Koreoleptoxis zhiyuanfui Lu, Chen & He, 2024

He, Yue Ming, Lu, Yi Zhi, Fu, Zhi Yuan, Xiang, Hong Quan & Chen, Hui, 2024, Description of 17 new species of Semisulcospiridae (Gastropoda: Cerithioidea) from southern China based on morphological and molecular evidence, Ecologica Montenegrina 75, pp. 12-32 : 27-31

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.37828/em.2024.75.2

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:52B03B1F-C31D-453E-A33D-2FE43134CA77

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EA4AB170-A3AD-4F17-8E42-8891ED6F89DC

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:EA4AB170-A3AD-4F17-8E42-8891ED6F89DC

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Koreoleptoxis zhiyuanfui Lu, Chen & He
status

sp. nov.

Koreoleptoxis zhiyuanfui Lu, Chen & He View in CoL , sp. nov.

https://zoobank.org/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:EA4AB170-A3AD-4F17-8E42-8891ED6F89DC

( Figs. 1 R View Figure 1 , 2 R View Figure 2 )

Material examined. 4 ex. Paitan River , Paitan Town , Zengcheng District, Guangzhou City, Guangdong Province, China, 23.50°N, 113.79°E, May 2023 by Da- Ming Shi leg. GoogleMaps

Holotype. NNUH20241101, shell height 14.63 mm, width 8.38 mm, height of the body whorl 11.14 mm.

Paratypes. 2 ex. NNUH20241102–3 , shell height 14.85–15.38 mm, width 8.45–8.47 mm, height of the body whorl 10.47–10.66 mm, locality and habitat same as holotype .

Locus typicus. Paitan Town , Zengcheng District, Guangzhou City, Guangdong Province, China, 23.50°N, 113.79°E GoogleMaps .

Etymology. The specific name " zhiyuanfui " is from the name of the collector. We suggest the Chinese common name as " 傅氏Ħĸ ".

Description. Shell small, thick, solid, conical, yellow, with two black horizontal stripes; shell comprising seven to eight whorls, surface smooth, growth lines no obvious, without spiral ribs, body whorl swollen, taking up most of the shell about 71%, with very faint transverse lines. Apex eroded. Suture low. Lip thin, inner lip slightly thickened and smooth, white, outer lip purplish blue-white. Umbilicus absent.

Operculum. ( Fig. 2 R View Figure 2 ) Ovate, smaller than aperture, corneous, thin, brown, length 4.89 mm, width 3.68 mm, and the nucleus located at the bottom left about 1/4.

Radula. ( Fig. 3 R View Figure 3 ) Central teeth with triangle-shaped pointed major cusp, and 2-3 smaller cusps on each side. Lateral teeth with enlarged, pointed major cusp and a smaller cusp on inner side. The outer sider of lateral teeth with 2–3 smaller cusps. Inner marginal teeth with four and outer with five to six flattened, rounded denticles.

Anatomy. Snout, foot and tentacles grey, with black pigmented spots. Snout broad, cylindrical, with long cephalic tentacles, tentacles greater than snout in length.

Remarks. Lateral teeth have backward 2–3 smaller cusps on outer side of K. zhiyuanfui sp. nov., which is a significant feature that distinguishes other Koreoleptoxis species. The new species can also be clearly distinguished from other Koreoleptoxis congeners by the following features: shell smooth (vs. shell sculptured in K. amurensis (Gerstfeldt, 1859) and K. friniana (Heude, 1888)) , outer marginal teeth with five to six flattened (vs. four flattened in K. bicintus (Gan, 2007)) .

Habitat and distribution. This species was collected from the Paitan River in Paitan Town, Zengcheng District, Guangzhou City, Guangdong Province. The species inhabits rivers with a depth of less than 50 cm, slow water flow, and a substrate made of stones and sand.

Molecular results

A total of 75 mitochondrial COI sequences from 52 species were utilized in the phylogenetic analyses. The GTR+I+G4+F model was selected as the best-fit of nucleotide substitution by the BIC criterion. ML and BI analyses resulted in congruent tree topologies with some minor differences in the terminal lineages. The average COI genetic distance (uncorrected p-distance) between the new species of Semisulcospiridae family more than 3.6%.

Discussion

The Semisulcospiridae in China exhibits a high level of diversity. However, some species are difficult to distinguish based solely on morphology. However, with the development of waterways, the living environment of many freshwater snails has become unfavorable. In this survey, most species of the Semisulcospiridae family in southern China rely on mountain streams, with only H. tchangsii and S. ningpoensis showing some tolerance to urban artificial waterways. Semisulcospira ningpoensis has shown a certain degree of invasiveness, as they can easily spread through artificially constructed waterways. Therefore, further investigations are urgently needed to better understand the species of Semisulcospiridae in China.

