Antrorbis Breweri, a New Genus and Species of Hydrobiid Cavesnail (gastropoda) from Coosa River Basin, Northeastern Alabama

نویسندگان

  • Robert Hershler
  • Fred G. Thompson
چکیده

— An aquatic cavesnail from Coosa River Basin, Alabama, representing a monotypic genus, is described (Antrorbis breweri, new genus, new species). Diagnostic features of the genus include a minute, planispiral to lowtrochoid shell with apical microsculpture of spirally arranged low tubercles; blind, unpigmented animal; few ctenidial filaments; intestine with coils on lateral surface of style sac and in pallial roof; simple penis; capsule gland with ventral channel; and two sperm pouches. Antrorbis and three other North American cavesnail genera that also have a simple penis and capsule gland with ventral channel herein are placed in the Lithoglyphinae. Among the numerous discoveries of North American nonmarine mollusks made by Leslie Hubricht is a minute planispiral snail from subterranean stream in Manitou Cave, northeastern Alabama, which he assigned (Hubricht 1940:35) to Horatia Bourguignat, 1887. Hubricht did not describe the snail, and its affinities were uncertain in light of the determination by Hershler & Longley (1986) that other putative North American Horatia are not congeneric with this European group. As part of ongoing review of North American cavesnails, the senior author recently collected live examples of the Manitou cavesnail which we describe below as a new genus and species of Hydrobiidae. Antrorbis, new genus Diagnosis. —A minute-sized (2.7-3.0 mm) North American group characterized by a planispiral-low-trochoid shell with apical microsculpture of spirally arranged low tubercles. Operculum paucispiral, without ventral peg. Animal blind, unpigmented. Ctenidial filaments few (7-10). Central radular teeth with single pair of basal cusps. Intestine coiling on right-lateral style sac and in pallial roof. Male with a simple penis. Females oviparous. Oviduct entering capsule gland, which has a ventral channel. Two sperm pouches present. Type species. —Antrorbis breweri, new species (by monotypy). Etymology.— Masculine, from the Classical Greek, antrum, a cave, and orbis, a circle, and referring to subterranean habitat and discoidal shell of the snail. Discussion. —Among North American freshwater hydrobiids, the Lithoglyphinae group of epigean genera (Thompson 1984) and three subterranean forms (Pterides Pilsbry, 1909; Phreatodrobia Hershler & Longley, 1986; Holsingeria Hershler, 1989) share with Antrorbis the simple penis and capsule gland with ventral channel. Antrorbis resembles some Phreatodrobia which have planispiral to low-trochoid shells, but a number of other highly unusual features (i.e., wrinkled protoconch sculpture, absence of basal cusps on the central radular teeth, presence of an anterior coil of the capsule gland) occur among this group of Texas endemics, mitigating against a close relationship with Antrorbis or any other known ge198 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON nus. Holsingeria and Pterides, local endemics from the Powell River Basin in southwestern Virginia and Panuco River Basin in northeastern Mexico, respectively, share with Antrorbis the spirally arranged, tubercular protoconch sculpture; and although these three genera are well differentiated by various combinations of features from shell, operculum, intestinal coiling, and pallia] oviduct complex, they appear to represent a natural group. The heterogeneous assortment of unusual character-states exhibited by these cavesnails makes it difficult to assess affinities among them, or with other hydrobiid groups, but nevertheless we are placing them in the Lithoglyphinae, the only subfamily that agrees with them in general soft anatomical features.' The lithoglyphines, as previously conceived (Davis & Pons da Silva 1984, Thompson 1984), were a morphologically compact group of genera characterized by a squat shell with large aperture, which accomodates a broad foot required for holding onto hard substrate in swift current. In light of recent studies on the anatomy of hydrobiid snails, and the discovery of additional new genera, shell shape (reflecting specialization for a particular habitat) no longer can be considered a defining feature of the Lithoglyphinae. In the wake of the taxonomic changes proposed herein, the Lithoglyphinae now parallels the hydrobiid subfamilies Nymphophilinae and Littoridininae in that included genera vary from nearly planispiral to broadly trochoidal to elongate-slender in shell shape. The Lithoglyphinae are represented in South America and Europe, and are widely deployed on the North American continent where they inhabit lentic and lotic epigean habitats as well as subterranean streams. No lithoglyphines are known from brackish-water habitats. We suspect that the Lithoglyphi1 The Hydrobiinae differ anatomically from this group in having a small pallia! tentacle; a penial lobe; and a complex, pigmented renal oviduct. nae are an ancient freshwater group, but the fossil record offers no useful information in this regard because the subfamily is not identifiable on the basis of shell features. Antrorbis breweri, new species Manitou cavesnail Figs. 1-5 Horatia sp. — Hubricht 1940:35. Horatia micra.— Stein 1976:21. " Horatia." -Burch 1982:270.-Hershler & Longley 1986:153, figs. 23k, 1, 28a. Material examined. —USNM 860429, holotype; University of Florida (UF) 135984 (4 specimens), USNM 860430 (9), paratypes, RH and party coll., 6 Jun 1988.— USNM 860431 (16), RH coll., 16 Sep 1988.-USNM 860432 (10), L. Hubricht coll., 19 Jun 1957. All material from Manitou Cave (Fig. 1), Little Wills Valley, Coosa River Basin, Fort Payne, AL (7.5 minute series), T. 7S, R. 9E, NE 'A section 18. Description. —Shell (Fig. 2; Table 1) discoidal, clear, transparent, 1.5-1.7 mm wide; height about half of width. Surface usually covered by moderately thick, yellow-orange periostracum. Whorls, 2.5-3.0, well rounded, sutures deeply indented. Whorl expansion rate moderate. Translation of protoconch and first teleoconch whorl highly variable, yielding impressive diversity of spire development. Aperture near-circular in outline, often slightly longer than wide, with adapical edge advanced. Inner lip thin, less curved than outer, adnate to small portion of body whorl, very slightly flared. Umbilicus broadly open. Protoconch (Fig. 3ad), 1.25 whorls, sculptured with raised tubercles arranged in numerous spiral rows. Tubercular sculpture weak or absent on teleoconch. Teleoconch having strong collabral growth lines. Operculum (Fig. 3e) thin, paucispiral, with 4.5 whorls. Ventral surface of operculum slightly convex, lacking peg development. Animal with 2.5 whorls. Pigment absent, except for some small black granules scatVOLUME 103, NUMBER 1 199 Fig. 1. Map (from Fort Payne Quadrangle, USGS 7.5 minute series, 1946 [revised 1983]) showing location

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تاریخ انتشار 2010