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species

Clavus unizonalis J. B. Lamarck, 1822

kingdom Animalia - animals »  phylum Mollusca - mollusks »  class Gastropoda - gastropods »  order Neogastropoda »  family Drilliidae »  genus Clavus

Scientific synonyms

Drillia vidualoides A. Garrett, 1873

Images

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Jan Delsing

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Jan Delsing

Clavus unizonalis

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Kiener

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Jan Delsing

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Jan Delsing

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Jan Delsing

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Kilburn, R.N.

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Garrett, A.

Clavus unizonalis

Author: Jan Delsing

Taxon in country check-lists*

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Description

Drillia vidualoides: Shell subclaviform, solid, spire long, acute, ashy-white, lower half of the last whorl chestnut-brown ; whorls 7-8, concave beneath the suture, girdled with a revolving row of large oblong nodules, about eight on each whorl; aperture oval, varied with white and chestnut-brown, about one-third the length of the shell; canal very short, wide and truncate; sinus large, deep, and rounded; peristome sharp, arched, and slightly sinuous near the base ; colu¬mella smooth, callous, and a wart-like callosity next the sinus. Length 10 mm.
An abundant species living on masses of dead coral in the lower region of the littoral zone. It closely resembles Drillia vidua Reeve, which we also collected both at the Viti, and at Wallis Island, and were invariably found on weedy ground, most generally buried in sandy mud. Our species has the nodules on the body whorl less acute, and vidua has the base of the shell more or less whitish and there is always a row of granules on the lower half of this body whorl.
Garrett, A., 1873. Descriptions of new species of marine shells inhabiting the South Sea Islands.
Shell medium length, 26 mm, heavy, high spire. Protoconch smooth, rounded, 2 whorls, 0.58 mm high, 0.89 mm wide. Up to 9 teleoconch whorls. Spire moderately high, narrow, body whorl not inflated. Suture adpressed, sinuous. Each whorl has about 8 to 10 strong, broad, low axial ribs which make the outer whorl triangular or convex in shape. The ribs begin about 1 / 3 down the whorl, reach a maximum by midwhorl, then decrease but reach the lower suture, not continuous on adjacent whorls. Ribs extend well down body whorl to just above the anterior tip of shell. There is a series of about 8 spiral cords on the anterior tip. Outer lip thickened. Sinus on shoulder, deep, U shaped, entrance might be slightly constricted by very strong callus. Columella smooth, slightly convex, narrow, margin distinct. Aperture subrectangular. Shell truncate, anterior canal short, broad, shallow, tip slightly notched. Colour variable, usually light gray with a broad dark brown band of varying width below ribs on body whorl. In some specimens the band continues as a thin brown line above the suture. Brown exterior band shows through inner aperture.
Wells F.E. (1991) A revision of the Recent Australian species of the turrid genera Clavus, Plagiostropha, and Tylotiella (Mollusca: Gastropoda).
Shell thick, claviform, adult length to 26 mm, breadth/length 0.31-0.47, aperture/total length 0.35-0.46); suture somewhat crenulate, deeply recessed anteriorly, adpressed to previous whorl; base broad, shallowly indented, fasciole distinct in adult shells. Outer lip with crenulate edge, anal sinus a widely open "U", parietal tubercle large; stromboid notch distinct. No subsutural cord or sulcus. Terminal varix slightly behind lip. Axial ribs opisthocline, very feeble on subsutural slope and at parietal level, projecting at periphery on last whorl, in unworn or immature shells angular and slightly squamiform, 8-12 on penultimate whorl. Spiral sculpture of 8-11 coarse, declivous ridges on fasciole; lower part of last whorl at parietal level with 2-3 rows on nodules on secondary radial riblets; surface covered with dense, rather rugose, microscopic spiral threads, and coarser collabral ones.
Subsutural region and periphery of ribs white to pale grey, last whorl with a broad, dark reddish- to blackish-brown band, usually showing above suture on spire whorls, base often but not always paler or even white, basal nodules (when present) white; inner lip brown, external brown band showing through to interior.
Protoconch (Fig. 6 I) worn in most material seen, in single studied specimen narrow, of about two smooth (except row of micropustules along suture) moderately convex whorls, diameter ca 600 µm height about 570 µm. Protoconch-teleoconch transition indistinct, marked by appearance of anal sinus.
Measurements (adult New Caledonian examples): 22.1 x 8.9 mm, 20.2 x 6.2 mm; 20.1 x 8.2 mm; 18.9 x 7.2 mm; 20.2 x 8.5 mm.
Radula: Rachidian narrow, slightly notched anteriorly, with strong median cusp and fine side denticles. Lateral teeth broad, arcuate, with 17 cusps, 4th-6th from inner side being the longest and gradually diminishing in length towards outer side, where they evanesce. Marginal teeth rather long and narrow, with broader short blade, about 1/3 of teeth length. Blade edges slightly thickened. Accessory limb weak. About 45 rows of teeth.
Kilburn, R.N. , Fedosov, A. & Kantor, Y., 2014. The shallow-water New Caledonia Drilliidae of genus Clavus Montfort, 1810 (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Conoidea)

