Conus (Afonsoconus) bruuni Powell, 1958

Tenorio, Manuel J. & Puillandre, Nicolas, 2023, Revision of the deep-water cone snail fauna from New Caledonia (Gastropoda, Conoidea), European Journal of Taxonomy 896, pp. 1-134 : 68

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.896.2291

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F53C16AD-46F5-413B-9ACE-29713C9ED8D9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8414982

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03898788-CA1B-3C25-D45B-FEF1308EFDDA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Conus (Afonsoconus) bruuni Powell, 1958
status

 

Conus (Afonsoconus) bruuni Powell, 1958 View in CoL View at ENA

Figs 2 View Fig , 50–51 View Fig View Fig

Conus bruuni Powell, 1958: 84 View in CoL , pl. 10 fig. 3.

Conus bruuni View in CoL – R̂ckel et al. 1995b: no. 66, pl. 16 figs 16–21.

Afonsoconus bruuni View in CoL – Tucker & Tenorio 2013: 119. — Monnier et al. 2018a: 640.

Material examined

201 lots (558 specimens). See Supp. file 1.

Type material

Holotype NEW ZEALAND • 43.5 mm; off Raoul Island , Kermadec Islands; 75–85 m depth; 3 Mar. 1952; NHMD-91131 , previously ZMUC-GAS-808 ( Fig. 50A View Fig ).

Figured material

NEW CALEDONIA • 43.5 mm; off S New Caledonia, stn CH5; 24º44′ S, 168º09′ E; 223 m depth; 27 Oct. 1986; CHALCAL 2 expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50B View Fig ) GoogleMaps 42.3 mm; Norfolk Ridge , Banc Jumeau Ouest, off New Caledonia, stn DW2042; 23º41′ S, 168º01′ E; 235‒245 m depth; 23 Oct. 2003; NORFOLK 2 expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50C View Fig ) GoogleMaps 41.1 mm; same collection data as for preceding; MNHN ( Fig. 50D View Fig ) GoogleMaps 51.3 mm; Grand Passage , off New Caledonia, stn DW2986; 17º59′ S, 163º05′ E; 270‒300 m depth; 5 May 2008; CONCALIS expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50E, L View Fig ) GoogleMaps 48.3 mm; Norfolk Ridge , Crypthélia, off New Caledonia, stn DW3072; 23°19′ S, 168°16′ E; 180–220 m depth; 23 Oct. 2008; TERRASSES expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50F View Fig ) GoogleMaps 52.8 mm; Loyalty Ridge , off New Caledonia, stn DW417; 20º42′ S, 167º04′ E; 283 m depth; 16 Feb. 1989; MUSORSTOM 6 expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50G View Fig ) GoogleMaps 56.8 mm; off S New Caledonia, stn DW113; 19º03′ S, 163º30′ E; 250 m depth; 2 Mar. 1990; SMIB 6 expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50H View Fig ) GoogleMaps 42 mm; Norfolk Ridge , Jumeau Ouest, off New Caledonia, stn DW3056; 23°42′ S, 168°01′ E; 250–330 m depth; 20 Oct. 2008; TERRASSES expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50I View Fig ) GoogleMaps 70.6 mm; New Caledonia, SW Île des Pins , off New Caledonia, stn PL21; 22º45′ S, 167º09′ E; 340–340 m depth; 12 Mar. 1989; CALSUB expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50J View Fig ) GoogleMaps 13.4 mm; Norfolk Ridge , off New Caledonia, stn DW156; 24º46′ S, 168º08′ E; 275–300 m depth; 28 Jan. 1993; SMIB 8 expedition; MNHN ( Fig. 50K View Fig ) GoogleMaps 68 mm; Grand Passage , off N New Caledonia, stn CP3008; 18º30′ S, 163º04′ E; 275–305 m depth; 7 May 2008; CONCALIS expedition; Atheris coll. ( Fig. 50M View Fig ) GoogleMaps .

Geographical distribution and bathymetry

N New Zealand (Kermadec Islands) in less than 100 m deep. In New Caledonia, Loyalty Islands and the Coral Sea typically at depths between 200 and 400 m. Specimens from the Philippines identified as A. bruuni correspond most likely to a different species (Tenorio et al. 2018).

Remarks

Medium-sized to moderately large (maximum shell length 75 mm) conical shell with a low to moderate spire straight or slightly concave and an angulate shoulder. Protoconch multispiral of about 3 whorls ( Fig. 50L View Fig ). Radular tooth ( Fig. 50M View Fig ) rather large, narrow and elongated with the anterior section slightly shorter than the posterior section. The tooth is serrated with a fairly long row of small denticles ending in a small terminating cusp. Barb and blade very short, almost equal in size. Basal spur is present on top of the large base. This is possibly the most abundant species among the lots from New Caledonia examined in the present work, with more than 550 specimens. In the phylogeny of New Caledonian cone snails presented in Fig. 2 View Fig , C. (A.) bruuni appears sister to species in the (sub)genus Phasmoconus . However, in a more general phylogeny, the Afonsoconus clade is sister to the Textilia clade (Tenorio et al. 2018; Puillandre et al. 2014), which contains fish-eating species with harpoon-shaped radular teeth such as Conus (Textilia) dusaveli (H. Adams, 1872) or Conus (Textilia) cervus Lamarck, 1822 . Although these two species occur in New Caledonia, no live specimens were available, so they were not included in our phylogenetic analysis.

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Neogastropoda

Family

Conidae

Genus

Conus

Loc

Conus (Afonsoconus) bruuni Powell, 1958

Tenorio, Manuel J. & Puillandre, Nicolas 2023
2023
Loc

Afonsoconus bruuni

Monnier E. & Limpalaer L. & Robin A. & Roux C. 2018: 640
2018
Loc

Conus bruuni

Powell A. W. B. 1958: 84
1958
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