Spixia striata (Wagner, 1827)

Breure, Abraham S. H. & Avila, Valentin Mogollon, 2016, Synopsis of Central Andean Orthalicoid land snails (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora), excluding Bulimulidae, ZooKeys 588, pp. 1-199 : 40

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/44F3D44F-18A7-8ED0-E78B-5C359FEB9CBF

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Spixia striata (Wagner, 1827)
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Stylommatophora Odontostomidae

Spixia striata (Wagner, 1827) View in CoL Figs 37 F–I, 38

Pupa striata Wagner 1827: 19.

Helix spixii var. major d’Orbigny 1835: 21 [nomen nudum].

Pupa spixii var. α major d’Orbigny 1838 [1834-1847]: 320; Breure and Ablett 2012: 25, figs 22 A–E, 22i.

Spixia striata ; Cuezzo et al. 2013: 182 (references, synonymy).

Type locality.

[Brazil] "in Provinciis S. Pauli et Sebastianopolitana".

Type material.

Not located.

Additional material.

NHMUK 1854.12.4.232, lectotype ( Breure and Ablett 2012), and NHMUK 1854.12.4.232 (6), paralectotypes of Pupa spixii major d’Orbigny.

Diagnosis.

Shell elongate-ovate, rather solid, broadly perforate, whitish with tawny blotches, sculptured with incrassate growth striae, suture slightly ascending behind the lip, aperture squarish oblique-ovate, with four teeth (small palatal lamella, indistinct basal lamella, concave columellar lamella entering the aperture, rectangular parietal lamella), peristome thickened, well expanded, narrowly reflexed.

Dimensions.

Shell height 34.8, diameter 11.0 mm.

Distribution.

Bolivia, Dept. Santa Cruz, Prov. Chiquitos ( d’Orbigny 1838 [1834-1847]). Paraguay. Argentina ( Cuezzo et al. 2013). Brazil ( Simone 2006).

Ecoregion.

Chiquitano dry forests [NT0212].

Remarks.

Breure (2013: 14) discussed the need for an in-depth study of the variation of this wide-ranging species; preferably with anatomical and molecular research. The Bolivian record based on d’Orbigny (1838) “frontières nord de la province de Chiquitos" needs further confirmation. The Bolivian material which is found as Spixia striata in museum collections may need re-identification in the light of the recent split of the two varieties of d’Orbigny.