Cocculinoidea
Cocculinoidea | |
---|---|
Various examples of Coccopigya crinita (paratype at MNHN, Paris) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda |
Subclass: | Neomphaliones |
Order: | Cocculinida Hazsprunar, 1987 |
Superfamily: | Cocculinoidea Dall, 1882 |
Families | |
Diversity[1] | |
51 extant species, at least 4 fossil species |
The Cocculinoidea is a superfamily of deepwater limpets (marine gastropods), the only superfamily in the order Cocculinida, one of the main orders of gastropods according to the taxonomy as set up by (Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005). The clade Cocciliniformia used to be designated as a superorder.
Taxonomy
[edit]According to Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005, the superfamily Cocculinoidea contains the families Bathysciadiidae and Cocculinidae.
The Cocculinoidea (Cocculinacea Dall, 1882) are combined with the Lepetelliodea (Lepetellacea Dall, 1882) in Cocculinoformia Haszprunar, 1987, referred to as a clade in Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005 although it used to be designated a superorder by Ponder & Lindberg, 1997. Bouchet & Rocroi (2005) leave the Cocculiniformia to consist only of the Cocculinoidea, having moved the Lepetelloidea to the Vetigastropoda.
(Note that before the stipulation by the ICZN, the majority of invertebrate superfamilies ended in -acea, or -aceae, not -oidea.)
Overview of species
[edit]Species within the Cocculinoidea include:
- Bathyaltum wareni Haszprunar, 2011
- Bathypelta pacifica (Dall, 1908)
- Bathysciadium concentricum Dall, 1927
- Bathysciadium costulatum (Locard, 1898)
- Bathysciadium rotundum (Dall, 1927)
- Bathysciadium xylophagum Warén & Carrozza in Warén, 1997
- Bonus petrochenkoi Moskalev, 1973
- Xenodonta bogasoni Warén, 1993
- Coccocrater agassizii (Dall, 1908)
- Coccocrater pocillum (Dall, 1890)
- Coccocrater portoricensis (Dall & Simpson, 1901)
- Coccocrater radiatus (Thiele, 1903)
- Coccopigya barbatula B. A. Marshall, 1986
- Coccopigya crebrilamina B. A. Marshall, 1986
- Coccopigya crinita B. A. Marshall, 1986
- Coccopigya hispida B. A. Marshall, 1986
- Coccopigya lata Warén, 1996
- Coccopigya mikkelsenae McLean & Harasewych, 1995
- Coccopigya oculifera B. A. Marshall, 1986
- Coccopigya okutanii Hasegawa, 1997
- Coccopigya punctoradiata (Kuroda & Habe, 1949)
- Coccopigya spinigera (Jeffreys, 1883)
- Coccopigya viminensis (Rocchini, 1990)
- Cocculina alveolata Schepman, 1908
- Cocculina baxteri McLean, 1987
- Cocculina cingulata Schepman, 1908
- Cocculina cowani McLean, 1987
- Cocculina craigsmithi McLean, 1992
- Cocculina dalli A. E. Verrill, 1884
- Cocculina diomedae Dall, 1908
- Cocculina emsoni McLean & Harasewych, 1995
- Cocculina fenestrata Ardila & Harasewych, 2005
- Cocculina japonica Dall, 1907
- Cocculina leptoglypta Dautzenberg & H. Fischer, 1897
- Cocculina messingi McLean & Harasewych, 1995
- Cocculina nassa Dall, 1908
- Cocculina oblonga Schepman, 1908
- Cocculina ovata Schepman, 1908
- Cocculina pacifica Kuroda & Habe, 1949
- Cocculina rathbuni Dall, 1882
- Cocculina subcompressa Schepman, 1908
- Cocculina superba Clarke, 1960
- Cocculina surugaensis Hasegawa, 1997
- Cocculina tenuitesta Hasegawa, 1997
- Cocculina tosaensis Kuroda & Habe, 1949
- Fedikovella beanii (Dall, 1882)
- Fedikovella caymanensis Moskalev, 1976
- Macleaniella moskalevi Leal & Harasewych, 1999
- Paracocculina cervae (Fleming, 1948)
- Paracocculina laevis (Thiele, 1903)
- Teuthirostria cancellata Moskalev, 1976
Fossil species within the Cocculinoidea include:
- † Coccopigya compuncta (Marwick, 1931)
- † Coccopigya komitica B. A. Marshall, 1986
- † Coccopigya otaiana B. A. Marshall, 1986
- † Paracocculina pristina (B. A. Marshall, 1986)
References
[edit]- ^ WoRMS. Taxon tree. accessed 28 November 2017.
- Keen, A.Myra 1958; Sea Shells of Tropical West America, Stanford University Press.
- Moore, R.C. 1952, Gastropods, in Moore, Lalicker, and Fischer; Invertebrate Fossils, McGraw-Hill Book.
Further reading
[edit]- Strong E. E., Harasewych M. G. & Haszprunar G. (2005) "Phylogeny of the Cocculinoidea (Mollusca, Gastropoda)." Invertebrate Biology 122(2): 114-125. doi:10.1111/j.1744-7410.2003.tb00077.x