Complete

Oxygyrus inflatus Benson 1835

Roger R. Seapy
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Containing group: Atlantidae

Introduction

Along with Atlanta peronii, Oxygyrus inflatus attains the largest shell size (diameter to 10 mm) in the family Atlantidae. The larval shell is calcareous and displays a distinctive pattern of evenly-spaced, zigzag-shaped spiral ridges oriented in the axis of shell growth and covering the shell surface. Unlike all other atlantids, the adult shell (teleoconch) is composed of a cartilaginous material, conchiolin. With growth the teleoconch overgrows the larval shell (protoconch), eventually surrounding it. An exposed shell spire, as seen in all other atlantids, is lacking and the spire is termed involute. The keel is glass-like, composed of conchiolin, and has a truncate anterior edge. The eyes are type c; characterized by a solid black, cup-shaped base. The operculum is unique among atlantids, with a broadly triangular shape (approaching trapezoidal) and lacking an apical gyre. The radula is type I, very large, with an elongate, triangular shape. The central (rachidian) tooth bears three cusps, in contrast with the single median cusp seen in all other atlantids. The geographical distribution is cosmopolitan in tropical to subtropical waters.

Diagnosis

Characteristics

  1. Shell
    1. Larval shell calcareous with evenly-spaced, zigzag-shaped spiral ridges oriented in the axis of shell growth and covering the shell surface
    2. Adult shell and keel cartilaginous, composed of conchiolin.  The adult shell overgrows the larval shell and eventually covers it except for the central portion, represented by the involute spire
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      Figure. Scanning electron micrographs of the shell of a young Oxygyrus inflatus (shell diameter = 2.2 mm), viewed from the right side at low (left) and high (right) magnifications. Scale bar = 0.5 and 0.1 mm, respectively. © Roger R. Seapy

      Figure. Scanning electron micrographs of the shell of Oxygyrus inflatus viewed at about a 60° tilt at low (left) and high (right) magnifications. Scale bars = 0.5 and 0.1 mm, respectively. Note that the critical point drying method used to prepare the specimen for examination resulted in a slight elevation of the base of the teleoconch from the underlying protoconch. ©

  2. Eyes type c, distinguished by a solid black, cup-shaped base that holds the spherical lens. This eye type is found in only two other species of heteropods, Atlanta helicinoidea and the Cardiapoda richardi
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    Figure. Right eye in Oxygyrus inflatus. Photo from an enlarged portion of the title illustration. ©

  3. Operculum broadly triangular, approaching trapezoidal, and lacks an apical gyre; unique among the atlantids. Also unlike other atlantids, only one-half of the aperture is covered by the operculum when the animal retracts into its shell  (Richter and Seapy, 1999)
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    Figure. Ventral views of opercula from Oxygyrus inflatus. Left: sketch of operculum from Spoel (1976, Fig. 133), © 1976 S. van der Spoel. Right: scanning electron micrograph of an operculum attached to the opercular lobe of the foot. ©

  4. Radula
    1. Radula type I; considerably larger than in other atlantids, with an elongate triangular shape and a broad base
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      Figure. Radula of Oxygyrus inflatus; whole radula (left) and lower half of radula enlarged (right). Modified from Richter (1961, figs. 27a,b) by addition of scale bars (= 200 and 100 µm, respectively). © 1961 G. Richter

    2. Central tooth tricuspid, with the three cusps of equal length in juveniles, but with the median cusp substantially longer in adults
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      Figure. Sketch of central (rachidian) tooth from the radula of Oxygyrus inflatus. From Richter (1961, fig. 2c). © 1961 G. Richter

    3. Lateral teeth (innermost tooth in the juvenile and adult radulae below) with a strong process on the inner side that bears an accessory cusp. The process and cusp become larger in adults. The pair of marginal teeth are monocuspid and become more strongly hooked distally in adults
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      Figure. Drawings of juvenile (left) and adult (right) lateral marginal teeth in Oxygyrus inflatus. From Richter (1961, fig. 12e). © 1961 G. Richter

  5. Larva
    1. Larval tissues posterior to the head region light bluish-purple; digestive gland brown
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      Figure. Oxygyrus inflatus larva, viewed from the right side. © 2005

    2. Larval shell with evenly-spaced, zigzag-shaped spiral ridges that run parallel with the axis of coiling and cover the shell surface
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      Figure. Larval shell of Oxygyrus inflatus viewed from beneath. Scanning electron micrograph modified from Thiriot-Quiévreux (1973, fig. 6a) by addition of scale bar (= 100 µm). © 1973 C. Thiriot

    3. Embryonic portion (protoconch I) of the larval shell low and dome-shaped (see the SEMs below). The embryonic shell is only seen in early larvae because it is subsequently overgrown by protoconch II. In the three sketches below protoconch II can be seen to progressively override and eventually completely overgrow protoconch I. The result is that an exposed spire (as seen in all other atlantids) is lacking in adults, and the spire is termed involute
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      Figure. Scanning electron micrographs of fossil Oxygyrus inflatus early larval shells in apertural (left) and apical (right) views. Unpublished photographs from Arie W. Janssen. Scale bars = 50 µm. © 2011 A. W. Janssen

