4.0 Article

A critical review of Antarctic Conoidea (Neogastropoda)

Journal

MOLLUSCAN RESEARCH
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages 153-206

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13235818.2015.1128523

Keywords

Antarctic Convergence; bathymetric distribution; endemism; new name; new species

Funding

  1. RFBR [14-04-00481]
  2. Service de Systematique Moleculaire [UMS 2700 CNRS-MNHN]
  3. project CONOTAX - French ANR [ANR-13-JSV7-0013-01]
  4. Australian Antarctic Division [53]
  5. Japanese Science Foundation
  6. French polar institute IPEV (ICOTA programme)
  7. French polar institute IPEV (REVOLTA programme)
  8. CNRS
  9. MNHN
  10. ANR (White Project ANTFLOCKs USAR) [07-BLAN-0213-01]
  11. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-13-JSV7-0013] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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The Antarctic Conoidean fauna is critically reviewed based on published data and specimens in the collections of the USNM, IORAS and MNHN. Forty-two species and subspecies of the superfamily Conoidea are recorded as occurring within the Antarctic Convergence (excluding the fauna of the Kerguelen Islands) and are attributed to 14 genera and seven families. These include the new taxa: Antarctospira n. gen. (type speciesLeucosyrinx badenpowelli Dell, 1990); Drilliola antarctica n. sp.; Pleurotomella (Pleutoromella) tippetti n. sp.; Pleurotomella (Anomalotomella) petiti n. sp.; Xanthodaphne pastorinoi n. sp. Aforia watsoni is introduced as a new name for Pleurotoma (Surcula) lepta Watson, 1881, non Pleurotoma lepta Edwards, 1861. A lectotype is designated for Conorbella antarctica (Strebel, 1908). New combinations are also proposed. Antarctospira badenpowelli (Dell, 1990), n. comb. (previously assigned to Leucosyrinx); Antarctospira principalis (Thiele, 1912), n. comb. (previously assigned to Typhlomangelia); Antarctospira mawsoni (Powell, 1958), n. comb. (previously assigned to Leucosyrinx); Typhlodaphne paratenoceras (Powell, 1951), n. comb. (previously assigned to Leucosyrinx); Belalora weirichi (Engl, 2008), n. comb. (previously assigned to Oenopota); Pleurotomella (Anomalotomella) innocentia (Dell, 1990), n. comb. (previously assigned to Typhlodaphne); Pleurotomella (Anomalotomella) nipri (Numanami, 1996), n. comb. (previously assigned to Typhlodaphne); Xanthodaphne raineri (Engl, 2008), n. comb. (previously assigned to Pleurotomella); Aforia hedleyi (Dell, 1990), n. comb. (previously assigned to Pontiothauma). The majority of Antarctic conoidean taxa have hypodermic marginal teeth. Although there is a similar relative abundance of conoideans in Antarctic waters to that seen in other well-studied faunas, the low number of conoideans is indicative of the general impoverishment of the gastropod fauna in the region. Fourteen percent (2 of 14) of conoidean genera that occur within the Antarctic Convergence are endemic to Antarctic waters, as are 82% (34 of 42) of the species. Most taxa have very broad bathymetric ranges, some extending from bathyal to hadal depths. The greatest species diversity was at bathyal depths.

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