Xanthodaphne pichi, Figueira, Raquel Medeiros Andrade & Absalão, Ricardo Silva, 2012

Figueira, Raquel Medeiros Andrade & Absalão, Ricardo Silva, 2012, Deep-water Raphitomidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Conoidea) from the Campos Basin, southeast Brazil, Zootaxa 3527, pp. 1-27 : 11-13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.210977

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5632961

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8E7187D8-8E35-674A-47C0-E004FB176CC3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Xanthodaphne pichi
status

sp. nov.

Xanthodaphne pichi View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs. 16–19 View FIGURES 12 – 19. 12, 13 )

Type material: Holotype MNRJ 30289 [1] OP II # 84 (22° 26' 28"S, 39° 58' 53"W), 3.88 mm, 1046m. Paratype IBUFRJ 17063 [1] OP I # 59 (21° 52' 59"S, 39° 55' 30"W), 6.98 mm, 750m. Paratype MZSP 108229 [1] OP I # 84 (22° 26' 27"S, 39° 58' 51"W), 4.64 mm, 1050 m. Paratype MCZ 374807 [1] OP I # 1 (22° 41'S, 40° 07'W - 22° 44'S, 40° 10'W), 15.72 mm, 1318 - 1305 m. Paratype MCZ 374808 [1] OP II # 78 (22° 37' 02"S, 39° 56' 20"W), 4.6 mm, 1945 m. Paratype MNHN [2] OP II # 53 (22° 04' 45"S, 39° 41' 58"W), 3.12 mm and 4.02 mm, 1910m. Paratype USNM 1187765 [1] OP I # 53 (22° 04' 46"S, 39° 43' 02"W), 4.02 mm, 1950m. Paratype USNM 1187766 [2] OP II # 58 (21° 57' 26"S, 39° 40' 34"W), 2.9 mm and 3.16 mm, 1942m.

Type locality: 22° 26' 28"S, 39° 58' 53"W, Campos Basin, Southeast Brazil, Southwestern Atlantic, 1046 m.

Material examined: Type material and 18518 [2] OP II # 49; 18519 [1] OP II # 52; 18520 [4] OP II # 53; 18521 [2] OP II # 58; 18522 [2] OP II # 62; 18523 [4] OP II # 77; 18524 [1] OP II # 78; 18526 [1] OP I # 51; 18527 [1] OP I # 53; 18528 [2] OP I # 57; 18529 [1] OP I # 58; 18530 [2] OP I # 62; 18531 [1] OP I # 72; 18532 [1] OP I # 84.

Description: Shell moderately plump, white, up to 15.72 mm long. Protoconch with about 3.5 whorls, yellowish. Protoconch 1 with rows of tiny crosses, resembling barbed wire. Protoconch 2 with diagonal cancellation on the lower 2/3 of the whorls, and with axial riblets crossed by fine spiral threads on the upper 1/3 at the first whorl. The other whorls of protoconch 2 do not show fine spiral threads on the upper 1/3, but rather microscopic threads in the interspaces between the axial riblets. Clear-cut proto-teleoconch boundary. Teleoconch whorls evenly rounded. Subsutural rounded spiral band present. Subsutural zone with slightly curved thin axial riblets. Remainder of the shell macroscopically smooth, except for very faint sinoidal scars that vanish towards the fasciole. Microscopic grains over entire teleoconch surface. Suture shallow. Base moderately long. Fasciolar region with about 5 oblique and very faint cords. Anal sinus shallow and wide. Inner lip very thin, reflected over parietal wall. Outer lip thin. Anterior siphonal canal broad and moderately short. Aperture elliptical.

Etymology: Pichí is a word in Tupy, a major language of Brazilian indigenous peoples, and means “smooth”, referring to the smooth shell surface typical of this species.

Geographic distribution: Only known from Campos Basin, off Rio de Janeiro, 722–1950 m.

Discussion: The species has a subsutural zone clearly showing thin curved axial riblets, as the other species of the genus Xanthodaphne . On the other hand, this species does not have spiral sculpture, which makes this generic positioning uncertain. Besides the absence of spiral sculpture, Xanthodaphne pichi can be distinguished from the other species of the genus by the absence of an evident shoulder. In this genus, X. pachia ( Watson, 1886: 353, pl. 19, fig. 5) is the most similar to Xanthodaphne pichi , but can be distinguished by its plumper profile and shorter axial riblets below the suture. This species is very similar to Xanthodaphne pyriformis Schepman (1913: 83[447], pl. 30, fig. 7) reported from Indonesia, but Xanthodaphne pichi seems to have more convex whorls.

MNRJ

Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro

MZSP

Sao Paulo, Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

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