Published October 3, 2019 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Fastosarion hannianus

  • 1. Australian Museum, 1 William St, Sydney NSW 2010, Australia Isabel. Hyman @ austmus. gov. au
  • 2. Australian Museum, 1 William St, Sydney NSW 2010, Australia

Description

Fastosarion hannianus (Stanisic, 2010)

Figs. 18, 19D, 20F, 22E–F, 24

Hymanarion hanniana [sic!] Stanisic, 2010 in Stanisic et al., 2010: 318–319, 334.

Material examined

Types: Holotype: QMMO48176 (Bakers Blue Mtn, c. 17 km W of Mt Molloy, NEQ 16°42’S, 145°10’E, rainforest, 800–1000 m, under logs, coll. 30 Dec 1989, ANZSES).

Paratypes: QM MO48167, QM MO78907.

Non-type material: See table 1.

Diagnosis

External morphology: Shell (fig. 19D) small (9.6 mm), golden amber, transparent, 2.1–3.0 whorls, subglobose, thin, last whorl large. Body (fig. 20F) 18–24 mm, dark reddish brown, darker on tail; dark bands on either side of neck. Mantle lobes and shell lappets moderately large, darker in colour, smooth. Tail not keeled, slime network weak. White pigmentation on visceral mass visible through shell.

Genital anatomy: Genitalia (figs. 22E–F, 24) with very short vagina; bursa copulatrix very short, duct distinct, bursa spherical. Penis large, cylindrical, internally often with 3–4 short, narrow longitudinal pilasters basally, two narrow longitudinal pilasters proximally, and one stimulator and one rounded pilaster medially; internal wall pustulose distally and longitudinally ridged proximally; 50% of penis contained in penial tunica. Epiphallus approx. equal to penis length; epiphallus arms equal in length; epiphallic caecum short; flagellum moderately long, uncoiled, slender, slightly swollen towards tip. Spermatophore simple (based on a fragment).

Remarks

The spelling of the species name is adapted herein to agree with the masculine gender of the genus name. Fastosarion hannianus is only known from the Hann Tableland and Bakers Blue Mountain, SW of Mossman in northeastern Qld (fig. 18), where it is found in vine thicket on basalt. This species shares with F. alyssa, F. insularis and F. mcdonaldi its small size and low-spired shell no greater than three whorls with, a short vagina and bursa copulatrix, equal length arms of the epiphallus, and a penis with some rounded pilasters proximally. It differs from these species in its more globose shell. Fastosarion hannianus is genetically very distinct from its nearest relatives (F. alyssa and F. insularis).

Notes

Published as part of Hyman, Isabel T. & Köhler, Frank, 2019, Phylogeny and systematic revision of the helicarionid semislugs of eastern Queensland (Stylommatophora, Helicarionidae), pp. 351-451 in Contributions to Zoology 88 (4) on pages 419-423, DOI: 10.1163/18759866-20191416, http://zenodo.org/record/8343061

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
QM
Event date
1989-12-30
Family
Helicarionidae
Genus
Fastosarion
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
MO48167 , MO78907
Order
Stylommatophora
Phylum
Mollusca
Scientific name authorship
Stanisic
Species
hannianus
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype , paratype
Verbatim event date
1989-12-30
Taxonomic concept label
Fastosarion hannianus (Stanisic, 2010) sec. Hyman & Köhler, 2019

References

  • Stanisic, J., Shea, M., Potter, D. & Griffiths, O. (2010) Australian Land Snails. 1. A Field Guide to Eastern Australian Species. Bioculture Press, Riviere des Anguilles, Mauritius.