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THE NAUTILUS 122(1):19–51, 2008 Page 19
On some Neogene to Recent species related to Galeodina
Monterosato, 1884, Galeodinopsis Sacco, 1895, and Massotia
Bucquoy, Dautzenberg, and Dollfus, 1884 (Caenogastropoda:
Rissoidae) with the description of two new Alvania species from
the Mediterranean Pleistocene
Vittorio Garilli
APEMA Research and Educational Service
Via Alla Falconara, 34
I-90136 Palermo, ITALY
vittoriogarilli@apema.eu.
ABSTRACT ern Atlantic and the Mediterranean provinces. They in-
habit a large variety of environments, from littoral to
Six species, related to the subgenera Galeodina, Galeodinopsis, bathyal, and their geographical distribution is extensive,
and Massotia, are re-analyzed. Alvania francescoi new species including the Mediterranean, Atlantic, Indo-Pacific, and
(SE Sicily) and A. rosariae new species (SE Sicily and NW the temperate Australian coasts (Ponder, 1985). Their
Peloponnesus) are described from Mediterranean Pleistocene. stratigraphical distribution might extend back to the Late
Galeodinopsis is regarded as the appropriate genus for Oli- Cretaceous, but the first well-established records date to
gocene-Recent taxa having a quite conical shell close to that of the early Tertiary (Ponder, 1985). With regard to the rich
some Alvania species and showing Manzonia-like combination Mediterranean and European Tertiary Alvania assem-
of two microsculptural characters: the pitted surface on the blages, some of the most informative analyses are those
spiral cords and the arrangement of the roughly prismatic ele- of Sacco (1895), Seguenza (1903), Cossmann (1921), Lo-
ments forming numerous and very fine spiral threads. Its type zouet (1998), Kowalke and Harzhauser (2004), and Chirli
species, Rissoa tiberiana (previously known from Mediterra- (2006).
nean Mio-Pliocene), lives along the tropical W African coasts,
where it is known under the name A. fariai. As suggested by the Many authorities, e.g. Monterosato (1884), Bucquoy et
oldest record of Galeodinopsis, the European Oligocene Rissoa al. (1884), Weinkauff (1885), Kobelt (1888), Locard
duboisi, this genus very likely originated from a pre-Neogene (1886), Nordsieck (1968, 1972), Jeffreys (1867, 1869),
Alvania group. The syntype of Rissoa prusi, a scarcely known Pallary (1920), Wenz (1938), Warén (1973, 1974), Gofas
species (Pleistocene of Rhodes), and material (also from type and Warén (1982), Van Aartsen (1982a, 1982b), Moolen-
locality) of the almost unknown R. cingulata (from Sicily) and beek and Hoenselaar (1989, 1998), Van der Linden and
of its close relative, R. tenera (Mediterranean, Atlantic Moroc- Wagner (1989), Moolenbeek et al. (1991), Van der Lin-
co and Canary Islands), is shown. These three taxa and the type den (1993), Bouchet and Warén (1993), Giannuzzi-
species of Galeodina and Massotia, are here tentatively con- Savelli et al. (1996), Palazzi (1997), Gofas (1999), Ávila
sidered as belonging to Alvania sensu lato. With the exception (2000), and Arduino and Arduino (2001), have contrib-
of A. cingulata, all the discussed species have a multispiral uted to the knowledge of the rich Recent Eastern Atlan-
protoconch. Generally, the protoconchs studied exhibit a sculp- tic (especially the W Africa and the Macaronesian Prov-
tural pattern known in other rissoid taxa. Protoconch I of the ince) and Mediterranean fauna. Ponder’s rissoid revision
type species of Massotia, A. lactea, is characterized by a coarser (1985), listing five Alvania subgenera, provided addi-
sculpture. tional perspective to the taxonomy.
Additional Keywords: Rissoidae, taxonomy, Mediterranean-W My attention is focused here on a relatively large, in-
Atlantic, Neogene-Recent, new species formal group of species of Alvania sensu lato character-
ized by shells with wide and ovate aperture, lacking an
INTRODUCTION internal denticulation of the outer lip, and often bearing
varices on a well-developed, inflated body whorl. These
The genus Alvania Risso, 1826, comprises one of the species have been historically assigned to the subgenera
most diversified groups in the caenogastropod family Galeodina Monterosato, 1884, Galeodinopsis Sacco,
Rissoidae, especially when considering the tropical east- 1895, and Massotia Bucquoy et al., 1884. This subgeneric
settlement was partially rejected by Ponder (1985), who,