Imeretiopsis cameroni Grego & Mumladze, 2020
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.955.51983 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C8EF4A4B-6F05-4621-B9B5-AE47FEE7C217 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0E981A62-FAEF-4440-9B5F-636EA97EFBAB |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:0E981A62-FAEF-4440-9B5F-636EA97EFBAB |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Imeretiopsis cameroni Grego & Mumladze |
status |
sp. nov. |
Imeretiopsis cameroni Grego & Mumladze sp. nov. Plates 8 (7, 8); 9(8) View Plate 8
Type locality.
Georgia • Imereti, Kutaisi, Iazoni (Tskhal-Tsiteli) Cave spring (იაზონის იგივე წყალ-წითელას მღვიმე), right bank of Tskalsitela River; 146 m alt., 42°16'18"N, 42°44'2"E; 145 m a.s.l.; sandy sediment inside the cave.
Material.
Holotype: Georgia • 1 adult, dry; type locality; 01 May 2018; J. Grego, L. Mumladze and M. Olšavský leg.; ISU FM-T016-H. Paratypes: Georgia • same as for holotype; 12 October 2019; J. Grego, L. Mumladze and G. Bananashvili leg.; 4 ISU FM-T016-P1/1 dry, JG F1406/1 dry, ZIN 1dry.
Diagnosis.
The new species differs conspicuously from all the similar species of the region by its more slender shell with more conspicuous axial growth lines, closed umbilicus and narrower aperture. Caucasogeyeria orientalis (Starobogatov, 1962) has a similar, but more robust, oval shell shape with a different shape of the aperture.
Description.
Shell: elongate narrow-turreted, 2.00-2.29 mm high shell with 5½ tumid whorls, weak suture and flat blunt apex. The early whorls rather inflated, and the inflation of whorls regularly decreasing abapically, apex almost flat. Shell surface glossy, whitish translucent with faint regularly spaced distant rib-like growth lines. Umbilicus closed. Aperture not expanded, elongate-oval with weakly sinuated labral profile and flat columellar profile. Protoconch pitted.
Operculum: light yellow, horny, elongate ellipsoid, paucispiral with excentric nucleus.
Animal body: not known.
Holotype measurements: H-2.00 mm; W-0.81 mm; BH-0.96 mm; BW-0.72 mm; AH-0.62 mm; AW-0.49 mm; CA: 35°
Anatomy: not known.
Etymology.
Named after Robert A. D. Cameron from Sheffield University, who significantly contributed to the malacological knowledge of Eurasia including Caucasus region.
Habitat.
Stygobiotic species. The fresh empty shells, some with opercula, were found in the sandy sediment of the cave stream. The condition of the shells indicates its habitat in the deep cave zone.
Distribution.
Only known from the type locality.
Conservation status.
The species is known from a single location and EOO is smaller than 10 km2. There is also indication of stochastic human driven habitat pollution and a very scare occurrence of dead mature individuals indicating a very weak surviving population. Therefore, it is assessed as Critically endangered (EN) B2.
Remarks.
The assignment of the new species to the genus Imeretiopsis gen. nov. is only provisional, based on the shell habitus, e.g., the similarly sinuated lateral labral profile. Molecular data will be necessary to confirm the taxonomic position of the species. The type locality, Iazoni Cave was formed in Cretaceous limestone with a high content of quartz sand grains. The sand accumulated in thick sedimentary layers after the carbonate dissolution inside the cave. A few kilograms of the cave sand had to be screened to find a single specimen. The cave drains water from a populated area SE of Kutaisi, and the sediments indicated a contamination by micro plastic and perhaps occasionally by chemicals from municipal waste. This can pose a direct danger to the important cave fauna including Motsametia borutzkii (Shadin, 1932), Euglesa subterranea (Shadin, 1932) and cave shrimps Xiphocaridinella kutaissiana Sadowski, 1930, Niphargus borutzkyi Birstein, 1933 and Asellus monticola fontinalis Birstein, 1936 reported from the type locality.
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