Polystira

{{Short description|Genus of gastropods}}

{{Automatic taxobox

|image = Polystira albida (G. Perry, 1811) 2013 000.JPG

|image_caption = Polystira albida

|taxon = Polystira

|authority = Woodring, 1928

|type_species= Pleurotoma albida Perry G., 1811

|synonyms = Oxytropa Glibert, 1955

|display_parents= 3

}}

Polystira is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Turridae, the turrids.{{WRMS species|391298|Polystira Woodring, 1928||14 April 2010}}

Taxonomy

Paul Bartsch (1934) states the genus Polystira was created by W. P. Woodring in 1928 for certain large West Indian turrids. He named the largest of the recent species, generally known as Pleurotoma albida Perry, as type. Unfortunately, the mollusk so designated is not Pleurotoma albida Perry, which Perry states " is frequently found at New Zealand and Lord Howe Island." Perry's figure 4, plate 32, of this species does not agree with the West Indian material. It clearly resembles certain shells from North Australia in the collection of the National Museum. The name is, therefore, not applicable to the West Indian shell, which will have to carry the next available designation. Lamarck in 1816, in his " Tableau Encyclopedique et Methodique ", figured on plate 439, as figure 2, the West Indian shell without naming it. Wood, in 1818, in his " Index Testaceologicus ", on page 125, names this species Murex virgo, referring to Lamarck's figure cited above. This appears to be the oldest available name for the type species. The type of Polystira Woodring must therefore be Murex virgo Wood = Polystira albida Woodring, not Perry.[https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/79638#page/11/mode/1up Bartsch, P. (1934) Reports on the collections obtained by the first Johnson-Smithsonian deep-sea expedition to the Puerto Rican deep; new mollusks of the family Turritidae. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 91, 1–29, 8 pls]

Distribution

This marine genus occurs on the American continent. Its radiation is extensive within its tropics and subtropics with a high species diversity. Several species also occur in the tropical eastern Pacific.{{cite journal | url=https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3884.5.5 | doi=10.11646/zootaxa.3884.5.5 | title=A review of the Polystira clade—the Neotropic's largest marine gastropod radiation (Neogastropoda: Conoidea: Turridae sensu stricto) | date=2014 | last1=Todd | first1=Jonathan A. | last2=Rawlings | first2=Timothy A. | journal=Zootaxa | volume=3884 | issue=5 | pages=445–491 | pmid=25543802 | url-access=subscription }}

Species

Almost 100 extant species have not yet been described.

Species recognized within the genus Polystira include:

;Species brought into synonymy:

  • Polystira barretti (Guppy, 1866): synonym of Polystira albida (G. Perry, 1811)
  • Polystira hilli Petuch, 1988:{{WRMS species|434710|Polystira hilli Petuch, 1988||14 April 2010}} synonym of Polystira jelskii (Crosse, 1865)
  • Polystira phillipsi Nowell-Usticke, 1969:{{WRMS species|434715|Polystira phillipsi Nowell-Usticke, 1969||14 April 2010}} synonym of Polystira gruneri (Philippi, 1848)
  • Polystira staretti Petuch, 2002 : synonym of Polystira starretti Petuch, 2002

References

{{Reflist}}

  • Perry, G. (1811) Conchology. iv + 5 pp. [61 plates] William Miller: London
  • Guppy, R.J.L. (1866) On the Tertiary Mollusca of Jamaica. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, 22, 281–295.
  • Berry, S.S. (1957) Notices of new Eastern Pacific Mollusca.—I. Leaflets in Malacology, 1, 75–82.
  • Petuch, E.J. (1987) New Caribbean molluscan faunas. Coastal Education & Research Foundation, Charlottesville, Virginia, [v], 154 pp.
  • Petuch, E.J. (1993) Una nuova Polystira/A new Polystira. La Conchiglia: Rivista Internazionale di Malacologia/The Shell: International Shell Magazine, 267, 62–63.
  • Petuch, E.J. (2001) New gastropods named for Frederick M. Bayer, in recognition of his contributions to tropical western Atlantic malacology. Bulletin of the Biological Society of Washington, 10, 334–343.
  • Petuch, E.J. (2002) New deep water gastropods from the Bimini Shelf, Bimini Chain, Bahamas. Ruthenica, 12, 59–72