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      Figure. Sketches of the larval shells of Oxygyrus inflatus at early (left) to late (right) stages of larval growth. Scale bar = 500 µm. Modified from Richter (1968, Figs. 15). © 1968 G. Richter

Comments

Taxonomy: This species has been recognized as Oxygyrus keraudreni (Lesueur, 1817) for over a century by all but a few authors; despite the fact that two early workers (d'Orbigny, 1835, and Souleyet, 1852) had shown that what Lesueur had described as Atlanta Keraudrenii was not a species of Atlanta. Both authors, however, politely continued to use Lesueur's well-known name and authorship for reasons of 'nomenclatural stability'. Erroneously interpreting the name Atlanta Keraudrenii Lesueur, Rang (1827) was the first to describe and illustrate the species now known as Oxygyrus keraudreni.

The generic name Oxygyrus was introduced in 1835 by Benson. Following a lengthy description of the genus, and at the very end of the paper, Benson named the species Oxygyrus inflatus with a very brief description in Latin and English:

"It only remains to give the specific character of Oxygyrus. O. inflatus. Shell tumid, whorls transversely and closely striate; sutures deeply cut."

Interestingly, Benson referred to neither Lesueur (1817) nor Rang (1827) in his paper. Fifteen years after Benson's publication, Gray (1850, p. 101) merged Lesueur's specific epithet with Benson's genus to create Oxygyrus keraudreni, which he then attributed to Lesueur! Based on Benson's short description of O. inflatus, and overlooking the preceding 2-1/2 pages of Benson's generic description, Tesch (1906) was unable to interpret the species name, and two years later in his 1908 review of the taxonomy of the family Atlantidae, Tesch (p. 5) included "O. inflatus? Benson" in his list of synonyms for O. keraudreni, but with no explanation or further discussion. Since the latter paper there have only been two authors (Thiele, 1929 and Wenz, 1941) who have recognized O. inflatus as the type species of Oxygyrus.

The preceding discussion is based on an as-yet unpublished manuscript by Arie W. Janssen, graciously provided to R. Seapy. Janssen is of the opinion that the original description of Atlanta keraudreni by Lesueur (1817) refers to a juvenile Atlanta species, most probably A. peronii (Lesueur, 1817). As noted above, the specific epithet keraudreni has persisted until the present as Oxygyrus keraudreni (Lesueur, 1817), which has been used by nearly all authors over the past century. To avoid all possible future uncertainties, Janssen intends to designate a neotype for Lesueur's taxon, making it a synonym of Atlanta peronii. And, Oxygyrus inflatus Benson, 1835 must now be recognized as the valid species name.

Ecology: The abundance of Oxygyrus inflatus differed dramatically in studies from the northwestern Indian Ocean and the North Pacific off Hawaii. In a paper by Richter (1974) on heteropods collected from the Meteor Expedition in the Indian Ocean, O. inflatus was moderately abundant, ranking fifth of sixteen atlantid species and accounting for 8.7% of the total species numbers. However, in three studies from Hawaiian waters off leeward Oahu it occurred in extremely low numbers. Based on species counts from five plankton cruises (Seapy, 1990a), it ranked last among thirteen species and represented 0.2% of the total numbers collected. In a diel vertical distribution study (Seapy, 1990b) it ranked last of eleven species, accounting for 0.6% of the total mean abundances. And, in a seasonal diel vertical distribution study it was not recorded in a fall sampling period and was last among fifteen species in the spring, accounting for 0.1% of the total mean nighttime densities.

Three studies of vertical distribution have shown that O. inflatus is a shallow-dwelling species, found mainly in the upper 50 m of the water column. In the tropical Atlantic Ocean Richter (1982) reported that it was almost entirely limited to the upper 100 m of the water column, with 89% of specimens collected from 0-50 m. In a diel study off leeward Oahu (Seapy, 1990b) it was limited to the upper 90 m, with only two individuals collected during the day between the surface and 45 m, and with one individual from 45-90 m and six from 0-45 m at night. A subsequent diel study (Seapy, 2008) was conducted from the same area as the previous one, but included fall and spring sampling periods at stations at 1, 5, and 15 nmi from shore. In the spring it was only collected in nighttime tows from 0-20 m at the 5 nmi station. The absence or near absence from daytime tows in the two studies above suggest the possibility of daytime net avoidance.

Other Names for Oxygyrus inflatus Benson 1835

References

Benson, W. H. 1835. Account of Oxygyrus; a new genus of pelagian shells allied to the genus Atlanta of Lesueur, with a note on some other pelagian shells lately taken on board the ship Malcolm. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 4: 173-176.

