Naquetia Jousseaume, 1880
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5252/z2013n4a5 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5171358 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C5878A-FFAF-FFE5-62A3-FAEEFFA5FAB9 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Naquetia Jousseaume, 1880 |
status |
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Genus Naquetia Jousseaume, 1880 View in CoL
TYPE SPECIES. — Murex triqueter Born, 1778 , Indo-West Pacific (by original designation).
REMARKS
Naquetia and Chicomurex Arakawa, 1964 are two muricine genera with closely similar shell morphology, with an average height of 40-120 mm in Naquetia and 30-85 mm in Chicomurex . The protoconch is paucispiral, consisting of 1.5- 2 whorls, or conical of sinusigera type, with 3-3.5 glossy whorls, usually with a narrow keel abapically. Each teleoconch whorl bears three rounded, squamous varices from the second or third whorl, with short, broadly open spines connected by squamous webbing. The radula is similar in the two genera, consisting of crowded rows of teeth with a rachidian bearing a large, broad, triangular central cusp ( Houart 1992: figs 116-128) and Figure 8A, B View FIG .
The type species of Chicomurex , C. laciniatus (Sowerby, 1841) differs from the type species of Naquetia in having a broader and more globose shell, a comparatively lower spire and a proportionally larger and broader aperture. Within these two genera, all species consistently exhibit this distinction. The two genera are also distinct in a molecular phylogenetic analysis ( Barco et al. 2010).
The new species described here is included in Naquetia in spite of the slightly broader shell relative to its length compared to other Naquetia species and the relatively low spire. However, it differs from Chicomurex in having a short, broad, squamous siphonal canal, relatively shorter variceal spines and a more strongly triangular outline, which are typical characters of Naquetia .
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