Nerita squatina, DeVries, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2018.1524032 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3671230 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BB2338-E35C-E22E-FE5E-A2265E88FC59 |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar |
scientific name |
Nerita squatina |
status |
sp. nov. |
Nerita squatina sp. nov.
( Figure 4 View Figure 4 (a – e))
Diagnosis
Spire flattened. Whorls with strong spiral cords. Columella with strong teeth, without papillae. Outer lip deeply fluted.
Description
(Based on fragments of multiple specimens): shell thick; length and width less than 20 mm. Spire flat to slightly sunken. Four whorls, angulate posteriorly and medially. Sculpture of about 15 steeply rounded primary spiral cords, subequal and evenly spaced anteriorly and posteriorly, alternatingly larger medially; rarely with secondary spiral cords. Interspaces flat. Axial sculpture absent except growth lines. Colour maculated black and cream. Apertural margin of columellar callus with strong anterior tooth, weaker medial tooth, and strong posterior bifid tooth; other teeth possibly present posteriorward. Abapertural portion of columellar callus with six well-spaced transversely elongate teeth, not aligned with apertural teeth; no papillae present. Outer lip with posterior inner edge bevelled and fluted; inflexions of bevel with small, spirally elongate spirally denticles along entire length. Base of columella separated from basal portion of bevelled outer lip by shallow sulcus.
Remarks
Nerita squatina does not resemble the smooth-shelled Nerita jayanca Olsson, 1944 from the upper Campanian Tortuga Formation in the Sechura Basin of northern Peru. Rather, the flattened shell form and arrangement of spiral cords of N. squatina resemble specimens of the late Eocene Nerita listrota Woodring, 1973 from Panama and the Paleocene to middle Eocene Nerita triangulata Gabb, 1869 from western North America, but some spiral cords on the latter two species are beaded and the columellar callus of those species is papillate ( Woodring 1973; Squires and Saul 2002).
The coarse adapertural and abapertural teeth on the columellar callus and the prominence of the spiral cords on N. squatina appear on modern species of the subgenera Nerita s. s., N. ( Ritena ) Gray, 1858, and N. ( Cymostyla ) Martens, 1887, closely related clades with a common ancestor inferred to have lived during the Oligocene or earlier ( Frey and Vermeij 2008; Frey 2010). Absent from the Caballas Formation species of Nerita , however, is the high spire characteristic of the Nerita s.s. - Ritena-Cymostyla clade ( Frey and Vermeij 2008).
Etymology
‘ Squatina ’, Latin noun meaning ‘ shark ’, referring to the row of adapertural teeth and row of parallel abapertural ridges on the columellar callus.
Material
All localities B8771 (type locality); all material fragmentary. UWBM 107577 About UWBM , holotype, spire, W (5.7) ; UWBM 107646 About UWBM , paratype, columellar callus teeth, W (6.2) ; UWBM 107647 About UWBM , paratype, outer lip, W (7.8) ; UWBM 107648 About UWBM , paratype, shoulder, W (8.5) ; UWBM 107649 About UWBM , paratype, anterior of outer lip, W (10.1)
.
Occurrence
Lower Paleogene, Cuenca Member, Caballas Formation, East Pisco Basin, southern Peru.
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