Published October 3, 2019 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Stanisicarion wolvi Hyman & Köhler 2019, sp. nov.

  • 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

Stanisicarion wolvi sp. nov.

Figs. 33, 34C, 39E–F, 40

Etymology

For Mt Wolvi, the type locality; noun in apposition.

Material examined

Types: Holotype: AM C.581912 (Gympie District, Mt. Wolvi, Salmon Lookout, 26° 10' 41" S, 152° 52' 21" E, coll. 04 Aug 2011, J. Ferguson).

Paratypes: AM C.478035 (same data as holotype).

Non-type material: See table 1.

Description

External morphology: Shell (fig. 34C) large (20.5–20.7 mm), golden amber, 3.9–4.4 whorls, subglobose with a very low spire. Body 40–45 mm, colour (in alcohol) uniform grey, mid field of sole white, shell lappets and mantle lobes grey with few black spots. Shell lappets and mantle lobes moderately large, lappets heavily pustulose, lobes finely pustulose. Dark line along mantle edge. Tail weakly keeled at tip, slime network prominent.

Genital anatomy: Genitalia (figs. 39E–F, 40) with moderately long vagina, slightly swollen; bursa copulatrix moderately long, duct distinct, bursa elongate oval. Penis long, slender, narrowing distally, internally with fine, numerous pustules arranged in longitudinal rows; 40% of penis contained in penial tunica. Epiphallus slightly longer than penis; epiphallus enters penis through a very short, broad verge, pointed at tip; epiphallus 2 longer than epiphallus 1; epiphallic caecum of moderate length; flagellum moderately long, slender. Spermatophore with a very long, narrow tail-pipe sculptured with a single spiraling row of small teeth.

Remarks

Stanisicarion wolvi (referred to above as ‘ Helicarionidae sp. Mt Wolvi’) is known only from Mt Wolvi near Gympie in southeastern Qld (fig. 33). It is closely related to S. aquila, which is not recorded from Mt Wolvi but is found only a short distance to the south in Kenilworth. However, S. wolvi is larger than S. aquila and while it is only known from preserved specimens, appears to differ in its uniform grey colouration with fewer spots on the shell lappets. Stanisicarion wolvi was found buried in the soil under rocks in notophyll vine thicket.

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 445-448, DOI: 10.1163/18759866-20191416, http://zenodo.org/record/8343061

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Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

URL
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F32A40FF87B16153419970F62FFCF1
LSID
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:55CB7210-2BCD-462A-B2F4-91A7C4CEE2FE

Biodiversity

Collection code
AM
Event date
2011-08-04
Family
Helicarionidae
Genus
Stanisicarion
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Stylommatophora
Phylum
Mollusca
Scientific name authorship
Hyman & Köhler
Species
wolvi
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype , paratype
Verbatim event date
2011-08-04
Taxonomic concept label
Stanisicarion wolvi Hyman & Köhler, 2019