Afrocyclus oxygala, Cole, 2019

Cole, Mary L., 2019, Revision of Chondrocyclus s. l. (Mollusca: Cyclophoridae), with description of a new genus and twelve new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 569, pp. 1-92 : 67-68

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.569

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:79BE13FC-B840-4C39-8D25-3328BDCC44D2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5586691

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7B7B852C-8B49-494A-A652-B313EBDC6372

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:7B7B852C-8B49-494A-A652-B313EBDC6372

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Afrocyclus oxygala
status

gen. et sp. nov.

Afrocyclus oxygala View in CoL gen. et sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:7B7B852C-8B49-494A-A652-B313EBDC6372

Figs 11 View Fig A–B, 28B, 29, 30

Chondrocyclus isipingoensis – Connolly 1939: 540 View in CoL . — Herbert & Kilburn 2004: 91.

Diagnosis

Shell very small, depressed, discoidal; periostracum with axial costae producing spiral rows of simple hairs; operculum very fragile and duplex, exterior portion very shallowly concave, with low multispiral lamella terminating in a solid fringe, radula with two large cusps on second lateral tooth and rachidian tooth without serrated upper edge.

Etymology

The specific name is derived from the Greek ‘ oxygala ’, meaning ‘sour milk’, a translation of the name of the type locality, Maasstrom.

Type material examined

Holotype

SOUTH AFRICA – Eastern Cape • Bedford, Maasstrom Farm , forest in kloof; 32.6830°S, 26.0830°E; 24 Jan. 2011; M. Cole, R. Daniels and V. Ndibo leg.; NMSA P0638 View Materials /T4153. ( Fig. 11 View Fig A–B) GoogleMaps

Paratypes

SOUTH AFRICA – Eastern Cape • 9 specimens; same collection data as for holotype; ELM D16895/ T151 GoogleMaps 3 specimens; same collection data as for holotype; ELM W03646/T172 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; same collection data as for holotype; NHMUK 20160078 View Materials GoogleMaps 1 specimen; Bedford, Maasstrom Farm , forest in kloof; 32.6830°S, 26.0830°E; 1 Jan. 2007; M. Bursey leg.; ELM D15108/T153 GoogleMaps 1 specimen; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W3122 View Materials /T154 GoogleMaps 5 specimens; Bedford, Maasstrom Forest ; J. Farquhar leg.; NMSA V6684 View Materials /T5154 40 specimens; Somerset East, Glen Avon Falls , forest beside base of falls; 32.6770°S, 25.6368°E; 19 Jan. 2002; D. Herbert leg.; in leaf-litter; NMSA W0754 View Materials /T4155 GoogleMaps 72 specimens; Somerset East, Glen Avon , downstream of falls; 32.6770°S, 25.6367° E; 25 Jan. 2011; M. Cole, V. Ndibo and R. Daniels leg.; ELM D16896/T155 GoogleMaps 50 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; ELM W03647/T156 GoogleMaps 3 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; NHMUK 20160076 View Materials GoogleMaps 2 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; NHMUK 20160077 View Materials GoogleMaps 3 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; RMNH.MOL.338285 GoogleMaps 4 specimens; same collection data as for preceding; NMW.Z.2016.003.00003 GoogleMaps .

Description

SHELL ( Fig. 30 View Fig A–C). Very small, depressed, discoidal, adult diameter 2.19–3.0 mm, height 1.12–1.68 mm, diameter:height 1.61–2.12 (n = 29). Spire low, each whorl just rising above the next, apex acutely mammillate and tilted ( Fig. 30A View Fig ). Embryonic shell ( Fig. 28B View Fig ) just over 2.25 whorls, microscopically malleate, junction between embryonic shell and teleoconch evident with termination of malleation. Teleoconch comprising just over two whorls, very rapidly increasing, convex, suture impressed. Aperture circular, last whorl descending steeply nearing aperture, peristome simple, continuous and free. Umbilicus very wide, exposing all the whorls ( Fig. 30C View Fig ). Periostracum glossy and lacquer-like with lamellate axial costae at regular intervals ( Fig. 30D View Fig ), the average number on last whorl varying between 63 and 95 ( Table 5), which produce three spiral rows of long, simple hairs at periphery; intervals between costae usually with approx. five microscopic axial threads. Shell translucent when fresh.

