Fustiaria liodon Pilsbry & Sharp 1897

Main Authors: Caetano, Carlos Henrique Soares, Scarabino, Victor, Absalão, Ricardo Silva
Format: info publication-taxonomictreatment Journal
Terbitan: , 2006
Subjects:
Online Access: https://zenodo.org/record/6258420
Daftar Isi:
  • Fustiaria liodon (Pilsbry & Sharp, 1897) Figs. 48–52 + Dentalium liodon Pilsbry and Sharp 1897: 107, pl. 21, figs. 37–39; Matthews and Rios 1974: 47. + Dentalium (Laevidentalium) liodon: Henderson 1920: 76, pl. 12, figs. 2–4; Warmke and Abbott 1961: 225, fig. 34 b; Rios 1970: 144; Penna 1972: 231; Penna­Neme 1974: 112. + Dentalium (Laevidentalium) liodon liodon: Henderson 1920: 76. + Dentalium (Laevidentalium) liodon alloschismum Pilsbry and Sharp 1897: 108, pl. 21, figs. 40–42; Henderson 1920: 77, pl. 13, figs. 1, 4–6. +Laevidentalium liodon: Scarabino 1985: 199, pl. 73, fig. 1023; 1994: 308, pl. 107, fig. 1511; Cabral and Mello 1994: 39, figs. 11, 12; Díaz and Puyana 1994: 256, pl. 71, fig. 1043. + Fustiaria liodon: Steiner and Kabat 2001: 445; 2004: 611. Type material Holotype ANSP 35554. Type locality St. Martin, West Indies (by original designation). Diagnosis Shell medium (to 34 mm), slender, slightly curved, regularly tapering, translucent, glossy, brilliant. Without sculpture. Apex with narrow slit or V­shape notch on the ventral side. Section circular throughout. Distribution USA: Florida; Caribbean Sea: St. Martin (Pilsbry & Sharp 1897); Barbados; Antigua; Honduras (Henderson 1920); Brazil: Amapá to Rio de Janeiro, including Fernando de Noronha Island (Penna 1972; Penna­Neme 1974; Scarabino 1975, 1985, 1994). Living 26 to 59 m (Penna­Neme 1974), shells down to 150 m. Remarks Pilsbry and Sharp (1897) noted that the apical slit can be positioned on the convex or on the concave side, or even laterally. However, the material examined in this study had shown only ventrally located slit (Figs. 51 and 52).
  • Published as part of Caetano, Carlos Henrique Soares, Scarabino, Victor & Absalão, Ricardo Silva, 2006, Scaphopoda (Mollusca) from the Brazilian continental shelf and upper slope (13 o to 21 oS) with descriptions of two new species of the genus Cadulus Philippi, 1844, pp. 1-47 in Zootaxa 1267 on pages 24-25, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.173183