Benthofascis pseudobiconica, Tucker & Tenorio & Stahlschmidt, 2011

Tucker, J. K., Tenorio, M. J. & Stahlschmidt, P., 2011, The genus Benthofascis (Gastropoda: Conoidea): A revision with descriptions of new species, Zootaxa 2796 (1), pp. 1-14 : 7-9

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2796.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5294704

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/366A374B-F351-FFF6-FF47-FD6FFAB0E9FF

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Benthofascis pseudobiconica
status

sp. nov.

Benthofascis pseudobiconica View in CoL new species

Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 , E–K; 4 View FIGURE 4 , E & F

Type material. Holotype: MNHN 23069, 39.8mm x 12.8 mm, off Cape Moreton , Queensland, Australia . Paratypes: USNM 902891 View Materials , 2 specimens from the Indian Ocean of South Australia ; USNM 845059 View Materials , 2 specimens from 80 fathoms, Stradbroke Island , Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia ; ANSP 424978 View Materials , 4 specimens from 100 fathoms, off Cape Moreton , Queensland, Australia ; ANSP 303729 View Materials , 2 specimens from 80 fathoms, off Cape Moreton , Queensland, Australia ; SMF 335128 View Materials , 1 specimen from trawlers at 200 m, on sand and rubble, off Bundaberg , central coast of Queensland, Australia ; SBMNH 424098 View Materials , 1 specimen from shell dredge at 160 m, east of Mooloolaba , southern Queensland, Australia ; Peter Stahlschmidt collection, 2 specimens from 100–120 m, off Capricorn Channel , Queensland, Australia ; AMS C.110615, 2 specimens from 132–155 m, off Mooloolaba , Queensland , 26º40'S, 153º36'E; AMS C.392807, 2 specimens from 128–183 m, E of Caloundra , Queensland , 26º48'S, 153º, 35'E; AMS C.373105, 2 specimens from 71–77 m, 5.7 km E of Mistral Point, Sydney , New South Wales , 33º56.470'S, 151º19.630'E (wet).

Other specimens. AMS C.383084, 4 specimens from 216–227 m, off Swain Reefs, off Hixson Cay , Queensland, 22º33'S, 153º26'E GoogleMaps ; AMS C.468236, 1 specimen from 115–176 m deep, East of Moreton Bay , Queensland, 26º55'S, 153º33'E GoogleMaps , dredged 1969; AMS C.111073, 2 specimens from 201 m, off S end of Fraser Island , Queensland, 27º57'S, 153º51.050'E GoogleMaps ; AMS C.388791, 2 specimens from 66m, 5.6 km E of North Head, Sydney , New South Wales, 33º49.600S, 151º21.700E GoogleMaps , dredged 18 January 1973, station SBS 21; AMS C.397151, 2 specimens from 128–137 m, off Tweed Heads , New South Wales, 28º19'S, 153º50'E GoogleMaps ; AMS 392811 , 5 specimens from 187 m, SE of Swain Reefs , Queensland, 22º20.2'S, 153º17.130'E GoogleMaps ; AMS C.388787 3 specimens from 66 m, 5.6 km E of North Head, Sydney , New South Wales, 33º49.5'S, 151º21.8'E GoogleMaps , dredged 26 April 1973, station SBS 1; AMS C.373099, 3 specimens from 71–77 m, 5.7 km E of Mistral Point, Sydney , New South Wales, 33º56.470'S, 151º19.630'E (wet) GoogleMaps ; AMS C.388789, 11 specimens from 71–77 m, 5.7 km E of Mistral Point, Sydney , New South Wales, 33º56.470'S, 151º19.630'E GoogleMaps , dredged, 20 July 1972, Station: SBS 2; AMS C.388794, 10 specimens from 115–176 m deep, East of Moreton Bay , Queensland, 26º55'S, 153º33'E GoogleMaps , dredged 1969; AMS C.110614, 5 specimens from 101–128 m, East of Caloundra , Queensland, 26º45'– 26º50'S , 153º34'– 153º36'E; AMS C.101223, 6 specimens from 128–183 m, 12–15 miles NNE of Cape Moreton , Queensland, 27º00'S , 153º34'– 153º36'E; AMS C.388788, 3 specimens from 115–175 m, off Moreton Bay , Queensland, 27º10'S , 153º, 40'E; AMS C.372589, 3 specimens from 9 m, Twofold Bay , New South Wales, 37º5'S, 149º55'E GoogleMaps ; AMS C.468231, 1 specimen from 201 m, off S end of Fraser Island , Queensland, 27º57'S, 153º51.050'E GoogleMaps ; AMS C.388782 4 specimens from 73 m, off Tweed Heads , New South Wales, 28º17'S, 153º44'E GoogleMaps ; AMS C.468234 1 specimen from 71–77 m, 5.7 km E of Mistral Point, Sydney , New South Wales, 33º56.470'S, 151º19.630'E (wet) GoogleMaps ; ANSP 310029 View Materials , 4 specimens from 100 fathoms, off Cape Moreton , Queensland, Australia ; SBMNH 424099 View Materials , 1 specimen from shell dredge at 160 m, east of Mooloolaba , southern Queensland, Australia .

