 412 –418, fig. 2d.

Potamides (Cerithidea) obtusa var. quadrata — Tryon, 1887: 161, pl. 33, fig. 63.

Cerithium (Cerithidea) quadratum — Kobelt, 1890a: 45 –46, pl. 9, fig. 8 ( Cecalupo 2005: pl. 31, fig. 7).

Potamides (Cerithidea) quadratus —von Martens, 1897a: 187 –188, pl. 9, fig. 23; pl. 10, fig. 4 (head) (in part, includes C. anticipata View in CoL ).

Potamides quadratum — Prashad, 1921: 495 –496.

Cerithidea (Cerithidea) quadrata View in CoL — Brandt, 1974: 193, pl. 14, fig. 53. Thach, 2007: 60, pl. 9, fig. 182.

Potamides (Cerithidea) rhizophorarum — Tryon, 1887: 162, pl. 33, fig. 62 (in part, includes C. rhizophorarum ; not A. Adams, 1855; as rhizoporarum).

Cerithidea rhizophorarum View in CoL — Van Regteren Altena, 1945: 145 (synonymy fide Van Benthem Jutting 1956; not A. Adams, 1855)

Cerithidea obtusa View in CoL —Ng & Sivasothi, 1999: 106, figs (not Lamarck, 1822).

Cerithidea (Cerithideopsis) pliculosa View in CoL — Cecalupo, 2005: 316, pl. 31, fig. 7 (not Menke, 1829).

Cerithidea (Aphanistylus) charbonnieri View in CoL — Cecalupo, 2006: 133, 186, 233 (not Petit de la Saussaye, 1851; in part, includes C. charbonnieri View in CoL ).

Taxonomic history. It is curious that the valid name for this species, introduced by Hombron & Jacquinot in 1848 (see Taxonomic History of C. anticipata for discussion of date of publication) has been so long neglected. It was erroneously listed in the synonymy of C. rhizophorarum by Tryon (1887). It was mentioned under C. quadrata by von Martens (1897a), perhaps unaware of its priority; it does not appear to be a preoccupied name. Since then it has not been mentioned until resurrected by Reid et al. (2013). Despite this relative obscurity, the conditions for reversal of precedence (ICZN 1999: Art. 23.9) in favour of the more widely-used C. quadrata are not met in this case. There is a specimen labelled as a syntype of Cerithium quoyii in MNHN (MNHN 25693; Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12. B – J A), but this is not the shell figured by Hombron & Jacquinot (1848: pl. 23, figs 6, 7) and it bears a label ‘Borneo’, whereas the type locality was given as ‘Singapour’. Furthermore, the shell more closely resembles C. dohrni from the Philippines, so its identification as a syntype is not accepted. The original figure and type locality are, however, sufficient to define the species unambiguously.

For most of its history this species has been known under the name C. quadrata . It is not clear why Sowerby (1866) ignored the earlier name, when he considered another of Hombron & Jacquinot’s (1848) new taxa, C. kieneri , to be valid.

Diagnosis. Shell: broad, spire convex, whorls flattened, periphery angled; aperture flared, anterior canal and apertural projection well developed; 14–32 axial ribs on penultimate whorl, 3–6 weakening ribs after ventrolateral varix; ventrolateral varix an enlarged rib at 240–270°; 7 spiral cords on spire, 6–9 cords and threads above periphery on last whorl; brown with darker spiral cords. Southeast Asia, Borneo, Java. COI GenBank HE680230 View Materials , HE680231 View Materials , HE680233 View Materials –680235, AM932771 View Materials , AM932772 View Materials .

Material examined. 58 lots.

Shell ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12. B – J A–J): H = 24.1–45 mm (52 mm, Brandt 1974). Shape elongated conical, usually relatively broad (H/B = 2.11–2.69, SH = 2.37–3.17); decollate, 6–9 whorls remaining; spire whorls flattened to weakly rounded, suture indistinct; spire profile usually convex; periphery usually strongly angled; thin to moderate thickness. Adult lip flared, slightly thickened; apertural margin planar in side view; strong anterior projection adjacent to deep notch of anterior canal. Sculpture on spire of straight to slightly curved (opisthocyrt) axial ribs, narrowly rounded, interspaces 1–1.5 times width of ribs, rarely 1 rib enlarged as a varix on spire, 14–32 ribs on penultimate whorl, 3– 6 distant ribs after ventrolateral varix, weak or absent on final 0.25 whorl, only faint axial wrinkles on base; spire whorls with 7 spiral cords, approximately equal in width to interspaces, often increased by interpolation of 1–3 narrow threads on last 1–2 whorls to give 6–9 spiral cords and threads above periphery on last whorl; base with (10)12–15 spiral threads, outermost is peripheral cord of same size as primary cords above and raised as a keel. Ventrolateral varix a strongly enlarged rib at 240–270°, forming an anteriorly projecting boss at periphery. Surface with fine spiral microstriae on periostracum, strongest on spiral cords. Colour: brown, spiral cords darker brown except for 2–3 pale cords at shoulder (giving appearance of pale spiral band); aperture pale brown, spiral lines showing through.