Acknowledgements

We would like to acknowledge Cen-Song Yang, Chong-Ye Li, Xiao-Bo Qian, Hao Li, Jia-Hao Jing, Jun-Da Zhao, Hao-Fei Fan, Yu-Huan Liu, Da-Ming Shi for assistance in obtaining samples for this study.

References

Chen, H., Shi, B.Y., Du, L.N. & Sun, H.Y. (2023) Description of a new species of Hua (Gastropoda: Semisulcospiridae) from Guizhou, China, based on morphology and molecular evidence. Zoological Science, 40 (5), 414–421. https://doi.org/10.2108/zs230025

Chiu, Y.W., Bor, H., Kuo, P.H., Hsu, K.C., Tan, M.S., Wang, W.K. & Lin, H.D. (2016) Origins of Semisulcospira libertina (gastropoda: semisulcospiridae) in Taiwan. Mitochondrial DNA Part A, 28 (4), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.3109/24701394.2016.1149823

Du, L.N. (2019) Systematics of Chinese Semisulcospiridae. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, China.

Du, L.N., Chen, J., Yu, G.H. & Yang, J.X. (2019 a) Systematic relationships of Chinese freshwater semisulcospirids (Gastropoda, Cerithioidea) revealed by mitochondrial sequences. Zoological Research 40, 541–551.

Du, L.N., Köhler, F., Yu, G.H., Chen, X.Y. & Yang, J. X. (2019 b) Comparative morpho-anatomy and mitochondrial phylogeny of Semisulcospiridae in Yunnan, south-western China, with description of four new species (Gastropoda: Cerithioidea). Invertebrate Systematics, 33, 825– 848. https://doi.org/10.1071/IS18084

Du, L.N. & Yang, J.X. (2019) In “Colored Atlas of Chinese Melania” Ed by Du, L.N. & Yang, J.X., Henan Science and Technology Press, Henan, pp 1–225.

Folmer, O., Black, M., Hoeh, W., Lutz, R. & Vrijenhoek, R. (1994) DNA primers for amplification of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I from diverse metazoan invertebrates. Molecular Marine Biology and Biotechnology, 3, 294–299.

Kalyaanamoorthy, S., Minh, B.Q., Wong, T.K., Haeseler, A. & Jermiin, L.S. (2017) ModelFinder: fast model selection for accurate phylogenetic estimates. Nature methods, 14, 587–589.

https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.4285

Katoh, K. & H, Toh. (2008) Recent developments in the MAFFT multiple sequence alignment program. Brief Bioinform, 9, 286–298. https://doi.org/10.1093/bib/bbn013

Köhler, F. (2016) Rampant taxonomic incongruence in a mitochondrial phylogeny of Semisulcospira freshwater snails from Japan (Cerithioidea: Semisulcospiridae). Journal of Molluscan Studies, 82, 2, 268–281. https://doi.org/10.1093/mollus/eyv057

Kumar, S., Stecher, G., Li, M., Knyaz, C. & Tamura, K. (2018) MEGA X: molecular evolutionary genetics analysis across computing platforms. Molecular biology and evolution, 35, 1547.

https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msy096

Minh, B.Q., Schmidt, H.A., Chernomor, O., Schrempf, D., Woodhams, M.D., Von Haeseler, A. & Lanfear, R. (2020) IQ-TREE 2: new models and efficient methods for phylogenetic inference in the genomic era. Molecular biology and evolution, 37, 1530–1534.

https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msaa015

Minton, R.L., Savarese, S.P. & Campbell, D.C. (2005) A new species of " Lithasia " (Mollusca: Caenogastropoda: Pleuroceridae) from the Harpeth River, Tennessee, U. S. A. Zootaxa, 1054, 31–42. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265728

Robert T.D. & John D.R. (2009) The snails the dinosaurs saw: are the pleurocerid populations of the Older Appalachians a relict of the Paleozoic Era? Journal of the North American Benthological Society, 28 (1). https://doi.org/10.1899/08-034.1

Ronquist, F., Teslenko, M., van der Mark, P., Ayres, D.L. & Darling, A. (2012). MrBayes 3.2: efficient Bayesian phylogenetic inference and model choice across a large model space. Systematic Biology, 61, 539–542. https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/sys029

Strong, E.E. & Köhler, F. (2009). Morphological and molecular analysis of ‘ Melania ’ jacqueti Dautzenberg and Fischer, 1906: from anonymous orphan to critical basal offshoot of the Semisulcospiridae (Gastropoda:Cerithioidea). Zoologica Scripta, 38, 483–502.

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1463-6409.2008.00385.x

Appendix

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF