Japonia bauensis, Marzuki & Liew & Mohd-Azlan, 2021

Marzuki, Mohammad Effendi bin, Liew, Thor-Seng & Mohd-Azlan, Jayasilan, 2021, Land snails and slugs of Bau limestone hills, Sarawak (Malaysia, Borneo), with the descriptions of 13 new species, ZooKeys 1035, pp. 1-113 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1035.60843

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:ED19022E-A170-4DB7-9587-FEFE15D07854

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D7EC642E-FFA0-495E-B506-4A815EF378D0

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:D7EC642E-FFA0-495E-B506-4A815EF378D0

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Japonia bauensis
status

sp. nov.

Japonia bauensis sp. nov. Figures 4C, D View Figure 4 , 5 View Figure 5

Material examined.

Holotype (SH 5.84 mm, SW 8.00 mm) (MZU.MOL.20.02), Malaysia, Sarawak, Kuching Division , Gunung Doya, limestone hill near Sungai Sebuyoh, 3.4 miles SE Bau, 1°22'57.24"N, 110°11'39.42"E, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 7.I.2018 GoogleMaps . Paratypes: 1 ex. (ME0000817), the same locality as Holotype, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 10.VII.2011 GoogleMaps ; 1 ex. (ME0009667), Bukit Sokwang ( Site 3), northern site of Gunung Doya, limestone hill along Skio road, 2.05 miles E Bau, 1°23'49.87"N, 110°10'32.14"E, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 7.I.2018 GoogleMaps ; 4 ex. (ME0008907), the same locality, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 22.IV.2017 GoogleMaps ; 1 ex. (ME0009167), Bukit Sokwang ( Site 2), northern site of Gunung Doya, limestone hill along Skio road, 2.05 miles E Bau, 1°23'45.69"N, 110°10'35.04"E, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 22.IV.2017 GoogleMaps ;> 10 ex. (ME0000743), Fairy Caves (Site 1), south part of Gunung Kapor, 4 miles SW Bau, 1°22'53.76"N, 110°7'4.34"E, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 18.VIII.2007 GoogleMaps ;> 10 ex. (ME0000779), the same locality, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 11.III.2011 GoogleMaps ; 4 ex. (ME0005974), the same locality, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 21.II.2015 GoogleMaps ;> 10 ex. (ME0007231), the same locality, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 27.X.2008 GoogleMaps ; 2 ex. (MZU.MOL.20.03), the same locality, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 27.X.2008 GoogleMaps ; 6 ex. (ME0008491), the same locality, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 10.II.2017 GoogleMaps ; 1 ex. (ME0009216), the same locality, coll. M. E. Marzuki, 8.IV.2017 GoogleMaps .

Differential diagnosis.

It differs from Japonia barbata (L. Pfeiffer, 1855) by having a smaller shell (shell height: 5.84-6.20 mm vs. 6.25-9.25 mm; shell width: 8.0-8.88 mm vs. 9.5-15.8 mm). In addition, it has very short feather-like periostracal hairs along the first peripheral ridge, while J. barbata has five-times longer feather-like periostracal hairs.

Description.

Shell small, depressed-conical, dextral, rather solid. Colour brownish to yellowish white, translucent, shiny with or without prominent brown radiating markings. Suture impressed. Whorls 5¼, convex, regularly increasing in diameter. Periphery rounded, slightly angular at ultimate whorl. Protoconch: smooth, dark brown, more or less rounded without spiral striae. Teleoconch with radial sculpture consisting of very fine transverse growth lines all over the shell. Spiral sculpture with seven spiral ridges, three above periphery, two along periphery, one below periphery, and one near base. Spiral striae absent. Aperture almost circular, somewhat oblique, parietal area between two spiral ridges below periphery and near base. Peristomes double, with prominent outer peristome except for the supra-columellar site, with a distinct notch near suture, inner peristome slightly expanded. Periostracum thin, corneous, and smooth with very short, deciduous, slender, feather-like hairs along first peripheral ridge and below periphery in fresh condition. Umbilicus: open, moderately wide, 1.80-2.00 mm in diameter. Dimensions: Shell height 5.84-6.20 mm; shell width 8.0-8.88 mm; Aperture height and width 2.60 mm.

Remarks.

Shells of some populations (i.e., Gunung Kapor areas) without or with inconspicuous spiral lirae (Fig. 4C View Figure 4 ).

Geographic distribution and habitat.

Bau and Serian-Padawan limestone hill clusters. Living snails were observed foraging among leaf litter and plant debris near the cliff in lowland limestone forest.

Etymology.

For Bau District, where the specimens were found.