Orthalicus bifulguratus (Reeve, 1849)

Breure, Abraham S. H. & Avila, Valentin Mogollon, 2016, Synopsis of Central Andean Orthalicoid land snails (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora), excluding Bulimulidae, ZooKeys 588, pp. 1-199 : 50-51

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.588.7906

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EC4E9A71-F7B9-48D2-B245-F8DA8C0907FA

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0EFB4537-D45A-6B2A-5861-0482D44E20B5

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Orthalicus bifulguratus (Reeve, 1849)
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Stylommatophora Orthalicidae

Orthalicus bifulguratus (Reeve, 1849) View in CoL Figs 50 A–C, 51 A–B, 52

Bulimus bifulguratus Reeve 1849 [1848-1850]: pl. 82 fig. 606; Breure and Ablett 2015: 24, fig. L2iii [not L2 i–ii].

Zebra fulgur Miller 1878: 186; Miller 1879: pl. 6 figs 1 a–b.

Orthalicus bifulguratus ; Breure and Schouten 1985: 29 (lectotype designation); Richardson 1993: 98 (references); Linares and Vera 2012: 151.

Type locality.

[Colombia] "Andes of Columbia".

Type material.

NHMUK 20140082, lectotype ( Breure and Schouten 1985: 29) (Cuming coll.).

Diagnosis.

Shell sculptured with a dense pattern of fine spiral lines, coloured with pairs of yellow, irregularly waving and zigzag, longitudinal bands bordered with dark brown on the right side.

Dimensions.

Shell height 56.9, diameter 32.8 mm.

Distribution.

Colombia. Ecuador, Prov. El Oro, 10.2 km W Pinas (UF 26616); Prov. Pichincha, Milpe (ANSP 170727); ibid., San Nicolás (RBINS); Prov. Tungurahua, Topo (FMNH 86649).

Ecoregion.

Eastern Cordillera real montane forests [NT0121], Northwestern Andean montane forests [NT0145].

Remarks.

Breure and Ablett (2015) noted that the lectotype, for which the dimensions are given above, is probably not full-grown. Their figures L2 i–ii illustrate Orthalicus bensoni (Reeve, 1849); this error is now redressed by figuring the correct shell. Also the specimen of Zebra fulgur Miller, 1878 was subadult as Miller gave the shell height as 50 mm. Cousin (1887) mentioned a specimen from San Nicolás, which was located in the RBINS collection. In the same collection a specimen was found with locality “Cabiloña, montaña / près Ambato"; we have been unable to find this locality in modern gazetteers.