Stenoplax limaciformis (Sowerby, 1832)

Reyes-Gómez, Adriana, Vargas-Ponce, Ofelia, Galván-Villa, Cristian, Salgado-Barragán, José, Esqueda-González, Ma. Del Carmen & Ríos-Jara, Eduardo, 2023, Inventory of chiton species (Polyplacophora) from the rocky intertidal of the Northern Gulf of California, with an illustrated taxonomic key, Zootaxa 5296 (2), pp. 147-178 : 153-154

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5296.2.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:624273A6-3028-42C2-ABE2-A18BBF828156

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7973084

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/795287BF-E451-5513-D0F1-72E07790F8EB

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Stenoplax limaciformis (Sowerby, 1832)
status

 

Stenoplax limaciformis (Sowerby, 1832) View in CoL View at ENA

( Figures 2C View FIGURE 2 , 4J–N View FIGURE 4 )

Chiton limaciformis Sowerby in Broderip & Sowerby, 1832: 25–33. Chresonymy and synonymy in Bullock (1985).

Type material. Syntype BMNH 1980007 /1.

Type locality. According to Kaas & Van Belle (1987) at Inner Lobos , Perú; Central America , Guacomayo (the exact location is unknown; it is even unclear from which country in Central America) .

Material examined. Ninety– five specimens, BL 11.2–28.9 mm.

Habitat. In the intertidal, on medium–sized and small rocks with patches of crusty algae and abundant globular tally of the algae Dictyosphaeria Decaisne, 1842 . The algae patches had a maximum diameter of 20 cm.

Remarks. Stenoplax limaciformis has a sculpture of somewhat elevated ribs, the ribs are usually broken at the periphery of the valves and become less broken and can show a zigzag arrangement towards the apex ( Figs. 4J, L View FIGURE 4 ). Lateral areas of valves raised and central areas with narrow longitudinal ribs ( Fig. 4K View FIGURE 4 ). Girdle with small, bent dorsal scales showing eroded surface with 5–9 longitudinal, broken striae ( Fig. 4M View FIGURE 4 ). Radula with tricuspid major lateral and short thin central tooth ( Fig. 4N View FIGURE 4 ).

Stenoplax limaciformis differs from the other species of Stenoplax in body shape and tegmentum sculpture. The morphological characters of S. limaciformis are: 1) high variation in the color pattern of the tegmentum, 2) maximal known body size 35 mm, 3) moderately elevated tegmentum sculpture of irregular and/or inter–cut slats forming nodules, and 4) elongated girdle scales, curved and with longitudinal fine grooves. However, S. sonorana exhibits a gray or olive–green tegmentum color; its maximum size is up to 65 mm; with coarse, elevated tegmentum and long bent spicules.

Stenoplax limaciformis is more similar to the species of the Caribbean ( Stenoplax purpurascens C.B. Adams, 1845 , S. floridana Pilsbry, 1892 , and S. bahamensis Kaas & Van Belle, 1987 ). These morphological similarities were also noted by Ferreira (1978) and Bullock (1985) and were confirmed in a molecular clock (cox1) study by García-Ríos et al. (2014). Bullock (1985) concluded that S. limaciformis shows a greater affinity to S. purpurascens . He noted that S. floridana , S. purpurascens , and S. bahamensis are morphologically similar but can be differentiated by details in shape and arrangement of the tegmentum sculpture, also observed in the Stenoplax species from the Mexican Caribbean discussed by Reyes–Gómez et al. (2017). Bullock (1985) recognized the Caribbean Stenoplax species including S. limaciformis from the Pacific as a complex of “sister species". The phylogeny of this genus requires more in–depth studies that analyze morphological characteristics and DNA regions of more individuals of the species that constitute this genus.

Due to the absence of S. limaciformis in the samples collected at higher latitudes, the present study considers Bahía San Carlos, Sonora as the northern limit of this species. Bullock (1985) reported that the northern limit of this species is located at Puertecitos and La Libertad, Baja California. However, Kaas & Van Belle (1987) mentioned that the distribution of S. limaciformis extends from the Gulf of California to Lobos Island, Perú.

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