Tomopleura Casey, 1904

Gofas, Serge & Rolán, Emilio, 2009, A systematic review of “ Asthenotoma spiralis (Smith, 1872) ” in West Africa, with description of two new species (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Conoidea), Zoosystema 31 (1), pp. 5-16 : 6-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/z2009n1a1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CC3008-FF95-FF80-331C-F9C674891A2E

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Tomopleura Casey, 1904
status

 

Genus Tomopleura Casey, 1904 View in CoL

TYPE SPECIES. — Pleurotoma nivea Philippi, 1851 , by original designation.

REMARKS

Pleurotoma View in CoL spiralis has been consistently attributed to the genus Asthenotoma Harris & Burrows, 1891 View in CoL , in the literature on West African mollusca (e.g., Knudsen 1952, 1956; Collignon 1960; Bassindale 1961; Bernard 1984; Gofas et al. 1985; Rolán & Ryall 1999; Ardovini & Cossignani 2004). Gofas (1990) and Gatto (1997) figured Asthenotoma meneghinii (Mayer, 1868) View in CoL , a fossil from the European Miocene which is the type species of Asthenotoma View in CoL . This species has an evenly biconical shell with the last whorl occupying about two-thirds of the total height, has a distinct axial sculpture forming nodes on the spire and last whorl, and has a simple outer lip with a poorly defined labial notch. The lower part of the columella is quite prominent and borders a large, broadly open siphonal canal. The Recent West African species “ Pleurotoma View in CoL ” lamothei Dautzenberg, 1910 has a quite similar shell architecture although the last whorl is not quite so high, and is possibly a Recent representative of Asthenotoma View in CoL . Its radula indicates that it belongs to the toxoglossate Conidae View in CoL but it has a well-developed operculum, which is lacking in “ Asthenotoma View in CoL spiralis . This feature and also the general shell architecture are quite different from the species considered hereafter, which have a high spire and relatively low body whorl, completely lack any element of axial macrosculpture, and have a well-defined labial notch. We consider these sufficient reasons to dismiss the current classification as Asthenotoma View in CoL .

The attribution to Tomopleura View in CoL as suggested herein is supported by shell characters and would extend the distribution of the latter genus to the Atlantic. The type species ( Fig. 1 View FIG ) is Indo-Pacific but matches the West African species in important details such as the position of the posterior notch, the nonthickened configuration of the outer lip abapically from the notch and the lack of axial folds on the shell. The protoconchs of T. nivea View in CoL as well as those of the West African species are comparable in being of a multispiral type, and share a smoothish, non-reticulate surface.

Admittedly there are also some differences, in particular, the posterior notch of the outer lip is not so deeply marked in Tomopleura nivea as in the West African species, but we consider that the alternative course of erecting a new genus for the three species treated herein is not appropriate in a paper concerned with the species-level systematics on a local scale, particularly in such a complex family as the Conidae .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Neogastropoda

Family

Borsoniidae

Loc

Tomopleura Casey, 1904

Gofas, Serge & Rolán, Emilio 2009
2009
Loc

Tomopleura

Casey 1904
1904
Loc

Tomopleura

Casey 1904
1904
Loc

Asthenotoma

Harris & Burrows 1891
1891
Loc

Asthenotoma

Harris & Burrows 1891
1891
Loc

Asthenotoma

Harris & Burrows 1891
1891
Loc

Asthenotoma

Harris & Burrows 1891
1891
Loc

Asthenotoma

Harris & Burrows 1891
1891
Loc

Drillia makimonos

Jousseaume 1883
1883
Loc

spiralis

Smith 1872
1872
Loc

spiralis

Smith 1872
1872
Loc

Conidae

Fleming 1822
1822
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