Siphonaria subatra Pilsbry, 1904
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/megataxa.13.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14989315 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0D49832F-FFE8-826A-FF68-FBE2FCF3FDD6 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Siphonaria subatra Pilsbry, 1904 |
status |
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Siphonaria subatra Pilsbry, 1904 View in CoL
( Figs 43J–L, S–T View FIGURE 43 , 44H–I View FIGURE 44 )
Siphonaria subatra Pilsbry 1904: 36 View in CoL , pl. 6, figs 60, 60a, b (type locality: Chichijima, Ogasawara [ Japan]).—Hirase 1907: 40; Abe 1940: 59; Hirase 1941: 94, pl. 121, fig. 13; Hubendick 1945: 29; Kuroda & Habe 1952: 86; Oyama et al. 1954: 19; Kuroda 1960: 43; Baker 1964: 159; Habe & Igarashi 1967: 28; Morrison 1972: 57; Galindo 1977: 416; Fukuda 1994: 50, 808, pl. 42; Higo et al. 2001: 142, fig. G4978; Hylleberg & Kilburn 2003: 133; Poppe 2010: 444; White & Dayrat 2012: 68.
Siphonaria (Siphonaria) subatra View in CoL — Hubendick 1946: 51, pl. 3, figs 32–35.
Siphonaria atra View in CoL — Lischke 1871: 105; Boettger 1892: 168; Pilsbry 1895: 5; Abe 1940: 59; Hirase 1941: 94, pl. 121, fig. 17; Kuroda 1941: 137; Kuroda & Habe 1952: 86; Oyama et al. 1954: 14; Habe 1964: 145, pl. 44, fig.17; Hirano & Inaba 1980; Fukuda 1994: 50, 804 (not S. atra Quoy & Gaimard, 1833 View in CoL ).
Siphonaria (Siphonaria) laciniosa View in CoL forma subatra View in CoL — Christiaens 1980a: 79.
Mestosiphon atra — Habe & Kohno 1980: 23 (not S. atra Quoy & Gaimard, 1833 )
Siphonaria (Mestasiphon) subatra View in CoL — Kira 1962: 201, pl. 69, figs 10a, b; Habe & Kosuge 1966: 113, pl. 4, fig. 22; Okutani 1982: 32.
Siphonaria View in CoL unit 38— Dayrat et al. 2014: 268, fig. 5 R.
Material examined. Type material. Lectotype of Siphonaria subatra Pilsbry, 1904 from Chichijima , Ogasawara [ Japan] ( ANSP 86132 a, Fig. 43J View FIGURE 43 ). Two paralectotypes same data as lectotype ( ANSP 86132 ) .
Other, non-type material. Japan, Okinawa: Tancha Bay, 26°27.897’N, 127°49.131’E, JP01-5 ( AM C.584932 1p, C.584932 p [SK332]), GoogleMaps Tancha Bay , rocky point 26°27.941’N, 127°49.194’E, JP01-6 ( AM C.585663 6p, C.584930 p [SK349], C.584931 p [M499, SK318], C.584933 p [M498, SK317]) GoogleMaps .
Taxonomic remarks. The original description is evidently based on a series of specimens ( Pilsbry, 1904: 36, pl. 6, figs 61, 61a–b). Baker (1964: 159) subsequently designated the lectotype. Dimensions of the lectotype ( Fig. 43J View FIGURE 43 ) match the original figure in Pilsbry (1904: 36) reasonably well. The lectotype has also been figured by Higo et al. (2001: 142, fig. G4978a). Our delineation of this species is based on comparative analyses of the morpho-anatomy and mitochondrial genetics of freshly collected topotypes ( Fig. 43K, L View FIGURE 43 , Table S1). Hubendick (1946: 50) listed a ‘transitional form’of ‘ S. subatra <> S. atra ’ without mentioning the locality. However, the figured specimen ( Hubendick 1946: 50, pl. 5, figs 5–6) is here identified as a specimen of S. subatra . Morrison (1972: 56–58) treated S. subatra as a synonym of S. laciniosa based on similarity in shell form and ‘common reproductive development’. Christiaens (1980b: 79) treated S. subatra as a variety of S. laciniosa based on specimens from Ping Chau, Hong Kong. These samples indeed correspond to shell characteristics considered herein as typical of S. subatra (i.e., siphon ridge formed by 3–4 ‘coalescing’ small ribs). Je (1989: 29) incorrectly listed S. subatra as a synonym of Anthosiphonaria sirius (= S. sirius ).
External morphology ( Fig. 43S View FIGURE 43 ). Foot wall, cephalic folds and pneumostomal lobe all evenly pale grey in colour with white subepithelial pustules; paler grey to foot edge, foot sole darker; mantle thin, translucent, wider than foot wall, weakly lobed without a thickened edge, pale band on mantle edge align with underside of ribs; no black pigmentation; two black ‘Eye’ spots prominent centrally on thickened cephalic lobes; pneumostome fold prominent.
Shell ( Figs 43J–L View FIGURE 43 ; Table S9). Medium sized (max sl mean = 19.8 mm, SD = 3.3 mm, n = 7), ovate; height low; apex offset sightly posterior and central, apical sides convex, shell thickness thick; protoconch direction undetermined, shell whorl dextral; growth striae indistinct in bands; exterior uneven, dark brown to pale tan, weak radial colour banding, protoconch area pale, central band darker and shell edge dark brown; rib count (mean = 51.4, SD = 8.0, n = 7), primary rib ridges pale, narrow, ribs slightly bent, increasingly raised and strongly protrude beyond shell lip (often> 1mm) to unevenly scallop and corrugate the edge; 3–5 finer secondary ribs between primary ribs, rib interstices darker; siphonal ridge formed by closely paired primary ribs protrudes greatest. Interior shell margin dark chocolate brown to blue/grey, uneven blue/grey rays on shell margin aligned under primary ribs, siphonal groove prominent, often same colour as shell margin; spatula mottled dark chocolate to tan brown; ADM scar distinct, CMS convex, darker than shell lip; thickening of shell lip common, overcoats brown markings on shell margin with blue/grey, infills and reduces lip scalloping.
Reproductive system ( Fig. 44H; n View FIGURE 44 = 3). Positioned within coelom under the respiratory cavity, hermaphroditic glands positioned to posterior against right foot wall and over foot sole, epiphallic parts positioned between BM and RAM; AO prominent, large, reasonably long, broad bluntly pointed, joins at top of smallish GA; ED elongated, narrow, twisted; EG medium with folds, single bent thickish flagellum F1 appears as an extension of ED at join with EG; AO, GA and ED all muscular white tissue; BD and CD elongated, with opposing connections join into GA close to ED and AO; BD longer and narrower than CD with a prominent distal coiling with an MA on bend attaching to inner foot wall, CD broadens to MG end, BD smooth, both ducts pass together through outer side of RAM ( BD above CD) and bent before connecting into folds of MG; BC small, prominent with internal purple gel, embedded in MG, translucent test, medium and bulbous; coiled HD with brown markings links AG at lower end of a block-like elongated yellowish finely granulated HG; MG and AG soft white folded tissue; SV embedded within AG, AG larger than HG, sides match curvature of inner foot wall at right posterior quarter of coelom.
Spermatophore ( Fig. 44I View FIGURE 44 ). Body cylindrical, thread-like, test thin, translucent, smooth, featureless (length = 9.17 mm, head length = 7.85 mm, n = 1, 86% of SMP length, AL = 16 mm; head tip tapered bluntly rounded, section containing a white core, tapers to a thin short flagellum; two SPM tightly folded in brown gelatinous mass in BC of one specimen.
Radula. Dentition formula 34:1:34 ( Hubendick 1946: 51).