Interchangeable taxa

The description of the two species, Pleurotoma unizonalis Lamarck, 1822 and P. vidua Reeve, 1845 has caused considerable confusion. Reeve (1843; 1845) figured both P. unizonalis and P. vidua, listing the habitat of both as Masbate I., Philippines but showing two clearly different forms with C. unizonalis being stouter with a lower spire. However, as long ago as 1898, Melvill and Sykes remarked that the two species appear to be very closely related, if not identical. An examination of the type material shows that the only difference between the two forms is in colouration, but among non-type material there is a full range from specimens with the solid dark brown on the lower half of the body whorl represented by C. viduus to the clearly restricted brown line across the body whorl of C unizonalis. This variation can be seen even within a single population. Also, some specimens within a population can have a higher spire and a lower width/length ratio than other individuals. The conclusion then is that there is a single variable species, and the name Pleurotoma unizonalis Lamarck, 1822 has priority.
Wells F.E. (1991) A revision of the Recent Australian species of the turrid genera Clavus, Plagiostropha, and Tylotiella (Mollusca: Gastropoda).
Several workers, most recently Wells (1991), have synonymised Pleurotoma vidua with P. unizonalis, whereas others (e.g. Higo et al (1999), Cernohorsky (1972 and 1978)) maintain them as distinct. Although typical examples of each are usually easily distinguishable, we find a precise diagnosis of their differences to be so elusive, that we must concur in recognizing only one variable species. It is possible that extensive series will reveal a geographical basis for shell characters—with typical unizonalis more characteristic of the Indian Ocean east to Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, and vidua of the western Pacific from the Philippines to Fiji—but this is largely speculative. None of the material examined from New Caledonia is referable to typical C unizonalis. The nominal forms are briefly defined below:
Pleurotoma vidua: Typical examples appear to differ from Clavus unizonalis in their somewhat higher spire (the widest part of the shell being anterior to median, not more or less median), the presence of 8-12 stronger ribs (7-8 more rounded ribs in unizonalis), the more angular whorl periphery and the entire base of the last whorl being brown (typical unizonalis is white with a discrete brown to black median band on the last whorl), usually with 1-4 rows of white basal granules (present in approximately 0.4 of the available adult New Caledonian material). Incidentally, by his choice of vernacular name, Reeve made it clear that the specific name was derived from the Latin noun "vidua" ("a widow"), not the adjective "viduus" ("bereft").
Pleurotoma (Clavus) nigrozonatus: As pointed out by several early authors, this name was proposed in the mistaken belief that Reeve's Pleurotoma vidua had already been utilized by Hinds. The figure reference to Hinds' work, given by Weinkauff as "pi. 6, fig. 6", actually illustrates Clavatula [= Lienardia] rubida Hinds, 1843, and the cited text reference ("p. 60") contains no mention of vidua or any other turrid name.
Drillia vidualoides: This was said by Garrett to differ from his concept of "Drillia vidua" in its blunter nodules, non-whitish base and the lack of granules on the base. Curiously, all three specimens in the ANSP collection labelled as syntypes are a good deal larger than the 10 mm given by Garrett (viz. 23.7 x 10.2 mm, 18.0 x 7.7 mm and 18.8 x 7.9 mm). However, one may assume a lapsus calami, as Garrett's figure, which is not accompanied by a scale bar and is presumably life-sized, measures ca 23 mm. It is not the similar-sized individual listed above, as that has the white basal granules considered characteristic of C vidua by Garrett (as does the 18.8 mm juvenile). The only one of the three to agree in lacking these granules, and in its rounded axial ribs, is the somewhat worn specimen.
The only character that might be used to distinguish vidualoides from the vidua form of C unizonalis is the lack of an angle to the axial ribs (the brown base originally considered diagnostic occurs also in syntypes of vidua). A few examples from the present expeditions e.g. Touho Stns. 1245 and 1240 are typical of vidualoides, but others appear intermediate.
Kilburn, R.N. , Fedosov, A. & Kantor, Y., 2014. The shallow-water New Caledonia Drilliidae of genus Clavus Montfort, 1810 (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Conoidea)

Distribution

Mozambique and Western Australia to Papua New Guinea, Philippines and Okinawa, and across Pacific to Fiji and New Caledonia, intertidal to 30 m, in coarse sand, stones and sediment, on reefs and among algae, in our material confirmed alive to ca 15 m.
Kilburn, R.N. , Fedosov, A. & Kantor, Y., 2014. The shallow-water New Caledonia Drilliidae of genus Clavus Montfort, 1810 (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Conoidea)
Author: Jan Delsing

Links and literature

EN Galli C.: WMSDB - Wolrdwide Mollusc Species Data Base July 10, 2013 [http://www.bagniliggia.it/WMSD/WMSDhome....] [as Clavus unizonalis Lamarck, 1822]
Data retrieved on: 23 November 2013

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