Architectonica perdix ( Hinds, 1844 )

Jirapatrasilp, Parin, Cuny, Gilles, Kocsis, László, Sutcharit, Chirasak, Ngamnisai, Nom, Charoentitirat, Thasinee, Kumpitak, Satapat & Suraprasit, Kantapon, 2024, Mid-Holocene marine faunas from the Bangkok Clay deposits in Nakhon Nayok, the Central Plain of Thailand, ZooKeys 1202, pp. 1-110 : 1-110

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1202.119389

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D04EE090-0D05-4EB2-ADA6-3EE4E19F59D9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11200496

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A85976DD-52A3-5682-B9C6-0D4B78648F67

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft (2024-05-15 19:11:54, last updated 2024-06-04 23:02:17)

scientific name

Architectonica perdix ( Hinds, 1844 )
status

 

Architectonica perdix ( Hinds, 1844) View in CoL

Figs 4 J View Figure 4 , 11 A View Figure 11

Solarium perdix Hinds, 1844: 22 – 23. Type locality: Ceylon; north-west coast of Australia.

Architectonica perdix View in CoL . Bieler 1993: 48 – 52, figs 35 – 38. Swennen et al. 2001: 57, 135, fig. 477. Hylleberg and Kilburn 2003: 113. Robba et al. 2004: 158, pl. 21, fig. 10 a, b. Dharma 2005: 204, pl. 77, fig. 2 a, b; 358, pl. 144, fig. 7 a, b. Thach 2005: 224. Robba et al. 2007: 95 (appendix). Nabhitabhata 2009: 200. BEDO 2017 b: 73, with in-text fig. Yang et al. 2017: 118, 120, fig. 493. Surakiatchai et al. 2018: table 5, pl. 1, fig. 12 a, b. Tudu and Balakrishnan 2018: 199 – 200, fig. 1 a – f. Wells et al. 2021: 131.

Referred material.

CUF - NKNY - G 02, G 31 (155 shells; Figs 4 J View Figure 4 , 11 A View Figure 11 ).

Habitat.

Sandy and muddy bottoms at a depth from 10 to 60 m ( Bieler 1993; Thach 2005; Yang et al. 2017).

Distribution.

Indian Ocean; Indo-West to Central Pacific, from China to Australia and Polynesia ( Robba et al. 2004; Tudu and Balakrishnan 2018). Records of fossils from the Middle Pliocene in Indonesia and from the Holocene in Thailand ( Dharma 2005; Surakiatchai et al. 2018).

Record in Thailand.

Gulf of Thailand and Andaman Sea ( Wells et al. 2021).

Taxonomic remarks and comparisons.

This species differs from its similar species, Adelphotectonica reevei (Hanley, 1862) , by having a much smaller protoconch and a much higher upper point of attachment of the whorls ( Bieler 1993). See also comprehensive taxonomic remarks in Bieler (1993).

Cohort Tectipleura Schrödl et al., 2011

Subcohort Euopisthobranchia Jörger et al., 2010

Order Cephalaspidea Fischer, 1883

Superfamily Cylichnoidea H. Adams & A. Adams, 1854

BEDO (2017 b) Marine Gastropods: Checklist of Molluscan Biodiversity in Thailand. BEDO, Bangkok, 376 pp. [in Thai]

Bieler R (1993) Architectonicidae of the Indo-Pacific (Mollusca, Gastropoda). Abhandlungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins in Hamburg 30: 1 – 376.

Dharma B (2005) Recent and fossil Indonesian shells. ConchBooks, Hackenheim, 424 pp.

Hinds RB (1844) Description of new species of shells. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 12: 21 - 26. https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / item / 46217

Hylleberg J, Kilburn RN (2003) Marine molluscs of Vietnam: annotations, voucher material, and species in need of verification. Phuket Marine Biological Center Special Publication 28: 1 – 300.

Nabhitabhata J (2009) Checklist of Mollusca Fauna in Thailand. Office of Natural Resources and Environmental Policy and Planning, Bangkok, 576 pp.

Robba E, Di Geronimo I, Chaimanee N, Negri MP, Sanfilippo R (2004) Holocene and recent shallow soft-bottom mollusks from the Northern Gulf of Thailand area: Scaphopoda, Gastropoda, additions to Bivalvia. La Conchiglia. International Shell Magazine 35: 1 – 290.

Robba E, Di Geronimo I, Chaimanee N, Negri MP, Sanfilippo R (2007) Holocene and recent shallow soft-bottom mollusks from the Western Gulf of Thailand: Pak Phanang Bay and additions to Phetchaburi fauna. Bollettino Malacologico 43: 1 – 98.

Surakiatchai P, Choowong M, Charusiri P, Charoentitirat T, Chawchai S, Pailoplee S, Chabangborn A, Phantuwongraj S, Chutakositkanon V, Kongsen S, Nimnate P, Bissen R (2018) Paleogeographic reconstruction and history of the sea level change at Sam Roi Yot National Park, Gulf of Thailand. Tropical Natural History 18: 112 – 134. https://li01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/tnh/article/view/148171

Swennen C, Moolenbeek RG, Ruttanadakul N, Hobbelink H, Dekker H, Hajisamae S (2001) The Molluscs of the Southern Gulf of Thailand. The Biodiversity Research and Training Program, Bangkok, 210 pp.

Thach NN (2005) Shells of Vietnam. ConchBooks, Hackenheim, 338 pp.

Tudu PC, Balakrishnan S (2018) First report of Patridge Sundial Snail Architectonica perdix (Hinds, 1844) from Northern part of East Coast of India. Records of the Zoological Survey of India 118 (2): 198 – 201. https://doi.org/10.26515/rzsi/v118/i2/2018/123516

Wells FE, Sanpanich K, Tan SK, Duangdee T (2021) The Marine and Estuarine Molluscs of Thailand. Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum National University of Singapore, Singapore, 195 pp. https://lkcnhm.nus.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2021/01/LKCNHM-EBOOK-2021-0001.pdf

Yang W, Cai Y, Kuang X (2017) Color Atlas of Molluscs of the South China Sea. China Agriculture Press, Beijing, 275 pp.

Gallery Image

Figure 4. Size comparison of gastropods found in this study A Brunneifusus ternatanus B Murex trapa C Indothais lacera D Pristiterebra miranda E Chicoreus capucinus F Indothais gradata G Ellobium aurisjudae H Inquisitor vulpionis I Turricula javana J Architectonica perdix K Pseudoneptunea varicosa L Cassidula nucleus M Pseudoetrema fortilirata N Paradrillia melvilli O Duplicaria tricincta P Granuliterebra bathyrhaphe Q Comitas ilariae R Cylichna modesta S Maoritomella vallata.

Gallery Image

Figure 11. Gastropods and bivalves A Architectonica perdix B Ellobium aurisjudae C Cassidula nucleus D Anadara inaequivalvis E Anadara indica F Tegillarca granosa.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Trochida

Family

Architectonicidae

Genus

Architectonica