Type locality. Cape Moreton , Queensland, Australia

Range. Queensland and New South Wales, Australia .

Description. Shell moderate in size, up to 42.4 mm long, solid, ovate-fusiform. We examined a total of 42 specimens that could be accurately measured. These averaged 27.8 mm long (range = 12.8–42.4 mm). They averaged 9.9 mm wide (range = 5.7–14.9 mm). Color pattern is banded with tan to yellow bands separated by areas of white. Three colored bands are present on the teleoconch whorls with one at the shoulder, one near midbody and the other at the anterior end. Sutural ramp has a colored band at the suture and a white area anterior to the colored band. Larger specimens have 6.7 to 7 whorls including the protoconch. Sculpture on the protoconch consists of fine spiral grooves. There are more than 4 spirals on the early to middle teleoconch sutural ramps. The spirals and axials are of the same size and do not produce a punctate appearance. The number of spirals is reduced on the outer teleoconch sutural ramps to two or three that are crossed by growth lines. The teleoconch is ornamented by closely set spirals separated by narrow interspaces. The sides of the body whorl are slightly convex but not flattened. The shoulders are indistinct. The aperture is narrow with a deep sinus, the lip is thin, straight and is produced medially. Inner shell walls are resorbed ( Fig. 2K View FIGURE 2 ). The columella is nearly straight. There is a groove near its posterior end just where the columella meets the body whorl. This forms a denticle inside the aperture. The anal sinus is not symmetrical and is deepest at the suture. The protoconch is paucispiral, blunt and swollen looking. The operculum is leaf-shaped with a terminal nucleus. It is fairly large and covers most of the apertural opening. The operculum of a specimen (AMS C.373099) with a shell length of 17.3 mm measured 3.65 mm in length. Previous drawings of the radula suggested that it is simple with a barb and blade (see Powell 1966; Tucker & Tenorio 2009, as B. biconica ). However, the tooth has more internal structure than previously known ( Figs. 4E & F View FIGURE 4 ). The barb is blunt tipped and is about one-third as long as the blade. The distal end of the blade is elevated above the shaft of the tooth and slopes to meet the tooth shaft. There is no anterior fold but there is a C-fold. This fold demonstrates that the tooth is enrolled a minimum of 360 degrees. There are no serrations and no terminating cusp. There is a fold on the shaft of the tooth that begins posterior to the distal end of the blade. This fold extends to the waist of the tooth ( Fig. 4E View FIGURE 4 ). The tooth has a slight but distinct waist.

Discussion. This species has been confused with Benthofascis biconica ( Figs. 1A–C View FIGURE 1 ), which it does resemble. The comparison to B. biconica is given under that species but in summary the two can be separated by body whorl shape and ornamentation of the first two whorls. In B. biconica the shoulders are more angular than in B. pseudobiconica . The early whorls of B. biconica have spirals and axials strongly developed, whereas in B. pseudobiconica the axials are hardly developed at all initially. B. angularis ( Figs. 2A & C View FIGURE 2 ) has even more angular shoulders than does B. pseudobiconica .

Etymology. The name underscores the similarities that the new species shares with Benthofascis biconica .

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