Mercuria balearica ( Paladilhe, 1869 )

Miller, Jonathan P., Delicado, Diana, García-Guerrero, Fernando, Khalloufi, Noureddine & Ramos, Marian A., 2023, Morphology and taxonomic assessment of eight genetic clades of Mercuria Boeters, 1971 (Caenogastropoda, Hydrobiidae), with the description of five new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 866 (1), pp. 1-63 : 21-26

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.866.2107

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:28B62104-CA03-481A-B229-D697148D4DE0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7891731

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5C7987C4-FFF4-FFE0-EF51-FDFA314EF9B4

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Mercuria balearica ( Paladilhe, 1869 )
status

 

Mercuria balearica ( Paladilhe, 1869) View in CoL View at ENA

Figs 11–14 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig ; Supp. file 2: Tables S10–S13

Amnicola balearica Paladilhe, 1869: 113 .

Mercuria balearica View in CoL – Boeters 1988: 207, figs 106–107.

Pseudamnicola balearica View in CoL – Quintana 2019: 19, fig 1a.

Revised diagnosis

Shell ovate-conic; aperture obliquely broad ovate; protoconch microsculpture granulated; central radular tooth formula (4)3-C-3(4)/1-1; glandular oviduct 2.5 times as long as wide; albumen gland longer than capsule gland; bursa copulatrix pyriform to elongate; seminal receptacle elongate, with a short duct; penis darkly pigmented, as long as the penial appendix; penial appendix unpigmented or slightly pigmented at the junction with the penis, rounded, small, base narrow, medially positioned on the inner edge of the penis; nervous system pigmented, elongated (mean RPG ratio = 0.53).

Type material (not examined)

Syntype FRANCE • 1 spec. (sex unknown); UM.PLD.005 ( Breure & Audibert 2017).

Type locality

According to the original description ( Paladilhe 1869), the type locality is Port Mahon, Minorca, Balearic Islands [Port-Mahon (Illes Balears)].

Material examined

SPAIN – Islas Baleares • 30 specs; Minorca, Colarsega River in Port Mahon ; MNCN 15.05/94744 • 30 specs; Minorca, stream near Sant Joan de Carbonell ; MNCN 15.05/94745 • 30 specs; Minorca, Cala en Porter ; MNCN 15.05/94746 • 30 specs; Minorca, Son Bou, Barranc de Bec ; MNCN 15.05/94747 . – Málaga • 30 specs; Ardales, El Chorro Spring ; MNCN 15.05/94732 • 30 specs; spring in Montecorto ; MNCN 15.05/94731 , MNCN 15.05/94737 • 30 specs; trough in Churriana ; MNCN 15.05/94733 • 30 specs; Venta El Pilar Spring ; MNCN 15.05/94734 , MNCN 15.05/94738 • 30 specs; trough in Los Granados ; MNCN 15.05/94735 • 30 specs; stream in Montecorto; MNCN 15.05/94736 . – Cádiz • 30 specs; Alozaina, Valentín Spring ; MNCN 15.05/94739 . – Jaén • 30 specs; Fontanar, stream in Caño de la Rambla ; MNCN 15.05/94740 • 30 specs; Peal de Becerro, Cinco Caños Spring ; MNCN 15.05/94743 . – Granada • 30 specs; Mojácar, Arabic Spring ; MNCN 15.05/94741 ). – Murcia • 30 specs; spring in Sierra de la Muela ; MNCN 15.05/94742 .

Additional locality information is provided in Supp. file 1: Table S1.

Description

SHELL. Ovate-conic, whorls 4–5, height 2–3.5 mm, width 1.4–2.6 mm ( Fig. 11A–F View Fig ; Supp. file 2: Table S10); periostracum yellowish to brown; protoconch with 1.5 whorls, ca 350 µm wide, nucleus less than 200 µm wide; protoconch microsculpture granulated ( Fig. 12A–C View Fig ); teleoconch whorls convex, separated by a deep suture; body whorl large, convex, occupying about two-thirds of the total shell length; aperture obliquely broad ovate, complete; inner lip thicker than outer lip; aperture margin straight, inner lip touching the shell wall; umbilicus narrow, not covered by the inner lip ( Fig. 11A–F View Fig ).

OPERCULUM. As for the genus, orange to brown, sometimes yellowish, about two whorls; muscle attachment oval, located near the nucleus ( Fig. 11G–H View Fig ).