OPERCULUM ( Fig. 30 View Fig E–F). Very fragile and duplex, outer portion consists of multispiral lamella with five–six whorls, height of lamellar blade very low thus operculum is very shallowly concave to almost flat, thickened horizontal ridge on lamellar blade just above disc surface; long fringe of fused bristles emanates from this ridge, fused to blade and then curving outwards, leaving no furrow between fringe and vertical portion of blade, fringe of each whorl does not appear to be fused to lamella of following whorl, fringe of outer whorl fairly long and overlaps disc slightly; inner portion of operculum is a thin disc, without a prominent tubercle in centre.

RADULA ( Fig. 30G View Fig ). Rachidian with five cusps, central one very long, outermost two relatively short, first lateral tooth with four cusps and a vestigial fifth, third cusp (from centre) very long; second lateral tooth with two large cusps, second cusp (from centre) larger, a third small cusp and a vestigial fourth.

PENIS ( Fig. 30 View Fig H–I). Relatively short, shaft more or less cylindrical.

Distribution and habitat

Eastern Cape, southern end of Great Escarpment, in Eastern Cape Escarpment Thicket ( Hoare et al. 2006) associated with river valleys ( Fig. 29 View Fig ).

Remarks

The molecular phylogeny suggests that A. oxygala gen. et sp. nov. belongs to a lineage distinct from all other populations of Afrocyclus gen. nov. sampled ( Fig. 1 View Fig ) but further study is required to resolve phylogenetic relationships between A. oxygala gen. et sp. nov. and other species of Afrocyclus gen. nov.

The species is readily distinguished by having only three rows of long hairs on lamellate costae round the periphery (although in adults the hairs were usually worn off), while A. isipingoensis gen. et comb. nov. has four rows around the periphery. A. oxygala gen. et sp. nov. lacks the additional spiral rows of hairs present in A. isipingoensis gen. et comb. nov.: one row of very short hairs below the suture and approx. five-seven rows of shorter hairs between the periphery and umbilicus. A. oxygala gen. et sp. nov. has a higher spire (and consequently deeper umbilicus) and a more strongly sculptured protoconch ( Fig. 28B View Fig ). The operculum has a smooth inner disc without a tubercle in its centre. The radula more closely resembles those of species in the Southern-Eastern Cape clade (smooth upper edge of rachidian and two large cusps on second lateral tooth) than those of other specimens of Afrocyclus gen. nov. examined. The penis of A. oxygala gen. et sp. nov. is relatively short.

This lineage occurs at the western extremity of the distribution of gen. nov. and the populations at Somerset East and Bedford are on opposite sides of the upper Great Fish River Valley ( Fig. 29 View Fig ). Although considered an arid barrier for dispersal of montane taxa ( Weimarck 1941; Stuckenberg 1962), this valley has not consistently been a major hindrance to connectivity along this region of the Great Escarpment ( Clark et al. 2010) and may have been an area of persistence of thicket during the Last Glacial Maximum (24000 to 18000 years ago) ( Potts et al. 2012) and perhaps prior maxima.

NMSA

KwaZulu-Natal Museum

ELM

East London Museum

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

NMW

Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Architaenioglossa

Family

Cyclophoridae

Genus

Afrocyclus

Loc

Afrocyclus oxygala

Cole, Mary L. 2019
2019
Loc

Chondrocyclus isipingoensis – Connolly 1939: 540

Herbert D. & Kilburn D. 2004: 91
Connolly M. 1939: 540
1939
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