Monilearia (Lyrula) loweana ( Wollaston, 1878 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.174000 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5622477 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/313F8794-8C7F-FF8C-FC1F-FBB8FB90D2C7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Monilearia (Lyrula) loweana ( Wollaston, 1878 ) |
status |
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Monilearia (Lyrula) loweana ( Wollaston, 1878)
Helix [ Actinella ] torrefacta R.T. Lowe, 1861 , 106–107 [Primary homonym of Helix torrefacta C.B. Adams, 1849 , from Jamaica ( Sagda torrefacta View in CoL )]. Type locality: "Hab. in rupium facie aridissima aprica, sole occidentali calefacta, supra "Salinas" Ariae ad oram septentrionalem Caurum versus Ins. Lanzarotae, in foraminulis superficialibus basalti cis vesicularibus praesertim latitans".
Helix [ Lyrula ] loweana Wollaston, 1878 , 382–383.
Helix usurpans Furtado, 1886 , 87.
Lyrula loweana Bank et al., 2002 , 118.
Material. Four empty shells of Helix torrefacta (ZMZ 506118/4, leg. Wollaston, 1870), 34 empty shells collected between February 1980 and February 1996, in several localities of the North of Lanzarote ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ).
Distribution and habitat ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). The species is endemic to Lanzarote. It can be traced between 50 and 600 m altitude, in lowland vegetationtype. It lives in the steep coastal areas from the extreme north of the island (El Risco) to the Peñas del Chache and also occurs in the young volcanic lavastreams, in Spanish named “Malpaís” (badlands). It can be found between lichens, in cracks and on the rock surface, within the Natural Reserve of the Archipelago “Chinijo” (north of the island and the surroundings islets), in the Natural Monument of La Corona, and also outside the protected areas of the island.
Description. The elegant discoidal shell ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A) has a nearly flat to slightly elevated spire with a pointed apex; it embraces 4–4½ slowly growing whorls that are moderate convex, angled at the beginning of the body whorl. The suture is deeply impressed, but simple, the regularly rounded umbilicus is not very wide, but deep and open. The last eighth of the bodywhorl is slightly bent downwards obliquely to the square flat ovate aperture. This has a delicate, discontinuous peristome with a non reflected, but slightly thickened lip.
The ornamentation is more pronounced on the dorsal side. There are many radial, laminar riblets crossed by 6–8 fine spiral, also laminar riblets ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 B–D), delimiting very numerous, small rectangular areas (reminding of honeycomb cells) which have a fragile, laciniae like bristle in each corner; each bristle is a prolongation of both transverse and radial riblets ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 D). Many of the bristles are lost in adult specimens. Each rectangular “cell” can be subdivided by more fine, spiral riblets ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 D), leading to the appearance of a fine reticulation. The protoconch is coloured brown with 1–1¼ whorls; at the very beginning it is smooth (approximately ¼–½ whorl), but then it is sculptured by the first radial riblets. The teleoconch is also brown, ornamented with alternating irregular lighter flames ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A), which occupy approximately the same space as the brown colour. In some specimens an obscure brown spiral band can be traced beneath the periphery; the lower part of that band may be interrupted by small white dashes.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Monilearia (Lyrula) loweana ( Wollaston, 1878 )
Ibáñez, Miguel, Groh, Klaus, Alonso, María R. & Castillo, Carolina 2006 |
Lyrula loweana
Bank et al. 2002 |
Helix usurpans
Furtado 1886 |
loweana
Wollaston 1878 |
torrefacta
R.T. Lowe 1861 |
Helix torrefacta
C.B. Adams 1849 |