Published December 31, 2015 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Leptochiton belknapi Dall 1878

Creators

Description

Leptochiton belknapi Dall, 1878

Leptochiton belknapi Dall 1878: 1; Kaas & Van Belle 1987: 23, fig.10; Schwabe & Sellanes 2010: 33, fig.1L–M

Leptochiton alveolus; Ferreira 1979:152, fig 10 (in part, non Chiton alveolus M.Sars MS, Lovén, 1846); Kaas & Van Belle 1985: 36, fig.14, map 6, (in part, non Chiton alveolus Lovén, 1846).

Leptochiton farallonis Dall 1902: 557.

Leptochiton mesogonus Dall 1902: 555.

Leptochiton opacus Dall 1908: 218.

Leptochiton sp. Sellanes et al. 2004: 1066.

Type. Holotype (USNM 30972).

Type locality. off Western Aleutian Islands, 53°08’N, 171°19’W, 1840 m depth.

Material examined. Holotype of L. belknapi (USNM 30972), L. alveolus [(2 spms from the Norwegian Sea, 2 spms from Newfoundland Bank, 1 spm from off Vineyard (USNM 602353)], two syntypes of L. giganteus (ZMA); holotype L. halistreptus (USNM 10932); syntypes of L. halistreptus abbreviatus (USNM 223498); syntype of L. opacus (USNM 110664); lectotype L. japonicus (ZMHU 102038); holotype of L. luridus (USNM 109027), holotype of L. farallonis (USNM 109025) and holotype of L. mesogonus (USNM 109019)].

Peruvian and Chilean record. Sellanes et al. 2004, (as Leptochiton sp.) and Schwabe & Sellanes 2010 (from off Peru, 11°50’S to off Chile, 42°40’S).

Distribution. Wide spread species, inhabits the Pacific Ocean from the Sea of Okhotsk and Bering Sea to North and South America’s Pacific waters southwards to 42°40’S, 200–1840 m.

Remarks. Studied material showed that several species which were synonymized with L. belknapi by Kaas & Van Belle (1987) are valid. Among them are Leptochiton luridus, L. halistreptus halistreptus, L. halistreptus abbreviatus, L. giganteus, L. japonicus. Leptochiton luridus differs from L. belknapi by having three cusps in major lateral teeth of radula and dorsal scales without ribs. Leptochiton luridus belongs to the L. vitjazi group. Both subspecies of L. halistreptus halistreptus and L. halistreptus abbreviatus differ from L. belknapi by having extensive rows of gills arranged from anus to valve V and by having the tail valve wider than the head valve. Leptochiton giganteus differs from L. belknapi by having the width of the jugal sinus almost equal to the width of the apophyses (width of jugal sinus much wider than apophyses in L. belknapi), dorsal scales without ribs. Leptochiton japonicus differs from L. belknapi in having 7 instead of 3 pores in the granules and 6–8 instead of 3 ribs in dorsal scales. According to Saito (1997), L. japonicus and L. aequispinus are valid species. In my opinion, L. simplex is a synonym of L. japonicus because L. simplex has 6 ribs on the dorsal scales of the girdle and similar valves. Other species (see Kaas & Van Belle 1987) were left in the synonymy of L. belknapi. I think that some specimens from Peruvian and Chilean samples recorded by Sellanes et al. (2004) as Leptochiton sp. and by Schwabe & Sellanes (2010) as L. belknapi may belong to one of the new deep-water species, described in this article from the Peru-Chile Trench (Leptochiton sigwartae, L. mutschkeae and L. macleani). Further work beyond the scope of this paper is necessary to study the specimens by Scanning Electron Microscope.

Notes

Published as part of Sirenko, Boris, 2015, Shallow and deep-sea chitons of the genus Leptochiton Gray, 1847 (Mollusca: Polyplacophora: Lepidopleurida) from Peruvian and Chilean waters, pp. 151-202 in Zootaxa 4033 (2) on page 154, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4033.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/241610

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Leptochitonidae
Genus
Leptochiton
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Lepidopleurida
Phylum
Mollusca
Scientific name authorship
Dall
Species
belknapi
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Leptochiton belknapi Dall, 1878 sec. Sirenko, 2015

References

  • Dall, W. H. (1878) Description of new form of molluscs from Alaska contained in the collections of the National Museum. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 1, 1 - 3. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.1
  • Kaas, P. & Van Belle, R. A. (1987) Monograph of living chitons 3, E. J. Brill / W. Backhuys, Leiden, 302 pp.
  • Schwabe, E. & Sellanes, J. (2010) Revision of Chilean bathyal chitons Mollusca: Polyplacophora) associated with cold-seeps, including description of a new species of Leptochiton (Leptochitonidae). Organisms Diversity & Evolution, 10 (1), 31 - 55. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1007 / s 13127 - 009 - 0002 - 6
  • Ferreira, A. J. (1979) The family Lepidopleuridae (Mollusca: Polyplacophora) in the eastern Pacific. The Veliger, 22 (2), 145 - 165.
  • Loven, S. L. (1846) Index molluscorum litora Scandinaviae Occidentalia habitantium. Ofverssigt Af Kungel Svenska Vetenskaps-Akademiens Forhandlinger, 3, 134 - 160.
  • Kaas, P. & Van Belle, R. A. (1985) Monograph of living chitons 1, E. J. Brill / W. Backhuys, Leiden, 240 pp.
  • Dall, W. H. (1902) Illustrations and descriptions of new, unfigured, or imperfectly known shells, chiefly American, in the U. S. National Museum. Proceedings of the United States national Museum, 24, 499 - 566. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.24 - 1264.499
  • Dall, W. H. (1908) Report on the dredging operations off the West coast of Central America, to the Galapagos, etc …. by the U. S. Fish. Comm. Steamer " Albatros ", 1891. 37. Reports on the scientific results. etc. 14, The Mollusca and Brachiopoda. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard University, 43 (6), 205 - 487.
  • Sellanes, J., Quiroga, E. & Gallardo, V. A. (2004) First direct evidence of methane seepage and associated chemosynthetic communities in the bathyal zone off Chile. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 84, 1065 - 1066. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0025315404010422 h
  • Saito, H. (1997) Deep-sea Chiton fauna of Suruga Bay (Mollusca: Polyplacophora) with descriptions of six new species. National Science Museum Monographs, 12, 31 - 58.