Lactiforis tropicalis, Golding, Rosemary E., Ponder, Winston F. & Byrne, Maria, 2007

Golding, Rosemary E., Ponder, Winston F. & Byrne, Maria, 2007, Taxonomy and anatomy of Amphiboloidea (Gastropoda: Heterobranchia: Archaeopulmonata), Zootaxa 1476, pp. 1-50 : 15-16

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.176773

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6240274

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F887BA-990E-543A-118F-C589FF06FC58

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lactiforis tropicalis
status

sp. nov.

Lactiforis tropicalis View in CoL sp. nov.

Holotype ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 K): Australia, Western Australia: Broome, Roebuck Bay, on mudflats in front of mangroves, 24 Jun 1983, B. Jenkins (AMS C.446775).

Paratypes: Same data as holotype (AMS C.164311), 59 specimens.

Other material examined: Australia, Northern Territory: Maningrida , mudflats off beach, 27 Mar 1980, P.H. Colman (AMS C.446493); Darwin, East Arm, at boat ramp on surface of damp mud, 6 Jul 1988, W.F. Ponder (AMS C.445398). Australia, Queensland: Torres Strait, Saibai Island, Saibai Village, on mud in front of seaward mangroves, 8 Jul 1976, W.F. Ponder and I. Loch (AMS C.445405).

Etymology: Tropicalis (Latin) refers to the tropical distribution of this species in Northern Australia and Torres Strait.

Description: Shell ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 K): Fragile, spire short, conical, diameter to 7 mm, exterior smooth, axial striae faintly visible; umbilicus wide; sutures shallowly impressed. Exterior white to cream; umbilicus brownishorange.

Operculum ( Figs. 3 View FIGURE 3 C, 4B): Thin, pale yellow, corneous with fan-shaped white deposit on interior surface around nucleus and along outer edge. Columellar edge of operculum curves inwards, outer edge rounded forming point in upper corner. Nucleus eccentric, paucispiral; exterior of operculum entirely corneous, with raised striae, white deposit visible from exterior.

External morphology: Head-foot lacking pigment in formalin-preserved specimens. Mantle white and mottled or spotted with black pigment in formalin-preserved specimens,

Digestive system: As for A. crenata , but proportionally smaller.

Mantle organs ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 C): Opposed ciliary tracts in mantle cavity short and restricted to exhalant canal; hypobranchial gland oval, flat, white in preserved specimens, positioned on roof of mantle cavity in exhalant canal; mantle roof slightly vascularised.

Radula ( Figs. 10 View FIGURE 10 C, D): Central and lateral teeth absent, marginal teeth narrow, unicuspid, elongate, with recurved tips. Marginal teeth pointing towards centre of radula, approximately 25 on each side, forming very dense, indistinct rows.

Central nervous system ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 C): Large cerebral-pleural and pedal ganglia joined by short commissures. Left parietal ganglia reduced. Visceral loop concentrated with visceral ganglion abutting right parietal ganglion, separated from left parietal ganglion by commissure. Presence of parapedal and subcerebral commissures not determined.

Reproductive system ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 F): Ovotestis, oviductal and albumen glands as for A. crenata . Seminal vesicle a large diverticulum from upper hermaphrodite duct. Seminal receptacle small, elliptical, pigmented, opening via a short duct to carrefour. Spermoviduct running straight through right body wall distally, leading to hairpin fold in cephalic region before junction with proximal end of copulatory organ. Base of long prostatic gland vivid crimson red at junction with spermoviduct and spermovipositor. Spermovipositor short, simple with thick, tubular base; aperture of spermoviduct simple, thickened, fused distally to spermovipositor sheath forming narrow ridge towards genital aperture. Spermovipositor sheath bearing muscular flap on left of spermovipositor, lacking pockets. Possible spermatophore found in some specimens, globular, with red coating, lodged in spermovipositor sheath between spermovipositor and muscular projection from wall.

Distribution and habitat ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ): Northern Australia, recorded from Broome (Western Australia) to the Torres Strait (northern Queensland), although based on few available records. It is assumed that L. tropicalis sp. nov., which occurs in both the Torres Strait and Broome, has a more-or-less continuous distribution between these sites, despite the lack of records from the Gulf of Carpentaria and the western coast of Cape York. It is found on estuarine and coastal mudflats.

Remarks: Lactiforis tropicalis sp. nov. has obvious similarities with L. takii (see generic diagnosis), but is distinguished from that species by the crimson prostatic gland and white shell with coloured umbilicus. The tropical Australian distribution of L. tropicalis is very different from that of L. takii , which is found only in Japan.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Family

Amphibolidae

Genus

Lactiforis

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