Laeocathaica parapolytyla Wu, 2023

Wu, Min, Shen, Wang & Chen, Zhong-Guang, 2023, Land snail diversity in central China: revision of Laeocathaica Moellendorff, 1899 (Gastropoda, Camaenidae), with descriptions of seven new species, ZooKeys 1154, pp. 49-147 : 49

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1154.86237

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4E410C2A-CC03-438F-8AC7-C5370819DE6C

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C78DF85F-7C31-47A3-921D-BE2D72DF128A

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C78DF85F-7C31-47A3-921D-BE2D72DF128A

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Laeocathaica parapolytyla Wu
status

sp. nov.

Laeocathaica parapolytyla Wu sp. nov.

Figs 2A, B View Figure 2 , 25 View Figure 25 , 27 View Figure 27 , 42G, H View Figure 42 , 48I, J View Figure 48

Type material.

Holotype HBUMM06640-spec.1, 1 dissected; town of Wenxian, Gansu Province, 1269 m a.s.l., near point (32.944391°N, 104.685604°E); 2011-VIII-09, coll. Wu, M., Xu, Q. and Budha, P.; DNA voucher HBUMM06639. Paratypes HBUMM06640-spec.2-9 (apex of spec.9 was removed for SEM observation), same data as holotype. HBUMM00532, Xinglongcun, Zhongzhaixiang, Wenxian, Gansu Province, near point (33.232415°N, 104.419075°E); 1998-V-19, coll. Chen, D.-N. and Zhang, G.-Q.

Measurement of holotype.

Shell height 6.9 mm, maximum diameter 15.6 mm, aperture height 3.9 mm, aperture breadth 5.8 mm, umbilicus diameter 5.0 mm, protoconch whorls 11/2, whorls 87/8.

Diagnosis.

Protoconch with dense radially-arranged threads, visible through umbilicus. Beneath carina a clear chestnut band present. Mucous glands four or five. Penis with two pairs of pilasters fusing into two Y-shaped forks. Vagina between atrium and dart sac not elongated. Proximal accessory sac absent.

Description of shell.

Sinistral, depressed, thin but somewhat solid. Shell with 81/8-93/8 fairly flat whorls. Suture impressed. Protoconch 11/2-13/4 whorls, with densely arranged radial threads that may be invisible because of weathering or erosion. Periphery distinctly angulate. Growth lines indistinct. Spiral grooves are absent throughout. Aperture oblique, roundly square, descending in front. Peristome not expanded and indistinctly reflexed at lower part. Within aperture a ring-like thickening present, basally with a flat tooth. Columella oblique. Umbilicus abruptly broadened after penultimate whorl, ~ 1/4 of maximum diameter. Protoconch visible through umbilicus. Shell apically in intermittent yellowish white and pale chestnut patches except white carina. In umbilical view shell distinctly paler in greyish yellow, just beneath carina a clear chestnut band present, umbilical region brownish.

General anatomy.

Eversible head wart prominent. Jaw arcuate, with four projecting ribs.

Anatomy of genital organs.

Penial sheath covering ~ 1/5 of penis. Penis distally fairly expanded. Inside penis, two high pilasters fusing into one Y-shaped fork at proximal 1/4, another pair of pilasters fusing into one Y-shaped fork at middle part. Fine pilasters on distal end of penis merging into ~ 7 thick and short folds. Epiphallic papilla absent. Vas deferens narrow throughout. Vagina between atrium and dart sac not elongated. Vagina between dart sac and insertion of bursa copulatrix duct ~ 1/2 length of dart sac. Dart sac ~ 1/2 length of penis. Accessory sac small but externally distinguishable, internally solid, ventrally inserting into dart sac at distal 1/3, together with mucous glands opening to dart chamber. Mucous glands four or five, each singly tubular or bifurcated. Proximal accessory sac absent. Bursa copulatrix duct equally thick.

Etymology.

The name of this new species is made up of para - meaning similar to and polytyla from Laeocathaica polytyla Möllendorff, 1899, which is conchologically close to the new species.

Ecology.

On rocks of local hill.

Distribution.

Only known from the type locality.

Remarks.

The new species exhibits a large intraspecific change in size (Fig. 25 View Figure 25 ), which is also showed in Laeocathaica polytyla (Fig. 24A, B View Figure 24 ). Laeocathaica parapolytyla Wu, sp. nov. looks like a flattened and sharply carinate L. polytyla , but has slightly different coloring and coarser growth lines. The terminal genitalia of these two species are similar, but in the new species the penis internally has two pairs of pilasters that fuse into two Y-shaped forks, while in Laeocathaica polytya the penis has only one Y-shaped fork formed by adjacent pilasters.