Pleioptygma Explained

Pleioptygma is a genus of large sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the superfamily Muricoidea.

Pleioptygma is the type genus of the family Pleioptygmatidae and it is the sole genus in the family Pleioptygmatidae.[1]

Etymology

The generic name Pleioptygma is composed from the Greek word "pleios", which means "full" and from the Greek word "ptygma", which means "fold". This is a reference to the numerous folds on the columella of the shell.

Description

In the genus Pleioptygma, the shell is medium to large in size. The shell has mainly spiral sculpture.

The type description of the genus Pleioptygma by Timothy Abbott Conrad (1863) reads as follows:

Although the shell of these gastropods looks similar to that of mitrids (family Mitridae), they are unrelated enough to require their own family.

The family Pleioptygmatidae has been defined based on the anatomy of the only extant species Pleioptygma helenae: The foot is relatively large in comparison to the size of the shell. Also the snout is relatively large. The foregut (of the digestive system) is different from other families within the Muricoidea. The proboscis is introvert, with a proboscis bulb that has an extreme thick wall. The proboscis bulb is connected directly to the buccal mass. There is no epiproboscis.

Species

Species within the genus Pleioptygma include:

References

This article incorporate public domain text from the reference

Notes and References

  1. de Bruyne R. H. (2004). Encyklopedie ulit a lastur. Rebo Productions, 336 pp.,, page 191.