Natalina quekettiana lucaris, Herbert & Moussalli, 2010

Herbert, D. G. & Moussalli, A., 2010, Revision of the larger cannibal snails (Natalina s. l.) of southern Africa - Natalina s. s., Afrorhytida and Capitina (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Rhytididae), African Invertebrates 51 (1), pp. 1-1 : 59-61

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5733/afin.051.0101

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/110B87C2-FFBE-FFE8-D7DC-FE8FFBD9FD03

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Natalina quekettiana lucaris
status

subsp. nov.

Natalina quekettiana lucaris View in CoL subsp. n.

Figs 10E View Fig , 11C, D View Fig , 12C View Fig , 14F View Fig , 35B View Fig , 38–40 View Fig View Fig View Fig

Etymology: From Latin lucus (a sacred grove or forest); in reference to the many traditionally sacred sites within the forests of central and southern Zululand, in particular Ngome and Nkandla Forests.

Identification ( Fig. 39 View Fig ): For general description see N. q. quekettiana above. Attains a larger size than any of the other taxa in the N. quekettiana complex (adult diameter> 35 mm); spire frequently also more elevated and periphery close to mid-whorl; axial riblets usually remaining distinct on base, but not always so; radula with six pairs of lateral teeth per transverse row.

As in N. q. quekettiana , fresh specimens have a darker brown apical surface and frequently a distinctly greenish base, but the contrast fades to a less intense yellowish brown and olive-green with time.

Dimensions: Holotype: diameter 38.4 mm, height 27.1 mm; largest specimen (W1114/ T2562, Nkandla Forest), diameter 43.0 mm; H:D of adults 0.58–0.71 (N=11).

Living animal ( Fig. 35B View Fig ): Head-foot dark grey-black dorsally, sides of foot paler; neck region lacking paler, dorsolateral, longitudinal stripes; tentacles dark grey-black; margin of foot fringed with yellow or orange-yellow, mantle edge bright sulphur-yellow to orange; lung wall usually heavily mottled with dots and anastomosing blotches of black pigmentation.

Radula ( Fig. 40 View Fig ): Like that of Natalina q. quekettiana , but with fewer transverse rows and only six lateral teeth per half row; formula 1+6+(17–20) (N=6, one in BMNH, Piele coll.); length up to 34 mm, with 49–66 broadly V-shaped transverse rows of teeth.

Distal genitalia: As for Natalina q. quekettiana .

Spermatophore ( Figs 12C View Fig , 14F View Fig ): Described and illustrated above in discussion of generic characters. Holotype ( Figs 39A–C View Fig ): SOUTH AFRICA: KZN: Entumeni Nat. Res. , (28.88836°S: 31.38007°E), 620 m, GoogleMaps

scarp forest, under log, A. Moussalli & D. Stuart-Fox, 24/xii/2003 (NMSA W3310/T2557).

Paratypes: SOUTH AFRICA: KZN: Ngome Forest (27.827°S: 31.415°E), 1200 m, mist-belt Podocarpus forest, dead under log near camp site, D. Herbert, 19/i/1995 ( NMSA V657 View Materials /T2560, 1 specimen) GoogleMaps ; Ngome Forest , Ntendeka wilderness area (27.80177°S: 31.43765°E), 1100 m, mist-belt forest, in leaf-litter, A. Moussalli & D. Stuart-Fox, 08/i/2004 ( BMNH 20100125 , 1 specimen; NMSA W3128 View Materials /T2566, 3 specimens; W3305/T2559, 5 specimens; W3306/T2564, 2 juvenile specimens) GoogleMaps ; Ngome Forest (27.8281°S: 31.4190°E), 1110 m, mist-belt section of forest, mostly under logs, D. Herbert, 14/xii/1995 ( NMSA V2249 /T2563, 6 specimens) GoogleMaps ; Nkandla Forest Res., Chibini area (28.7227°S: 31.1282°E), 1200 m, mist-belt forest, under logs and in leaf-litter, D. Herbert, M. Bursey & T. Nangammbi, 20/x/2003 ( NMSA W1114 View Materials /T2562, 2 specimens) GoogleMaps ; same data as holotype ( NMSA W6854 View Materials /T2558, 1 specimen; W3317/T2565, 2 juvenile specimens) GoogleMaps ; Entumeni Nat. Res. (28.883°S: 31.383°E), 700 m, scarp forest, in leaf-litter, O. Bourquin, vii/ 1981 ( NMSA B5290 View Materials /T2561, 1 specimen) GoogleMaps ; Entumeni Nat. Res. (28.88583°S: 31.37944°E), 663 m, scarp forest, in leaf-litter at base of large tree between forestry office and picnic site, M. & K. Cole, 13/i/2010 ( ELM D16217 View Materials /T027, 1 specimen) GoogleMaps ; Kranskop , Zimbaba Bush (28.9328°S: 30.9510°E), 1100 m, 1922 ( NMSA A7060 View Materials /T2568, 1 juvenile specimen; A7061/T2567, 2 juvenile specimens; A7135/T2569, 1 specimen) GoogleMaps .

Distribution ( Fig. 38 View Fig ): Known primarily from the interior of Zululand (Ngome, Nkandla and Entumeni forests), but extending across the Thukela River valley to the Kranskop area; occurs at altitudes of 600–1200 m.

Habitat: Restricted to Afrotemperate and scarp forest; in leaf-litter and under logs; evidently scarce.

Notes: Molecular data indicate this subspecies to be the sister taxon of the nominotypical subspecies ( Moussalli et al. 2009), which it resembles in terms of the bicoloured shell pattern in living specimens and the very dark head-foot coloration. It differs in attaining a considerably larger size and in having only six lateral teeth per half row in the radula, compared to 8 or 9 in N. q. quekettiana .

Some variation in coloration, possibly geographical, is evident. Specimens from Ngome Forest have a distinctly bicoloured shell with a dark brown apical surface, whereas in those from Entumeni Forest the shell is less strongly bicoloured, with a chestnut to tan apical surface, and the mantle edge and pedal margin are orangish rather than bright yellow.

Conservation: The known extent of occurrence of N. q. lucaris is approx. 2500 km 2, but within this range its distribution is limited to islands of mist-belt and scarp forest. The forests from which it has been recorded include some of the largest such habitats remaining in KwaZulu-Natal (>2750 ha), and it is likely also to occur in Qudeni Forest, another large but very poorly sampled forest. These forests are in some cases formally protected, but the level of protection is variable and its efficacy is not guaranteed. Owing to their remote location in underdeveloped areas, the forests are subject to on-going anthropogenic pressure in the form of subsistence harvesting of forest products, grazing and trampling by livestock, and peripheral encroachment by small-scale agriculture.

NMSA

KwaZulu-Natal Museum

ELM

East London Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Stylommatophora

Family

Rhytididae

Genus

Natalina

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