RADULA. Length intermediate, ca 800 µm long (35% of total shell length), containing about 65 rows of teeth. Central tooth formula (4)3-C-3(4)/1-1, central cusp V shaped, cutting edge slightly concave ( Fig. 12D View Fig ). Lateral tooth formula (3)4-C-4(3), central cusp V shaped and slightly longer than the central tooth one. Inner marginal teeth with 14–18 cusps; outer marginal teeth with 15–17 cusps ( Fig. 12E–F View Fig ). Radular data were collected from the following specimens: MNCN 15.05/94745 – stream near Sant Joan de Carbonell, Minorca; MNCN 15.05/94747 – Barranc de Bec, Son Bou, Minorca; MNCN 15.05/94738 – Venta El Pilar Spring, Málaga; MNCN 15.05/94741 – Arabic Spring, Mojácar, Granada; MNCN 15.05/94743 – Fuente de los Cinco Caños Spring, Peal de Becerro, Jaén.

PIGMENTATION AND ANATOMY. Animal slightly darkly pigmented, although unpigmented specimens were also found ( Fig. 11D View Fig ); head and tentacles black, pigmentation lighter on eye lobes, snout and neck; snout about as long as wide, approximately parallel-sided, with medium distal lobation. Ctenidium occupying almost the total length of the pallial cavity; 21–27 gill filaments; filaments broad, triangular, fused at the base by an epithelium ( Fig. 13D View Fig ). Osphradium elongate, more than 3 times as long as broad, positioned opposite to the middle of the ctenidium. Stomach almost as long as wide with two nearly equally sized chambers (Supp. file 2: Table S11); style sac longer than wide, with the unpigmented intestine surrounding its distal part before continuing on as a straight rectum ( Fig. 13E View Fig ).

MALE GENITALIA. Prostate gland bean-shaped, about 2 times as long as wide (Supp. file 2: Table S13), connected by the posterior vas deferens to a convoluted seminal vesicle and the testis ( Fig. 13C View Fig ). Penis darkly pigmented, gradually tapering, attached to the neck behind the right eye; penial appendix and distal end of the penis nearly equal in size; penial appendix unpigmented or slightly pigmented at the junction with the penis, rounded, small, base narrow, medially positioned on the inner edge of the penis ( Fig. 13B View Fig ).

FEMALE GENITALIA. Glandular oviduct 2.5 times as long as wide; albumen gland longer than capsule gland ( Fig. 13A View Fig ); bursa copulatrix pyriform ( Fig. 14B–D View Fig ) to elongate ( Fig. 14A View Fig ), ca 2 times as long as wide (Supp. file 2: Table S12), lying against the albumen gland; bursal duct shorter than bursa length; renal oviduct unpigmented, coiled, with three loops; coils can be wide open ( Fig. 14E View Fig ) or highly coiled ( Fig. 14F–G View Fig ); seminal receptacle elongate, with a short duct, positioned on the distal part of the renal oviduct just above the junction with the bursal duct ( Fig. 14E–G View Fig ).

NERVOUS SYSTEM. Pigmented, elongated (mean RPG ratio = 0.53; see Supp. file 2: Table S15); cerebral ganglia approximately equal in size; pleuro-supraoesophageal connective ca 9 times as long as pleuro-suboesophageal one ( Fig. 13F View Fig ).

Ecology and distribution

Mercuria balearica presents broad ecological plasticity, inhabiting springs, streams and ponds with conductivities ranging from 179 to 2750 µS/cm. Population densities were low. During our field surveys, we found evidence of local extinctions in the regions of Andalusia and Minorca (e.g., extirpated populations in the towns of Zuheros, Arriate, Alozaina, Gaucín, Ferreries), suggesting that the species was more abundant in the late twentieth century. This species occurs sympatrically with Pseudamnicola meloussensis Altaba, 2007 , Theodoxus aff. fluviatilis , Melanopsis spp. and Potamopyrgus antipodarum .

The species was previously cited from springs, streams, small rivers and ditches in the southern Iberian Peninsula and on the Balearic Islands of Ibiza and Minorca ( Boeters 1988; Glöer et al. 2015). We confirmed the species in Minorca (Ibiza was not included as a field site) and in several other springs and streams in south-eastern Iberia ( Fig. 1 View Fig ).

