Conus nobilis var. vincoomnes Lichtenstein, 1794
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5127.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:215155F7-C692-4AAC-ADC8-2665BC18C27D |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6460570 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/063287B5-D117-6152-FF43-C30E1CEA2B9E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Conus nobilis var. vincoomnes Lichtenstein, 1794 |
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Conus nobilis var. vincoomnes Lichtenstein, 1794 View in CoL
Conus nobilis Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL , is a well-known species from the Indian Ocean. The description of C. nobilis vincoomnes Lichtenstein, 1794 View in CoL , fits exactly C. nobilis victor Broderip, 1842 View in CoL (e.g., Abbott & Dance, 1983: 247; Röckel et al. 1995: pl. 36, fig. 8), characterized by the two areas with multiple bands consisting of tightly spaced dark brown markings. Both, Lichtenstein (1794) and Broderip (1842) compare their species to C. nobilis View in CoL and C. ammiralis View in CoL , further strengthening the identity of the two specific names, although no dimensions were given by Lichtenstein. Lichtenstein noted that this species is extremely rare with the three exclamation marks; C. nobilis victor View in CoL is still today a rare shell from Indonesia. The name vincoomnes View in CoL had never been used in the literature, hence, was designated by Geiger (2003) a nomen oblitum, and C. nobilis victor View in CoL is a nomen protectum. The subspecies is currently accepted as valid in WoRMS.
Note the similarity in the species names ( victor View in CoL = the winner; vincoomnes View in CoL = I win all), which may prompt some speculation as to the origin of Broderip’s material. Broderip (1842) had two specimens at hand, one from H. Cuming, the other from the Reverend A. Harford, whereas Lichtenstein based his description on a single specimen. The two Broderip specimens had equal standing as syntypes. Finet & Caillez (1993) inadvertently designated a lectotype by labelling the specimen shown in their fig. 5 as “ Holotype BMNH 1992085”; the wherabouts of the second specimen is not known. The name given by Broderip (1842) may also be seen in the context of naming a small, rare, and finely patterned species akin to C. cedonulli Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL . The latter species epithet signifies “I cede to none” or, as Dance (1966) phrased it, “second to none”. Accordingly, C. victor View in CoL and C. vincoomnes View in CoL could have been named independently in that tradition, though there is no indication to such an intent in either of the original descriptions.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Conus nobilis var. vincoomnes Lichtenstein, 1794
Geiger, Daniel L. 2022 |
C. nobilis victor
Broderip 1842 |
C. nobilis victor
Broderip 1842 |
C. nobilis victor
Broderip 1842 |
victor
Broderip 1842 |
C. victor
Broderip 1842 |
C. nobilis vincoomnes
Lichtenstein 1794 |
vincoomnes
Lichtenstein 1794 |
vincoomnes
Lichtenstein 1794 |
C. vincoomnes
Lichtenstein 1794 |
Conus nobilis
Linnaeus 1758 |
C. nobilis
Linnaeus 1758 |
C. ammiralis
Linnaeus 1758 |
C. cedonulli
Linnaeus 1758 |