scholarly journals Studies in Canarium urceus (Linné, 1758) Part 4: Canarium (Canarium) orrae (Abbott, 1960) (Gastropoda: Neostromboidae: Strombidae) and a new species from the Northern Territory, Australia

The Festivus ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 270-281
Author(s):  
Stephen Maxwell ◽  
Aart Dekkers

This part of the Canarium (Canarium) urceus (Linné, 1758) after Abbott (1960) revision examines the Australian species of that complex. Currently, there is one recognised species, Canarium (Canarium) orrae (Abbott, 1960), which is divided herein into two species, with the description of Canarium (Canarium) darwinense n. sp. from the Van Diemen Gulf and Darwin surrounds. The C. (C.) darwinense is distinguished from C. (C.) orrae in morphological form. The southern range of C. (C.) orrae is extended to Monkey Mia, Shark Bay. Examples of C. (C.) orrae were also noted from the North Coast of Sumbawa, Indonesia, and Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. While there is a geographic break in the distribution of C. (C.) orrae creating two populations, Western Australian and Gulf of Carpentaria, populations from these two ranges could not be distinguished using morphology. Future research will likely show genetic differences as a consequence of drift caused by isolation, thus leading to the potential recognition of two cryptic subspecies.

Zootaxa ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 639 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Mothes ◽  
Maurício A. De Campos

A new species of Biemna Gray, 1867, B. trisigmata sp. n., is described from the northern Brazilian coast, Amap State. The new species is compared to other tropical West Atlantic species of Biemna, from which it differs in having three categories of sigmas and two categories of microxeas.


Brunonia ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 201
Author(s):  
DJ Boland ◽  
DA Kleinig ◽  
JJ Brophy

A new species, Eucalyptus fusiformis Boland et Kleinig, from the north coast of New South Wales is described. Its taxonomic position is in E. subgenus Symphyomyrtus series Paniculatae following the informal classification of eucalypts proposed by Pryor and Johnson (1971). E. fusiformis is characterised by its flowers, fruits and adult leaves. In the bud the staminal filaments are fully inflected while the androecium has outer staminodes and the anthers are cuboid and adnate. The fruits are narrow, often truncate fusiform, tapering into long slender pedicels. The adult leaves are dull grey, concolorous and hypoamphistomatic. The species resembles the more numerous and often co-occurring ironbark E. siderophloia which has similar adult and seedling leaves. The volatile oils of both species are very similar. The ecology, distribution, taxonomic affinities and conservation status are discussed.


Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3575 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. LOWRY

The sand-hopper Bellorchestia mariae sp. nov. is described from Honeymoon Bay on the north coast of Jervis Bay, NewSouth Wales, Australia. It is the sister species of B. richardsoni Serejo & Lowry, 2008 and appears to have a limited dis-tribution from about Narrawallee in the south to northern Jervis Bay. The distribution of B. richardsoni Serejo & Lowry,2008 is extended from Point Ricardo, Victoria, northwards to Ulladulla on the New South Wales coast. A new synonymyis proposed for the sand-hopper Notorchestia quadrimana (Dana, 1852) which includes N. novaehollandiae (1899) andN. lobata Serejo & Lowry, 2008. It is considered to be a wide-ranging species from Shark Bay in Western Australia aroundthe south coast to at least Maitland Bay in central New South Wales. The beach-hopper Orchestia dispar Dana, 1852 isdescribed from Valla Beach in northern New South Wales and moved to the new genus Vallorchestia. This is the first re-cord of V. dispar since its original description 160 years ago. The beach-hopper Platorchestia smithi sp. nov. is describedfrom Brooms Head, New South Wales, Australia. It is common on ocean beaches from Bendalong in the south to Ballina in northern New South Wales. South of Bendalong beach-hoppers on ocean beaches appear to be absent.


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey Quilter ◽  
Michele L. Koons

AbstractThe Moche archaeological culture of the North Coast of Peru has been reified into a political system and claimed as the first state in South America. While some recent scholarship has reduced the size of the proposed state, the idea of Moche as a distinct political, social, or ethnic entity remains. In this article we demonstrate that even by the “classic” neoevolutionary theory of the 1960s—1980s the criteria for Moche statehood were not met. We suggest that neoevolutionary models for one or more Moche states are inadequate for understanding an archaeological culture that endured for more than six centuries, and we offer suggestions for directions for future research.


Zootaxa ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 1087 (1) ◽  
pp. 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
BEATRIZ MOTHES ◽  
MAURÍCIO CAMPOS ◽  
CLÉA LERNER ◽  
JOÃO LUÍS CARRARO ◽  
ROB W.M. VAN SOEST

Biemna spinomicroxea sp. nov. is described from the coast of Amapá State, Brazil. It differs from all other Biemna species in lacking smooth sigmas. The spiculation consist of oxea megascleres, spined small sigmas and microxeas. A key to the tropical West Atlantic species of Biemna is provided.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 334 (1) ◽  
pp. 75 ◽  
Author(s):  
KINGSLEY W. DIXON ◽  
MAARTEN J. M. CHRISTENHUSZ

Few plants are so cryptic as the underground orchids, Rhizanthella Rogers (1928: 1), of Australia. Unlike the species on the eastern seaboard of Australia, the Western Australian species spend their entire life cycle, including flowering, below the soil surface (only rarely with the tips of the bracts showing), making them unique among orchids and indeed, among flowering plants generally (Brown et al. 2013). Discovery in 1928 of the first underground orchid in Western Australia was an international sensation where the plant was described as ‘a remarkable subterranean orchid’ (Wilson 1929). The new taxon described in this paper resolves the enigmatic, disjunct distribution of Rhizanthella in Western Australia, where there was thought to be a central and southern node of a single species, R. gardneri Rogers (1928: 1).


