Coluzea altocanalis Dell, 1956

Harasewych, M. G., 2011, The Living Columbariinae (Gastropoda: Neogastropoda: Turbinellidae) of New Zealand, Zootaxa 2744 (1), pp. 1-33 : 18-20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2744.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F187FD-FFA5-FF96-FF42-1305FCB5F988

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Coluzea altocanalis Dell, 1956
status

 

Coluzea altocanalis Dell, 1956 View in CoL

( Figures 37 View FIGURES 35–38 , 41 View FIGURES 39–42 , 62–76 View FIGURES 62–76 )

Synonymy:

Coluzea altocanalis Dell, 1956: 50 View in CoL , figs. 53, 54.

Columbarium (Coluzea) altocanalis Powell, 1979: 169 .

? Fulgurofusus sp. cf. benthocallis Darragh, 1969: 104, pl. 6, fig. 114.

Diagnosis. Very large species with narrow, fusiform, white shell with tall, conical spire (spire angle 30–36˚), laterally oriented, flange-like keel along shell periphery, long (~½ shell length) axial siphonal canal. Protoconch cylindrical, of ~2¼ whorls. Teleoconch with two strong, posteriorly deflected cords between suture and periphery. Axial sculpture limited to growth lines, irregular undulations in spiral sculpture.

Description. Shell ( Figures 62–70 View FIGURES 62–76 ) largest in subfamily (to 127.3 mm), moderately thin, with very tall, conical spire (spire angle 30–36˚), small aperture, long, axial siphonal canal. Protoconch ( Figures 73–74 View FIGURES 62–76 ) tall, narrow, nearly cylindrical, with weakly inflated, heavily eroded whorls increasing in diameter from 520 µm to 1.7 mm in ~2¼ whorls. First whorl deflected from coiling axis of shell by ~58˚. Transition to teleoconch marked by development of strong shoulder followed within ¼ whorl by onset of spiral cords and laterally directed peripheral keel. Teleoconch extrapolated to consist of up to 8 strongly convex, broadly ovate whorls. Suture ( Figure 68 View FIGURES 62–76 , s) abutted to or subducted beneath keel of anterior carina ( Figure 68 View FIGURES 62–76 , ac) of previous whorl. Sculpture limited to two prominent spiral cords between suture and periphery, a strong, flange-like peripheral keel ( Figure 68 View FIGURES 62–76 , pk), a prominent cord between keel and anterior carina, 2–4 weaker cords between carina and siphonal canal, and 6–12 weak cords along proximal ⅓ of siphonal canal. Spiral cords between suture and shoulder pronounced, developing into posteriorly deflected minor keels ( Figure 68 View FIGURES 62–76 , dk) with increasing shell size. Fine to very fine spiral threads on keels and between major cords. Axial sculpture lacking, apart from weak growth striae and occasional undulations along spiral sculptural elements. Aperture ovate, tapered anteriorly, narrower in juveniles, more rounded with increasing shell size ( Figures 70 View FIGURES 62–76 →66→62), deflected from shell axis by 14–24˚. Outer lip glazed, furrowed beneath spiral cords and keels, most deeply beneath peripheral keel. Inner lip smooth. Outer shell layer comprising surface sculpture resorbed along parietal region, columella and proximal siphonal canal prior to deposition of a thin porcellaneous glaze. Siphonal canal long (~½ shell length), narrow, axial, stout, proximal ½ straight, distal ½ weakly spiral. Shell color uniformly white. Periostracum very thin, yellowish, finely lamellose. Operculum ( Figures 71, 72 View FIGURES 62–76 ) thin, elongated, broadly rounded posteriorly, sharply tapering anteriorly, attached to columellar muscle along broadly ovate area limited to posterior ⅔ of operculum. Operculum weakly corrugated, with thickened lateral edges. Nucleus anterior, free edges are usually worn, abraded.

Dried tissues of single juvenile specimen ( Figure 70 View FIGURES 62–76 , SL = 13.2 mm) rehydrated. General anatomical organization typical of Coluzea . Radular ribbon ( Figures 75, 76 View FIGURES 62–76 ) short, of ~42 rows of teeth. Rachidian teeth 25.7 µm wide, basal plate with U-shaped central section flanked by broad, rectangular, laterally expanded edges. Three long, cylindrical cusps, central cusp longest (12.5 µm), confined to central 9.5 µm of rachidian tooth. Lateral teeth, each with a single, long (20.7µm), scythe-shaped cusp, attached to radular ribbon along a basal plate 14 µm wide.

Type locality. ( Figure 37 View FIGURES 35–38 ,) Chatham Rise [43°40.0’S, 179°28.0’E], 403 m. 24 Jan. 1954, MV ALERT.

Type material. Holotype NMNZ M.008219, paratype 1, NMNZ M.008220, both from the type locality. A second paratype was deposited at the Canterbury Museum ( Dell, 1956: 50).