Comparative remarks. In our phylogeny ( Figs 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 ), S. subatra ( atra group, unit 38) is the sister species of S. tenebrae sp. nov. (unit 92) from CI. Both species combined from the sister lineage of S. vudaensis sp. nov. (unit 37) from Fiji. Siphonaria subatra differs from S. tenebrae by COI distances of ≥ 15.1% and from S. vudaensis by distances of ≥ 13.3% (Table S3). Siphonaria subatra has been found in sympatry with three congeners in Okinawa. Siphonaria rucuana has a smaller, taller, shell with stronger ribbing and weaker edge scalloping, a larger, bulbous, blunt AO, and a longer BC. Siphonaria camura sp. nov. has a smaller, taller, more fragile shell with a less scalloped edge, larger, bulbous BC, BD without a distal loop, and a barbed SPM. Siphonaria tanchaensis sp. nov. has a larger, taller, paler shell with greater edge scalloping, patterned exterior, and a smaller AO and BC. For comparison with S. sipho refer to comparative remarks under that species. Siphonaria subatra exhibits a similar shell morphology to other species in the atra group. However, the extended projection of the multi rib formed siphonal ridge beyond shell edge is a major difference. A shell figured as ‘ S. atra ’ from Japan in Hirase (1941: pl. 121, fig. 17) corresponds well with characteristics typical of S. subatra . It is well outside the known distribution of this species. Specimens depicted as ‘ S. subatra ’ in Hubendick (1946: pl. 3, figs 32–35) are of two different species; figs 32, 35 from ‘Japan’ are specimens of S. subatra and figs 33, 34 from Mindanao and Java Sea are likely specimens of S. alba . Figured specimens in Kira (1962: pl. 69, figs 10a, b) from Amami Islands as well as from Okinawa ( atra group, unit 38) in Dayrat et al. (2014: fig. 5R, UF351784) exhibit features typical of S. subatra .
Distribution and habitat. Recorded from Okinawa, Japan ( Fig. 45 View FIGURE 45 ). In this study, found on exposed rocky shores at sheltered positions across the mid-littoral level (43T).
AM |
Australian Museum |
BM |
Bristol Museum |
MG |
Museum of Zoology |
SPM |
Sabah Parks |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Siphonaria subatra Pilsbry, 1904
Jenkins, Bruce & Köhler, Frank 2024 |
Siphonaria
Dayrat, B. & Goulding, T. C. & White, T. R. 2014: 268 |
Siphonaria
Christiaens, J. 1980: 79 |
Mestosiphon atra
Habe, T. & Kohno, H. 1980: 23 |
Siphonaria (Mestasiphon) subatra
Okutani, T. 1982: 32 |
Habe, T. & Kosuge, S. 1966: 113 |
Kira, T. 1962: 201 |
Siphonaria (Siphonaria) subatra
Hubendick, B. 1946: 51 |
Siphonaria subatra
White, T. R. & Dayrat, B. 2012: 68 |
Poppe, G. T. 2010: 444 |
Hylleberg, J. & Kilburn, R. N. 2003: 133 |
Higo, S. & Callomon, P. & Goto, Y. 2001: 142 |
Fukuda, H. 1994: 50 |
Galindo, E. S. 1977: 416 |
Morrison, J. P. E. 1972: 57 |
Habe, T. & Igarashi, T. 1967: 28 |
Baker, H. B. 1964: 159 |
Kuroda, T. 1960: 43 |
Oyama, K. & Yamamoto, T. & Tokioko, T. 1954: 19 |
Kuroda, T. & Habe, T. 1952: 86 |
Hubendick, B. 1945: 29 |
Hirase, S. 1941: 94 |
Abe, N. 1940: 59 |
Pilsbry, H. A. 1904: 36 |
Siphonaria atra
Fukuda, H. 1994: 50 |
Habe, T. 1964: 145 |
Oyama, K. & Yamamoto, T. & Tokioko, T. 1954: 14 |
Kuroda, T. & Habe, T. 1952: 86 |
Hirase, S. 1941: 94 |
Kuroda, T. 1941: 137 |
Abe, N. 1940: 59 |
Pilsbry, H. A. 1895: 5 |
Boettger, O. 1892: 168 |
Lischke & C. E 1871: 105 |