Acanthochitona sp.

Dell’Angelo, Bruno, Gori, Sandro, Baschieri, Leonardo & Bonfitto, Antonio, 2010, Chitons (Mollusca, Polyplacophora) from the Maldive islands, Zootaxa 2673 (1), pp. 1-38 : 21

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2673.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D7EE78-FFC0-FF9E-FF7F-FEBEFBF7B3FE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Acanthochitona sp.
status

 

Acanthochitona sp.

( Figures 7E–G View FIGURE 7 )

Material examined: LB05: 2 intermediate valves.

Description: Intermediate valves twice as wide as long, front margin slightly convex at both sides of concave jugal part, hind margin concave at both sides of slightly protruding apex, jugal area large and smooth, latero-pleural area sculptured with neatly separated, roundish to oval, raised granules, convex at the top, with many aesthetes (from 6 to 14, not differentiated in megalaesthetes and micraesthetes) irregularly arranged on the whole surface and the periphery of the granules.

Remarks: The two intermediate valves from LB05 cannot be attributed with certainty to the other North Indian Ocean Acanthochitona , mainly for the lack of informations on the granules structures of these species. Based on the available characters (the shape of intermediate valves and the granules structure), this species is different from the other Maldive Acanthochitona species , A. penicillata (see the preceding species).

A. mahensis Winckworth, 1927 known from Red Sea, India (Madras), Seychelles and Andaman Islands ( Anseeuw & Terryn 2004) and A. penetrans Winckworth, 1933 known from Andaman Islands have a different structure of aesthetes ( Leloup 1941: pl. 3, Fig. 1B View FIGURE 1 ; pl. 3, Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ).

Notoplax curvisetosa (Leloup, 1960) known from Red Sea, Madagascar and Glorieuses Islands (Dell’Angelo et al. 2004) has rather conspicuous polygonal granules in the latero-pleural areas.

A. jugotenuis Kaas, 1979 known from Mozambique has a different shape of intermediate valves, the jugal area is finely longitudinally ribbed, and latero-pleural areas are densely granulose ( Kaas 1979).

A. quincunx Leloup, 1981 known from Madagascar has a particular granules structure, with small hemispherical granules quincuncially arranged ( Leloup 1981).

A. limbata Kaas, 1986 known from Madagascar has a different granules structure (Dell’Angelo et al. 2004: pl. 6, figs 3–4).

A. woodwardi Kaas & Van Belle, 1988 known from Kuwait and Qatar has the jugal area sculptured with about five weak, flat longitudinal ribs ( Kaas & Van Belle 1988). Unfortunately the structure of the granules is unknown.

Notoplax arabica Kaas & Van Belle, 1988 known from Kuwait and Qatar, has a peculiar sculpture of large, elongate, convex, widely spaced granules ( Kaas & Van Belle 1988).

Acanthochitona mastalleri Leloup MS, Strack, 1989 known from Red Sea, Oman and Kenya ( Anseeuw & Terryn 2004), is a very different species, with the tegmentum reduced in lateropleural areas and the overlapping dorsal girdle.

Hong et al. (1990) report Acanthochitona defilippii (Tapparone-Canefri, 1874) for the Maldive Islands, basing on a preceding mention of Is. Taki (1962: 35 “Sylvia Bay, Maldive Archipelago, Indian Ocean”). A. defilippii is a different species, characterized by intermediate valves of cup-like form, beaked, not comparable with the material examined. The report of this species for the Maldive Islands remains probably a misinterpretation, Sylvia Bay is not present at our knowledge on the Maldive Islands maps, and there is not a word corresponding to “Bay” in the Maldivian vocabulary.

Distribution: Acanthochitona sp. is known only from the Maldive Islands.

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