Landouria conoidea ( Leschke, 1914 ) Nurinsiyah & Neiber & Hausdorf, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.526 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3FFC527D-E9CA-4D9F-BF59-076FA60171AC |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11238049 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B1DB4C-8B3D-4E0B-4FCD-FAA5384EFC1D |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Landouria conoidea ( Leschke, 1914 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Landouria conoidea ( Leschke, 1914) View in CoL comb. nov.
Figs 4 View Figs 2–5 , 6 View Figs 6–11 , 53 View Figs 52–55 ; Tables 3–4 View Table 3 View Table 4
Plectotropis conoidea Leschke, 1914: 212 View in CoL , figs 8–9 (“Buitenzorg”).
Landouria rotatoria – van Benthem Jutting 1950: 461 View in CoL (in part). (not Pfeiffer, 1842)
Diagnosis
Landouria conoidea is characterized by a small, conical, sharply keeled shell with tubercles all over the shell surface.
Material examined
Syntypes
INDONESIA • 8 spec.; West Java, Bogor ; 6°36′ S, 106°48′ E; ZMH 98144 .
GoogleMapsOther material
INDONESIA • 10 spec.; West Java, Bogor ; 6°36′ S, 106°48′ E; ZMH 98145 GoogleMaps .
Description
SHELL ( Figs 4 View Figs 2–5 , 6 View Figs 6–11 ; Tables 3–4 View Table 3 View Table 4 ). Conical, with 4.75–5 slightly convex whorls; protoconch almost smooth; teleoconch with fine, irregular wrinkles; apical side without distinct incised spiral lines, umbilical side with indistinct spiral lines; with tubercles all over shell surface that carry scaly processes or hairs mainly at periphery; tuberculate around umbilicus; brownish-corneous; body whorl sharply keeled at beginning; aperture almost circular; upper insertion of peristome slightly descending; peristome expanded, reflexed and slightly thickened; umbilicus hardly eccentric, wide, comprising 30–43% of shell diameter, hardly obscured by columellar edge.
GENITALIA. Unknown.
Remarks
Landouria conoidea differs from L. winteriana , which occurs in the same region in West Java, in the smaller shell diameter (7.6–8.7 mm vs 9.7–12.6 mm in L. winteriana ), the higher shell form (D/H 1.48–1.54 vs 1.55–2.07 in L. winteriana ), the more pronounced keel and the presence of tubercles all over the shell surface ( Fig. 6 View Figs 6–11 ).
With regard to the conical shell form, L. conoidea resembles L. naggsi sp. nov. (Fig. 25), from which it differs in the less elevated (D/H 1.48–1.54 vs 1.21–1.37 in L. naggsi sp. nov.), smaller shell (D 7.6– 8.7 mm vs 11.6–14.0 mm in L. naggsi sp. nov.) with fewer whorls (4.75–5 vs 6.25–7 in L. naggsi sp. nov.), the more pronounced keel and the shell sculpture consisting of tubercles vs longish scales in L. naggsi sp. nov.
Distribution
Landouria conoidea is so far known only from Bogor in West Java (Fig. 53).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
SubFamily |
Bradybaeninae |
Tribe |
Aegistini |
Genus |
Landouria conoidea ( Leschke, 1914 )
Nurinsiyah, Ayu Savitri, Neiber, Marco T. & Hausdorf, Bernhard 2019 |
Landouria rotatoria – van Benthem Jutting 1950: 461
van Benthem Jutting W. S. S. 1950: 461 |
Plectotropis conoidea
Leschke M. 1914: 212 |