Triphora charybdis, Fernandes, Maurício R. & Pimenta, Alexandre D., 2015

Fernandes, Maurício R. & Pimenta, Alexandre D., 2015, Five new species and two records of Triphorinae (Caenogastropoda, Triphoridae) from Brazil, Zootaxa 4012 (3), pp. 493-513 : 507-509

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4012.3.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3AAEBA6B-4914-4524-AD2B-5436AEB05AC7

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038987C7-D416-F849-5982-FD68E4E8FC64

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Triphora charybdis
status

sp. nov.

Triphora charybdis View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figure 7 View FIGURE 7. A C–K)

Type material. Holotype: MNRJ 18620. Paratypes: Brazil: Rio de Janeiro state: MNRJ 31107, 22º42’S, 40º40’W, xi/2007 [1]; MNRJ 32067, 22º42’S, 40º40’W, x/2007 [1]; MNRJ 32404, 22º42’S, 40º40’W, viii/2002 [1]; MNRJ 33527, type locality [1]; MNRJ 32549, 23º05’S, 40º58’W, 100 m [2]; MORG 52207 [1], MORG 52238 [1]: 23º05’S, 40º58’W, 100 m.

Other material examined. Brazil: Amapá state: MNRJ 33392, 04º27’54”N, 49º58’05”W, 160 m, 13/x/2000 [18]. Rio de Janeiro state: MNRJ 32351, 22º20’29”S, 40º11’41” W, xii/2004 [2]; MNRJ 19480, 22º42’S, 40º40’W, 110 m, 11/iv/2003 [1]; MNRJ 30869, 22º42’S, 40º40’W, 110 m, 19/ix/2003 [2]; IBUFRJ 19563, 22º48’S, 40º45’W, 110 m, iv/1998 [7]; IBUFRJ 19576, 22º48’S, 40º45’W, 110 m, 27/i/1998 [2]; IBUFRJ 19593, REVIZEE C1-D3 [1]; MORG 48290, 23º05’S, 40º58’W, 100 m [1]; MORG 52247, 23º05’S, 40º58’W, 100 m [1]. Santa Catarina state: MNRJ 32071, 26º38’45”S, 46º51’54”W, 153 m, ii/2004 [8]; MNRJ 32622, 26º38’51”S, 46º52’30”W, 150 m, 28/i/2005 [3]; MORG 50071, off Itajaí, 28/i/2005 [4].

Material examined of Triphora cf. lilacina ( Dall, 1889) in Rolán & Fernández-Garcés (2008): FLMNH 129846 [2]; FLMNH 154900 [2]; FLMNH 238675 [5]; FLMNH 279375 [1].

Type locality. Station HAB 16-B4 of Project Habitats: 23º10’01”S, 41º03’13”W, 107 m, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil.

Etymology. The specific name refers to the sea monster Charybdis , from Greek Mythology. Epithet as a noun in apposition.

Diagnosis. Median spiral cord usually emerges on seventh teleoconch whorl, reaching same size of abapical cord after about five whorls; white adapical spiral cord, brown abapical cord, median cord initially white and later becoming brown or being brown from its emergence; long anterior canal, almost closed, directed downward.

Description. Shell sinistral, elongated, conical-fusiform, rectilinear profile, reaching 8.53 mm in length, 1.97 mm in width. Brown protoconch; teleoconch with white adapical spiral cord, brown to orange-brownish abapical cord, median cord initially white but later becoming brown/orange-brownish or brown/orange-brownish since its emergence; nodules lighter in color than inter-nodular spaces in all spiral cords; orange-brownish base. Protoconch conical, 0.54–0.60 mm in length, 0.39–0.42 mm in width, with 5 to 5.5 convex whorls; embryonic shell domeshaped, covered by rounded granules overall; larval shell with one spiral cord (abapical) at its beginning, the adapical cord emerging after one whorl, but disappearing just before the transition to teleoconch; about 28 almost rectilinear to slightly sigmoid axial ribs. Teleoconch with up to 14 whorls; two spiral cords (adapical and abapical) on the first whorl, abapical one continuous with that of protoconch; median spiral cord emerges between end of sixth and beginning of eighth whorl, reaching same size of abapical cord (adapical one slightly more pronounced than others) after 4.5 to six whorls; 20 to 21 opisthocline axial ribs; rounded nodules of medium size; distinct but little developed suture, with a small sutural cord; narrow and weakly nodulose to wavy subperipheral and adapical basal cords, slightly wavy to smooth abapical basal cord; two supranumerical cords may develop, one between median and abapical spiral cords, the other between abapical and subperipheral cords; aperture ovate; long anterior canal, almost closed, directed downward; posterior canal as a notch, not detached from aperture.

Remarks. Shells of Triphora charybdis sp. nov. from Amapá (northern Brazil) and Santa Catarina (southern Brazil) are much worn, although their identification as this species is unambiguous. In a certain way, they resemble sub-fossil material, almost losing the original coloration, indicating that this species may have had a wider distribution in the past.

Triphora charybdis View in CoL is similar to the morphotype Triphora cf. lilacina ( Dall, 1889) View in CoL in Rolán & Fernández-Garcés (2008), also illustrated in the present study ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A B). The protoconch sculpture, the coloration pattern of the teleoconch and the whorl in which the median spiral cord emerges are very similar in both. In contrast, T. charybdis View in CoL has a later strenghtening of the median spiral cord (reaching the same size of the abapical cord after about five whorls, Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A F; after ~2.5 whorls in T. cf. lilacina View in CoL , Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A B), slightly longer anterior canal directed downward ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A H), more heterogeneous coloration between adapical (white) and abapical (brown) spiral cords on the teleoconch (the distinction of coloration is not so evident in most shells of T. cf. lilacina View in CoL - Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A B), narrower and less nodulose subperipheral cord ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A H), in addition to a more rectilinear shell profile (but slightly curvilinear profile in T. cf. lilacina View in CoL ). The shell of Triphora lilacina ( Dall, 1889) View in CoL , whose lectotype is illustrated herein ( Fig. 7A View FIGURE 7. A ) and in Rolán & Fernández-Garcés (2008), has a curvilinear profile, lilac coloration, and median spiral cord emerging only in the eleventh whorl ( Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008), thus being greatly differentiated from T. charybdis View in CoL .

Shells of T. charybdis View in CoL with damaged or incomplete base (without the distinct anterior canal) and with few teleoconch whorls (precluding the late development of the median spiral cord) can be mistaken for other species from the western Atlantic having a white adapical cord and a brown abapical cord. Triphora ellyae De Jong & Coomans, 1988 View in CoL is easily distinguished by its smaller size, curvilinear-ovoid shell shape, and smooth subperipheral cord. Triphora atlantica ( Smith, 1890) View in CoL has two or three white initial teleoconch whorls, a thicker and more nodulose subperipheral cord, and larval shell with only one spiral cord (the abapical) on two whorls, but on one whorl in T. charybdis View in CoL ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A I). In Triphora elvirae De Jong & Coomans, 1988 View in CoL and Eutriphora bermudensis ( Bartsch, 1911) View in CoL , the median spiral cord is always white, but in T. charybdis View in CoL it acquires a brown coloration after its emergence ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7. A C-D).

Geographic distribution. Brazil: Amapá [subfossil?], Rio de Janeiro and Santa Catarina [subfossil?].

Bathymetric distribution. 80 to 160 m.

MNRJ

Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro

FLMNH

Florida Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Family

Triphoridae

Genus

Triphora

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