Remarks

The taxonomy of the species has undergone several revisions, with the most recent change occurring in 2019, when Quintana (2019) placed the species in the genus Pseudamnicola Paulucci, 1878 . He had found an abundant population living in Colarsega River at Port-Mahon ( Minorca Island), which is the type locality of M. balearica . He sent a subsample to the MNCN in Madrid so that we could review the classification. We confirmed that all the specimens received belong to Pseudamnicola meloussensis and communicated to Quintana that more exhaustive sampling would be necessary to find specimens of M. balearica . However, he thought that if all the specimens found in this locality are Pseudamnicola , then M. balearica and P. meloussensis are probably the same species and they should be renamed as Pseudamnicola balearica , the species described by Paladilhe (1869) (as Amnicola balearica ), with P. meloussensis consequently being a junior synonym of P. balearica . However, during a more detailed sampling of this population in 2018, we were able to collect a few specimens of M. balearica living together with P. meloussensis . The DNA-based sequences ( Miller et al. 2022) and shell morphology ( Fig. 11C View Fig ) of these specimens correspond to those of a member of Mercuria , confirming their placement in this genus (and their continued presence at the type locality).

Our morphological observations (this study) and DNA results ( Miller et al. 2022) confirm the previous assignments of other Iberian populations to M. balearica ( Boeters 1988; Glöer et al. 2015). Populations from the stream near Sant Joan de Carbonell, Minorca (MNCN 15.05/94745), Venta El Pilar Spring, Málaga (MNCN 15.05/94738) and Fuente Valentin Spring, Cádiz (MNCN 15.05/94739) accounted for most of the morphological variation observed between Minorcan and Iberian populations. Sequence divergence of COI among these populations was low (<1.2%) ( Miller et al. 2022).

Intraspecific morphological differences for this species are observed mainly in shell, penis and female genitalia features. Specimens from Minorca are generally larger in size and present globose to high-spired shells, whereas the Iberian specimens have only globose shells (Supp. file 2: Table S10). The specimens from Los Granados Trough in Málaga (MNCN 15.05/94735) have the smallest shells. All the specimens have a pigmented epithelium, though some specimens from Arabic Spring in Mojácar (MNCN 15.05/94741) are unpigmented. Variation in the male reproductive organs is as previously described for the genus: the penis is either slightly longer or shorter than the appendix, and the appendix is usually rounded and unpigmented (only the population in Peal del Becerro, Jaén presents a slightly pigmented appendix). The bursa copulatrix varies from pyriform in most of the populations to elongate in the specimens from Venta El Pilar Spring, Málaga (MNCN 15.05/94734). Populations from Minorca have both morphotypes. Females from Venta El Pilar Spring (MNCN 15.05/94734), the stream in Montecorto (MNCN 15.05/94736), Fuente Valentín Spring (MNCN 15.05/94739) and Arabic Spring (MNCN 15.05/94741) have a bursa copulatrix that surrounds the albumen gland, which is located beneath it (see Fig. 14C View Fig ) rather than parallel to it (the typical orientation in other members of the genus).

Mercuria balearica can be distinguished from M. similis by its smaller, less globose shell, less convex body whorl, shorter tapering triangular penis with a rounded unpigmented penial appendix that is slightly larger than or equal in size to the penis, pyriform bursa copulatrix and higher number of cusps on the central and lateral teeth of the radula. Mercuria balearica resembles M. carrillorum sp. nov. and M. felixi sp. nov. in shell shape (ovate-conic) and colour but differs from these congeners by having a shorter, more pigmented penis with a larger rounded penial appendix. Also, their distribution areas do not overlap. Sequence divergences for COI indicated that M. balearica is most closely related to M. tensiftensis and M. felixi (5.2% mean divergence with both species) and most distantly to M. midarensis and M. melitensis ( Paladilhe, 1869) (8.6% mean divergence with both species) ( Miller et al. 2022).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

SubClass

Caenogastropoda

Order

Littorinimorpha

Family

Hydrobiidae

SubFamily

Mercuriinae

Genus

Mercuria

Loc

Mercuria balearica ( Paladilhe, 1869 )

Miller, Jonathan P., Delicado, Diana, García-Guerrero, Fernando, Khalloufi, Noureddine & Ramos, Marian A. 2023
2023
Loc

Pseudamnicola balearica

Quintana J. 2019: 19
2019
Loc

Mercuria balearica

Boeters H. 1988: 207
1988
Loc

Amnicola balearica

Paladilhe A. 1869: 113
1869
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