Guttula Explained

Guttula is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod molluscs in the family Seguenziidae.

Description

(Original description by Schepman) The small, shell has a conoidal shape. It is smooth, pearly, and perforate. The aperture is rounded, with an angle at the base. The operculum contains few whorls.

It is chiefly on account of the peculiar radula, that Schepman had located the then only species in a new genus.[1]

Quin (1998) adds the following specifications.

Shell: The shell has no peripheral carina, no axial riblets, no midwhorl angulation, no spiral lirae, no basal, posterior or anterolateral sinus, no columellar sinus. The aperture has a circular shape. The columellar tooth is absent. There is no umbilical septum. The shell has punctate microsculpture.

Radula

the rachidian tooth is broader than high and has the lateral wings prominent. The lateral tooth cusp is broad to absent.[2]

Species

Species within the genus Guttula include:

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.org/details/prosobranchiaofs13sche Schepman 1908-1913, The Prosobranchia of the Siboga Expedition; Leyden,E. J. Brill,1908-13
  2. http://docserver.ingentaconnect.com/deliver/connect/umrsmas/00074977/v49n1/s49.pdf?expires=1369928888&id=74401970&titleid=10983&accname=Guest+User&checksum=8A1DBAA5A294BA597FCC6300E3EDAA2A James F. Quinn Jr., (1991), Systematic Position of Basilissopsis and Guttula, and a Discussion of the Phylogeny of the Seguenzioidea (Gastropoda: Prosobranchia), Bulletin of Marine Science, Volume 49, Numbers 1-2, September 1991, pp. 575-598(24)