Animal ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 D): Head and base of tentacles pinkish grey with cream spots; anterior half of snout blackish, sometimes with a few yellow spots, if black pigment is less intense then snout and tentacle bases appear more strongly pink; tentacles pale grey with black rings; sides of foot grey, blackish anteriorly, with small yellowish cream spots; sole of foot grey, pinkish towards margin; mantle pale pinkish grey (based on ethanol-preserved specimens). Adams & Reeve (1848) described and illustrated a light brown snout with three longitudinal, broad, opaque yellow lines, the central one longest and reaching nearly to the tip where it is bifid, the foot light pinkish brown mottled with dark brown and the sole lilac.

Range ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ): S Vietnam, E Thailand, Malaysia, Borneo, Java, S Sulawesi. Records: Vietnam: Ninh Phu, 25 km N Nha Trang ( NHMUK 20010373) ; Vung Tau ( ANSP 330752). Cambodia: Kampot ( Morlet 1889). Thailand: Chantaburi R. ( RMNH; AM C.79266; USNM 794072); Koh Taluei ( USNM 361191). Malaysia: Leban Condong, Pahang (AM C.124469); Klang, Selangor ( NHMUK); Koyong Hujan, Sarawak ( USNM 673304); Uglam Hujung, Kudat, Sabah ( NHMUK 20130247) ; Sandakan, Sabah ( USNM 666744; ANSP 295506). Brunei: Sungai Ayam Ayam, Brunei Bay ( NHMUK). Singapore: Pulau Ubin ( NHMUK 20130249; USNM 828821). Indonesia: Pantai Cermin, Deli, Sumatra ( RMNH 175798); Pulau Dua, Banten, Java ( ANSP 225509); Cilcap, Java ( RMNH); Madura ( RMNH); Lovina, Bali ( ZMB 106180); Balikpapan, Kalimantan (AM C.317961); Makassar, Sulawesi ( RNHL 175807; ZMB).

Habitat and ecology. This species can be found up to 1.5 m above the ground on trunks of Rhizophora , Nypa and other mangrove trees, in the middle and landward zones of broad mangrove forests in marine and moderately brackish areas. In Thailand, Brandt (1974) noted that it climbs up trees to feed on algae growing on roots and stems; since other Cerithidea species descend the trees to feed on the ground, this observation may be questioned. In Singapore, Berry (1963) observed it on mangrove trees around MHWN and on the mud surface beneath. In Java, Van Benthem Jutting (1956) found it both in mangrove forests and brackish fish ponds, while Mujiono (2009) observed it up to 1.93 m above the ground on mangroves, including Acanthus ilicifolius .

Remarks. In molecular phylogenetic analyses, this species forms a clade with C. dohrni , but the two are only reciprocally monophyletic in the COI analysis ( Reid et al. 2013; Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). The uncorrected pairwise distance between them for COI is 0.091, which is low for an interspecific comparison in Cerithidea (only the C. anticipata / reidi comparison, 0.076, is lower). There are, however, small but consistent differences in the shells of the two species, which support their recognition as species. A third species in the C. quoyii group, C. andamanensis , shows differences from these others and characters for their discrimination are listed in Table 1 View TABLE 1 . The ranges of C. quoyii and C. dohrni do not overlap, but those of C. quoyii and C. andamanensis just meet in NE Sumatra ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ).

Over most of its range, C. quoyii is found with C. obtusa ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ). The latter is a broader, heavier shell with rounded periphery and the animal has a predominantly red, rather than blackish, body ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B, D). Both are used for food in Southeast Asia ( Brandt 1974; Hamli et al. 2013).

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

ANSP

Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

ZMB

Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Zoological Collections)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Family

Potamididae

Genus

Cerithidea

Loc

Cerithidea quoyii ( Hombron & Jacquinot, 1848 )

Reid, David G. 2014
2014
Loc

Cerithidea (Aphanistylus) charbonnieri

Cecalupo 2006: 133
2006
Loc

Cerithidea (Cerithideopsis) pliculosa

Cecalupo 2005: 316
2005
Loc

Cerithidea obtusa

Sivasothi 1999: 106
1999
Loc

Cerithidea (Cerithidea) quadrata

Thach 2007: 60
Brandt 1974: 193
1974
Loc

Cerithidea rhizophorarum

Van 1945: 145
1945
Loc

Potamides quadratum

Prashad 1921: 495
1921
Loc

Potamides (Cerithidea) quadratus

Martens 1897: 187
1897
Loc

Cerithium (Cerithidea) quadratum

Kobelt 1890: 45
1890
Loc

Potamides (Cerithidea) obtusa var. quadrata

Tryon 1887: 161
1887
Loc

Potamides (Cerithidea) rhizophorarum

Tryon 1887: 162
1887
Loc

C. dohrni

Hamli 2013: 412
Mujiono 2009: 54
Reid 2008: 680
Dharma 2005: 92
Swennen 2001: 111
Poutiers 1998: 454
Van 1956: 435
Dautzenberg 1906: 410
Morlet 1889: 144
Tapparone-Canefri 1874: 144
1874
Loc

Cerithium truncatum

Reeve 1860: 124
Adams 1848: 43
1860
Loc

Rousseau 1854: 97
1854
Loc

Cerithium obtusum

Adams 1848: 43
1848
Loc

Cerithium quoyii

Loc

Cerithidea quoyii

Loc

Cerithidea quadrata G.B. Sowerby II, 1866

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