Material examined. NORTH ISLAND: 2 NMNZ M.074636, E of Cape Kidnappers [39°52.8’S, 177°36.5’E], 785–882 m, mud, 21 Jan. 1981, RV TANGAROA. CHATHAM RISE: 1 GoogleMaps NMNZ M.059580, Northern Mernoo slope [42°38.1’S, 176°16.3’E], 980–1,000 m, mud, 11 Jan. 1979, RV TANGAROA; 6 GoogleMaps NMNZ M.059715, Northern Mernoo slope [42°38.2’S, 176°10.5’E], 999– 984 m, mud, 11 Jan. 1979, RV TANGAROA. SOUTH ISLAND: 1 GoogleMaps NMNZ M.058503, Papanui Canyon , NE of Taiaroa Heads [45°46’S, 171°03’E], 660 m, 1 Sep. 1976, RV MUNIDA GoogleMaps .

Additional material at NMNZ. NORTH ISLAND: 1 NMNZ M.100332, SE of Mahia Peninsula [39°32.8’S, 178°16.5’E], 857–880 m, 29 Sep. 1989, RV JAMES COOK. CHATHAM RISE: 1 GoogleMaps NMNZ M.059755, northern slope of Mernoo Bank [42°57.9’S, 175°27.8’E], 500–518 m, mud, 12 Jan. 1979, RV TANGAROA. SOUTH ISLAND: 1 GoogleMaps NMNZ M.059621, ridge c 35 km off Clarence River mouth [42°16.3’S, 174°20.8’E], 790–860 m, 14 Jan. 1979, RV TAN- GAROA; 1 GoogleMaps NMNZ M.050976, off Kaikoura Peninsula [42°28.5’S, 173°47.5’E], 786 m, mud, 18 Mar. 1976, RV ACHERON GoogleMaps .

Distribution ( Figures 37 View FIGURES 35–38 , 41 View FIGURES 39–42 ). Coluzea altocanalis inhabits the upper continental slope off the eastern coast of North Island, South Island, and along the Chatham Rise at depths ranging from 403–1,000 m. This species has a confirmed bathymetric range of 403–984 m, and a mean station depth [n = 9] of 675.6 m. There appears to be an inverse relationship between the depth at which this species occurs and latitude, with southern records occurring at shallower depths than northern records.

Remarks. Coluzea altocanalis is easily distinguished from the other living New Zealand species of Columbariinae on the basis of its large size, narrow spire angle, lack of axial sculpture, even on the early whorls, cylindrical protoconch, and prominent, keel-like spiral sculpture. Young specimens resemble Coluzea kiosk Finlay, 1930 , a fossil species from the Hutchinsonian Stage (Burdigalian – Aquitanian Miocene) of Clifden, South Island, which differs in having a much taller, narrower spire, axial sculpture that is evident on early whorls and along the peripheral keel, and a thicker, more heavily sculptured siphonal canal. The type of C. kiosk is small (47 mm), but Finlay (1930b: 270) extrapolated that, based on fragments, this species reached about 120 mm in length. In the Recent fauna, Coluzea altocanalis resembles Coluzea kallistropha Harasewych, 2004 , from deeper waters (1,335 –1,600 m) off Mozambique. Coluzea kallistropha is distinguished by having a smaller shell (to 52 mm) with a more conical protoconch, a shorter, broader spire, a flatter shoulder, and a peripheral keel that is much wider and situated higher on the aperture.

Darragh (1969: 104, pl. 6, fig. 114) illustrated a dead and damaged specimen taken in 912–997 m off Castle Point, North Island that he provisionally identified as Fulgurofusus sp. cf. benthocallis ( Melvill & Standen, 1907). This record falls within both the geographic and bathymetric ranges of Coluzea altocanalis , and the illustration closely resembles the juvenile specimen shown in figure 69, herein. With the re-identification of this specimen as C. altocanalis , F. benthocalis remains endemic to the Scotia Sea in the southern Atlantic.

Coluzea altocanalis has a broad range in New Zealand waters. Off the eastern coast of North Island, it overlaps geographically with both C. spiralis and C. wormaldi . However, it inhabits considerably greater depths [785–880 m] than either C. spiralis [172–306 m] or C. wormaldi [91–461 m] in this region. Although the distribution of C. altocanalis overlaps with that of C. mariae off South Island and on the Chatham Rise, the two species have been collected in a single station only once, off Papanui Canyon, at a depth of 660 m [RV MUNIDA]. All of the specimens of C. mariae collected at this station were dead and worn. In other areas of geographic overlap, C. altocanalis occurred at depths 200–300 m greater that records for C. mariae .

NMNZ

Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Neogastropoda

Family

Columbariidae

Genus

Coluzea

Loc

Coluzea altocanalis Dell, 1956

Harasewych, M. G. 2011
2011
Loc

Columbarium (Coluzea) altocanalis

Powell, A. W. B. 1979: 169
1979
Loc

Fulgurofusus sp.

Darragh, T. A. 1969: 104
1969
Loc

Coluzea altocanalis

Dell, R. K. 1956: 50
1956
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF