Hystricella microcarinata De Mattia & Groh

Mattia, Willy De, Neiber, Marco T. & Groh, Klaus, 2018, Revision of the genus-group Hystricella R. T. Lowe, 1855 from Porto Santo (Madeira Archipelago), with descriptions of new recent and fossil taxa (Gastropoda, Helicoidea, Geomitridae), ZooKeys 732, pp. 1-125 : 17-18

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.732.21677

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9995702B-6146-4BA1-BB53-23DC9BA9650F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EE848F87-CEBC-4430-9D7F-4D00D2EE2FF9

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:EE848F87-CEBC-4430-9D7F-4D00D2EE2FF9

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Hystricella microcarinata De Mattia & Groh
status

sp. n.

Hystricella microcarinata De Mattia & Groh View in CoL sp. n. Figs 74, 76

Type material.

SMF 348924, holotype, from loc. typ. (locus typicus), leg. W. De Mattia & J. Macor, May 2016.

Locus typicus.

Porto Santo, E of Vila Baleira, S slope of the hill above Vale do Touro, 50 m W of the oil tanks, excavated Quaternary mixed gravel, 33°03'47"N / 16°19'26"W, 24 m.

Diagnosis.

Hystricella species with two keels on the body whorl, the upper less developed than the lower one; growth lines rather coarse, giving the impression of an irregular ribbing; tubercles on the base of the shell rather scattered and not as prominent as in H. bicarinata .

Description of the shell of the holotype.

Shell very small for the genus, with 5⅓ regularly increasing whorls, the protoconch with 1.6 whorls. The form of the shell is rounded conical, the convex teleoconch whorls exhibit two flat keels that become more and more expressed; the upper keel is much less developed than the lower one; keels on the body whorl located in its upper half. The last whorl measures 69%, the penultimate whorl 15% of the total shell height. The lower half of the body whorl is, beneath the distinctly angled periphery, in frontal view nearly straight, only very slightly convex. The suture between the whorls is simple, not sunken. The aperture, which is inclined to the vertical axis of the shell in an angle of 50° and is descending in the last 5% of the last whorl in an angle of 36° to the horizontal axis, has an oblique-ovate form, its width is 43% of the shell width, its height 34% of the shell height. It has a slightly reflected lip, which is completely detached from the body whorl. The eccentric umbilicus, which is approximately 11% as wide as the shell, is shaped in the upper whorls like a pinhole. The protoconch is smooth. The teleoconch exhibits a number of oblique radial ribs, 16 in the penultimate quadrant of the body whorl and is additionally covered by numerous rough tubercles. The number of tubercles in the standard-quadrate of the base is 43. There are no traces of colouration (Fig. 74).

Measurements.

D 4.1; H 4.2 mm; FW 2.7 mm; PA 49°; DU 0.3 mm; NT 12; NW 4.8 (n = 1). Ratio D/H 0.9; ratio FW/H 0.6.

Distribution.

The species is only known from the type locality where it appears to be extremely rare (Fig. 76). Its close resemblance to other (sub-) fossil Hystricella taxa may have led to misidentifications during previous collecting and sorting, thus the distribution area of the species may possibly become larger after further investigations.

Etymology.

The name is a combination of the Greek name for small (μικρός = mikrós) and the Latin name for keeled (carinatus) and alludes to the small size of the shell with a keel at its periphery.

Comparison and comments.

Being a (sub-) fossil species, only the shell features can be taken into account for comparisons. The globose shape is similar to that of some forms of H. echinulata ; nevertheless the overall dimensions and surface sculpture of the shell clearly distinguish H. microcarinata sp. n. Because of its small size, the new species can also be confused with small specimens of H. aucta Wollaston, 1878 which, however, possesses two well-developed keels, has a wider umbilicus, a different shape and differently positioned angles of the aperture, or with Wollastonia beckmanni gen. et sp. n., which has a much flatter spire, has no keels on the whorls, a much wider umbilicus and also a different shape and differently positioned angles of the aperture.

Taxonomic remarks.

The generic affiliation of this species is based exclusively on the shape of the shell and the presence of keels on the body whorl. A similar arrangement of the tubercles and keels can be found also in some Wollastonia gen. n. species that will be described below.

Status and conservation.

Extinct before the islands’ scientific exploration in the 19th century, possibly already before human settlement.