Sinocamaena Wu, 2024

Wu, Min, Chen, Tian & Shen, Wang, 2024, New camaenid genus and species from Zhejiang, East China (Eupulmonata, Helicoidea), ZooKeys 1202, pp. 135-154 : 135-154

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1202.118964

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B73212F2-69AA-4703-826B-ADE235E8B7E0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11200382

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/40C4A6B6-BC44-4F77-87E3-1DDF85815DB3

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:40C4A6B6-BC44-4F77-87E3-1DDF85815DB3

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Sinocamaena Wu
status

gen. nov.

Sinocamaena Wu gen. nov.

Chinese name.

中华坚螺属.

Type species.

Sinocamaena cheni Wu , gen. et sp. nov.

Diagnosis.

Shell depressed. Protoconch and teleoconch granulate. Protoconch strongly sculptured. Peristome expanded. Head wart low and tiny. Between the ommatophore insertions, a gland pore present. A mantle lobe present. Penial sheath absent. Epiphallus very short. Epiphallic papilla well developed. Flagellum absent.

Description.

Shell depressed. Whorls slightly convex. Suture slightly impressed. Umbilicus broad. Protoconch with granules on strong radial sculpture. Peristome expanded. Adult shell surface without ribs, hairs or scales. Growth lines fine and evenly broken into granules on teleoconch. Shell with several thin bands above and beneath carina.

General anatomy. A small pore externally present between ommatophore insertions. Eversible head wart very weakly developed. A mantle lobe present.

Genitalia. Penial sheath absent. Penis externally without penial caecum. Pilasters inside penis low and weak. Epiphallus very short. Epiphallic papilla rather developed. Flagellum absent.

Etymology.

This new genus is named after “ sino ” (= China) and “ camaena ” which is a camaenid genus that includes many large-sized helicoid species.

Distribution.

China: Zhejiang.

Remarks.

The new genus is conchologically close to many camaenids, such as Camaena Albers, 1850 and Burmochloritis Godwin-Austen, 1920 , in having a large helicoid shell with multiple slender bands. In comparison to Camaena (sensu Schileyko 2003), the new genus has a strongly sculptured protoconch and an extremely short epiphallus (the part between penial retractor muscle insertion and vas deferens insertion), but has neither the axial corrugated pilasters within penis nor the flagellum. The new genus differs from Burmochloritis ( Páll-Gergely et al. 2023) in the absence of the flagellum, the long cylindrical epiphallus, the penial caecum and the dart sac. Sinocamaena gen. nov. shares with Sinochloritis the possession of granules on the protoconch and the characters from both general and genital anatomy, including the presence of a visible gland pore between the ommatophore insertions, a mantle lobe, a well-developed epiphallic papilla and the absence of a penial sheath and a dart sac apparatus. Compared to Sinochloritis , the new taxon has neither a flagellum nor a long epiphallus with the cylindrical trunk, nor prominent penial pilasters. In terms of shell morphology, generally, the new genus looks different from any other Chinese indigenous camaenid genus. Regardless of the shell morphology, all the other Chinese camaenid genera having no dart sac apparatus, i. e., Amphidromus Albers, 1850 , Landouria Godwin-Austen, 1918 , Pancala Kuroda & Habe, 1949 , Satsuma , Yakuchloritis Habe, 1955 , Pseudostegodera and the above mentioned Sinochloritis , possess a well-developed flagellum in the male part of genitalia (table 1 in Wu 2023). The present phylogeny (Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ) suggests that the new taxon is possibly the nearest relative of almost all the members of dart sac-bearing bradybaenines endemic to the South Gansu Plateau or Central China.

It is noteworthy that the taxa that are basal on the phylogram, i. e., Nesiohelix , Traumatophora , Acusta , Bradybaena , Plectotropis , Aegista , Euhadra , Satsuma , Camaena , have mantle lobes. In general, the camaenids from Central China constitute a monophyly that receives high support values (clade X in Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ), in which all terminals have a dart sac apparatus but lack a mantle lobe. The extended study of mantle lobes in helicoids taken here suggests that the presence of the mantle lobe could be a widely distributed and possibly a plesiomorphic character in the superfamily Helicoidea .