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Date: | Sun, 14 Mar 1999 10:00:12 -0500 |
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Dear Paul,
I recently bought a set of four shells labelled as B. tuberosissima that
were part of an 'old collection'. Data said shells were from the
Philppines. One shell has a white aperture characteristic of B. leo, but
otherwise appears identical to the other shells in the lot.
Dr. Alan Beu in his new (1998) book "Indo-West Pacific Ranellidae, Bursidae
and Personidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda): A monograph of the New Caledonian
fauna and revisions of related taxa " notes in his comments on page 166
(under the section on Bursa rosa) that the types of B. siphonata "...are
specimens of the leo (Shikama, 1964) form of Bursa tuberosissima, as is
shown by their white aperture with sparse pllicae on the inner lip, and
their grey-brown spiral cords on a paler background." This indicates that
Dr. Beu believes B. leo is only a form of B. tuberossima.
Hope this info helps. Please let me know if you get any more comment on
your posting, unless you plan on summarizing what you get for a CONCH-L
posting.
Warm regards,
Bill Fenzan
Norfolk, Virginia, USA
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-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Kanner <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Monday, March 08, 1999 12:43 AM
Subject: Bursa intergrading?
>I recently returned from the Philippines. Diving around Mactan Is. I
>collected
>several specimens Bursa leo and Bursa tuberosissima. A couple of the
>specimens have characteristics of both species. i.e. aperture bright yellow
>with typical
>dentation of tuberoissima but with the color and body whorl of Bursa leo.
>The two odd specimens lack the destintive hump on the dorsum as well. Does
>anyone out there know if these species intergrade or if this is common?
>
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