Gray, J. E. 1850. Catalogue of the Mollusca in the collection of the British Museum, 2. Pteropoda. British Museum/E. Newman, London. 45 pp.

Janssen, A. W. In Prep. Late Quaternary to Recent holoplanktonic Mollusca (Gastropoda) from the eastern Mediterranean: systematics, morphology and palaeogeographical implications (provisional title, intended to be published eventually in Bollettino Malacologico).

Lesueur, [C. A.] 1817. Mémoire sur deux nouveaux genres de mollusques, Atlante et Atlas. Journal de Physique, de Chimie, et d'Histoire naturelle 85: 390-393, 2 plates.

Orbigny, A. d'. 1834-1847. Voyage dans l'Amérique méridionale (le Brésil, la république orientale de l'Uruguay, la république Argentine, la Patagonie, la république du Chili, la république de Bolivia, la république du Pérou), exécuté pendant les années 1826, 1827, 1828, 1829, 1830, 1831, 1832 et 1833, 5. Bertrand and Strasbourg, Levrault, Paris. pp. 49-72, 129-176, pls. 3-8, 17-23, 25, 55 (1835).

Rang, [P. C. A. L]. 1827. Observations sur le genre Atlante. Mémoires de la Société d'Histoire naturelle de Paris 3: 372-381, pl. 9, figs. 4-6 and 8.

Richter, G. 1961. Die Radula der Atlantiden (Heteropoda, Prosobranchia) und ihre Bedeutung für die Systematik und Evolution der Familie. Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Ökologie der Tiere 50: 163-238.

Richter, G. 1968. Heteropoden und Heteropodenlarven im Oberflächenplankton des Golfs von Neapel. Pubblicazioni della Stazione Zoologica di Napoli 36: 346-400.

Richter, G. 1974. Die Heteropoden der "Meteor" Expedition in den Indischen Ozean 1964/65. "Meteor" Forschungs-Ergibnisse Ser. D, No. 17, pp. 55-78.

Richter, G. 1982. Mageninhaltsuntersuchungen an Oxygyrus keraudreni (Lesueur) (Atlantidae, Heteropoda). Beispiel einer Nahrungskette im tropischen Pelagial. Senckenbergiana Maritima 14: 47-77.

Richter, G. and R. R. Seapy. 1999. Heteropoda, pp. 621-647. In: D. Boltovskoy (ed.), South Atlantic Zooplankton. Backhuys Publishers, Leiden.

Seapy, R. R. 1990a. The family Atlantidae (Gastropoda: Heteropoda) from Hawaiian waters: a faunistic survey. Malacologia 32: 107-130.

Seapy, R. R. 1990b. Patterns of vertical distribution in epipelagic heteropod molluscs off Hawaii. Marine Ecology Progress Series 60: 235-248.

Seapy, R. R. 2008. Offshore-inshore and vertical distributional patterns of heteropod mollusks off leeward Oahu, Hawaii. Marine Biology 154: 985-995.

Souleyet, [L. F. A.] 1852. Heteropodes, pp. 289-392. In: [J. F. T. Eydoux] and [L. F. A.] Souleyet, Voyage autour du monde exécuté pendant les années 1836 et 1837 sur la corvette 'La Bonite', commandée par M. Vaillant, capitaine de vaisseau, publié par ordre du Gouvernement sous les auspices du Département de la marine. Zoologie, 2. Atlas. A. Bertrand (ed), Société de Géographie, Paris.

Spoel, S. van der. 1976. Pseudothecosomata, Gymnosomata and Heteropoda (Gastropoda). Bohn, Scheltema and Holkema, Utrecht. 484 pp.

Tesch, J. J. 1906. Die Heteropoden der Siboga-Expedition. Monograph 51, 112 pp, 14 plates. E. J. Brill, Leiden.

Tesch, J. J. 1908. Systematic monograph of the Atlantidae (Heteropoda) with enumeration of the species in the Leyden Museum. Notes from the Leyden Museum 30: 1-30, 5 plates.

Thiele, [K. H.] J. 1929. Handbuch der systematischen Weichtierkunde, Fischer, Jena 1(1): 1-376.

Thiriot-Quievreux, C. 1973. Heteropoda. Oceanography and Marine Biology Annual Review 11: 237-261.

Wenz, W. 1941. Handbuch der Paläozoologie, 6. Gastropoda, 1. Allgemeiner Teil und Prosobranchia, 5. Bornträger, Berlin. pp. 961-1200.

Title Illustrations
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Scientific Name Oxygyrus inflatus
Location Hawaiian waters
Specimen Condition Live Specimen
Identified By Roger Seapy
Sex Female
Life Cycle Stage adult
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California State University, Fullerton, California, USA

Correspondence regarding this page should be directed to Roger R. Seapy at

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Citing this page:

Seapy, Roger R. 2011. Oxygyrus inflatus Benson 1835. Version 23 July 2011. http://tolweb.org/Oxygyrus_inflatus/28753/2011.07.23 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/

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