Melayonchis eloisae Dayrat, 2017

Dayrat, Benoît, Goulding, Tricia C., Bourke, Adam J., Khalil, Munawar & Tan, Shau Hwai, 2019, New species and new records of Melayonchis slugs (Gastropoda: Euthyneura: Pulmonata: Onchidiidae), Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 67, pp. 557-585 : 581

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26107/RBZ-2019-0043

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0F0AB24A-A37E-4DE0-B367-E2F5476FBB0E

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/664587E0-145B-FFDC-55ED-888CFAE55AAB

treatment provided by

Diego

scientific name

Melayonchis eloisae Dayrat
status

 

Melayonchis eloisae Dayrat View in CoL in Dayrat et al., 2017

Melayonchis eloisae Dayrat in Dayrat et al., 2017: 1861–1870, figs. 3–8.

Type locality. Singapore, Pasir Park , 01°22.840ʹN, 103° 57.224ʹE, 1 April 2010, station 5, mangrove forest with rich litter, lobster mounds, dead logs GoogleMaps .

Type material. Holotype, 15/10 [1011] mm, and one paratype 22/ 13 mm, by original designation ( ZRC.MOL.6499).

Additional material examined. Indonesia, Sumatra, Dumai , 01°42.838ʹN, 101°23.286ʹE, 9 October 2012, 1 specimen 23/ 14 mm [1775], station 74, mangrove forest just behind abandoned buildings, high intertidal, with many Thalassina mounds and small creeks in between ( UMIZ 00003 ) GoogleMaps .

Distribution ( Fig. 6 View Fig ). Sumatra (new record). Other records are in Brunei Darussalam, India (Andaman Islands), Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore (type locality), and Vietnam (Dayrat et al., 2017: 1863).

Habitat. In Sumatra, M. eloisae was found in a mangrove forest, at high intertidal, with many Thalassina mounds and small creeks in between, which is its most favorite habitat (Dayrat et al., 2017: 1863). Individuals were found on tree trunks and roots.

Abundance. Melayonchis eloisae is rare in Sumatra where we only found a few specimens at one site. It is hard to predict whether M. eloisae is present or not, even in what seems a perfect habitat (Dayrat et al., 2017: 1863).

Remarks. Melayonchis eloisae was expected to be present in eastern Sumatra, given its known records on the other side of the Strait of Malacca (western Peninsular Malaysia) and Singapore. Melayonchis eloisae in Sumatra is completely indistinguishable from the individuals found elsewhere. Also, the DNA sequences of the individual from eastern Sumatra are nested within the rest of the species (Figs. 3, 4).

ZRC

Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore

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