Paramya recluzi (A. Adams, 1864)
Figure 5 H–M
Eucharis recluzi A. Adams, 1864: 309 .
Anisodonta recluzii (A. Adams, 1864) — Habe, 1961: 123, pl. 56, fig. 7; Habe, 1968: 180, pl. 56, fig. 7; Kuroda et al. 1971: 625, 403, pl. 118, fig. 20.
Paramya recluzii (A. Adams, 1864) — Habe, 1977: 281, pl. 28, fig. 9; Xu, 1987: 438 –439, fig. 1d; Xu, 1997: 230; Okutani, 2000: 1021, pl. 508, fig. 8; Kwon et al. 2001: 277, fig. 1136; Lutaenko et al. 2003: 168; Noseworthy et al. 2007: 99; Xu & Zhang, 2008: 257, fig. 812; Xu, 2008: 589.
Paramya recluzi (A. Adams, 1864) — Bernard et al., 1993: 107.
Material examined. MBM 300739 (1 articutate shell), Jiaozhou Bay, Station C-5 (36°6’N, 120°18’E), Kexue II R/ V, on June 25th, 1985; MBM265366 (1 articutate shell), Liaodong Bay, Station B66A, in mud, 26m, Kexue I R/V, on July 1st, 1988.
Distribution and habitat. Recent. Bohai Sea, Jianzhou Bay, China; Japan; Korea. Sandy mud bottom 5– 50 m. Life habitat unclear, possibly commensal with echiurid worms, such as in the case of Paramya subovata (Jenner & McCrary 1969; Henry 1976) and the third species of this genus P. africana (see Cosel 1995).
Type locality. Yobuko, Saga Prefecture, Kyushu.
Diagnosis. Length to 10 mm; gaping anteriorly and posteriorly; boundary between posterior area and posterocentral shell obtusely convex; umbo small; sculpture of coarse growth commarginal lines, with minute granulations, more obvious on the ventral margin; chondrophores of similar size; pallial sinus shallow, does not exceed further ventral than posterior adductor scar; pallial line thin orobscure.