Zootaxa ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 3000 (1) ◽  
pp. 49 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOSÉ MANUEL TIERNO DE FIGUEROA ◽  
BRUNELLA GAETANI ◽  
JULIO MIGUEL LUZÓN-ORTEGA ◽  
MANUEL JESÚS LÓPEZ-RODRÍGUEZ ◽  
ROMOLO FOCHETTI

The identity of Isoperla curtata Navás, 1924, an Iberian endemic, has been questioned since its description. Marked variability in pigmentation, wing length, penial armature and ecology of populations have been noted. To clarify the taxonomic status of I. curtata we examined variation in mating calls and cytochrome c oxidase subunit I sequences for two populations from north-central and southern Spain. Results of both approaches support the presence of two species. The north-central population corresponds to the nominal taxon, I. curtata, while southern populations represent a new species, Isoperla morenica, described herein.


Author(s):  
Odile Volonterio ◽  
Paul E. Brewin

South Georgia is a remote sub-Antarctic island, considered a marine biodiversity ‘hotspot’ in the Southern Ocean. During a survey along the north coast of South Georgia several marine planarians were found. One of the specimens was a new species ofAllogenus(Uteriporidae), which is described here asAllogenus sluysisp. nov. The new species has the characteristics of the genus and can be distinguished from the type and only known species,Allogenus kerguelensis, by its smaller size, blackish-brown pigmentation, presence of three retinal cells in each eye cup, position of its testes half-way between the ventral and dorsal body surfaces or at a slightly more ventral position, and by having an ejaculatory duct that opens centrally at the tip of the penis papilla. The presently known geographical distribution ofAllogenus, the heterogeneous marine planarian species composition in South Georgia, and the distribution of these species in this region are in agreement with a previously proposed vicariance hypothesis, albeit that dispersal cannot be ruled out.


1965 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Sauer

Field study of 32 sites along the Western Australian coast showed that pioneer vegetation includes 110 species in 40 angiosperm families. Less than 25 % are exotic, only 10 % are endemic, and the bulk are shared with the interior or with other coasts of Australia. Regional ranges and microdistributions, described from herbarium records and 50 sample transects, are diverse. Although unique in detail, species distributions show broadly coherent relationships between geographic origins and present habitat patterns. Sheltered intertidal shores have two discrete types of land vegetation. Mangroves, sea-dispersed outliers of a richer Indo-Malayan assemblage, form extensive estuarine forests on the tropical coast, where tidal ranges are large, and a few stands of one species occur along the temperate coast. Low-growing chenopods and similar halophytes, with major populations in saline interior basins, are scattered discontinuously along the coast in shallowly flooded tidal marshes. They are subject to no apparent climatic control within the region. Rocky coasts are even more disjunct and also lack any unique, autochthonous vegetation. Wet pockets in the spray zone bear ordinary salt marsh plants while dry rock shores and outcrops in the dunes have vegetation differing mainly quantitatively from neighboring sand areas. Open beaches and dunes offer the most extensive coastal habitats and bear the most complex vegetation. Species groups derived from different geographic sources are loosely segregated by zones parallel to the shore. Toward the rear of the active dunes, some plants are simply outrunners from the stabilized inland sand vegetation : these are important dune pioneers in the drier sectors. Generally, the active dune zone is dominated by species peculiar to it, some endemic but mostly shared with temperate coasts east of the study region. All are adapted to tolerate salt spray, sand blast, and other special habitat conditions. Sclerophylions shrubs predominate, grading into small trees on parts of the moister, tem~erate coasts. Prostrate succulents, rhizomatous grasses and sedges, and other types of evergreen perennials are minor components. The active dune vegetation is floristically richer and more regionally diversified towards its inner limits, the few species native to the outer dunes having comparatively wide coastwise ranges. On the outer faces of the foredunes and on the storm beach, the otherwise almost purely Australian sand vegetation is joined by exotics. Sea-dispersed paleotropical and pantropical beach vines, grasses, and other low-growing plants range along the north coast and a few penetrate beyond the tropic. A different, primarily inland group of old immigrants may have arrived indirectly via the arid interior to provide the extreme outpost vegetation of the drier coasts. Along the moister, temperate coasts, a belt seaward of the native dune vegetation is occupied by recently naturalized annuals and other low-growing herbs from temperate African and European beaches.Except close to roads and settlements, little recent modification of the coastal vegetation is evident. Some blowouts, particularly on the drier margin of the tem- perate region, may stem from dune burning, but generally the plant cover regenerates rapidly after fire.


1982 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 115 ◽  
Author(s):  
HBN Hynes

In the genus Newmanoperla the name exigua is reinstated for the Western Australian species, and a new species is described from Tasmania. The nymph of the wingless Leptoperla cacuminis from Mt Kosciusko is described. In Riekoperla a new species from Tasmania and a subspecies from King I. are described. The Tasmanian endemic Cardioperla is extensively revised, ten species with seven new specific names being recognized. In Dinotoperla a new species from both sides of Bass Strait is described, as are the unknown males of two Tasmanian species. In Trinotoperla two new species close to T. zwicki are described. For all the Tasmanian species the nymphs are comparatively described, and it is shown that in each of the genera Cardioperla, Riekoperla and Neboissoperla there is a Tasmanian species of which adults have not yet been collected.


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