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Penion

Penion is a genus of large marine snails, commonly known as siphon whelks, classified within the mollusc family Austrosiphonidae.[2][5][6][7][8][9]

Penion
Temporal range: Early Paleocene to Recent, 66.0–0.0 Ma
A siphon whelk Penion ormesi,[2] collected from Golden Bay in New Zealand
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Caenogastropoda
Order: Neogastropoda
Family: Austrosiphonidae
Genus: Penion
P. Fischer, 1884[1]
Species

See text

Synonyms
  • Austrosipho Cossmann, 1906
  • Austrosipho (Verconella) Iredale, 1914
  • Berylsma Iredale, 1924[3]
  • Largisipho Iredale, 1929
  • Penion (Austrosipho) Cossmann, 1906
  • Verconella Iredale, 1914[4]

Description edit

 
An apertural view of a shell of Penion maximus

Siphon whelks are large, benthic marine snails, or whelks.[7][10][11][12][13]

Penion are commonly called siphon whelks because they have a very long siphon. Species typically have a large, pointed operculum.[14] Radulae have 3 or 4 cusps on lateral teeth and 3 cusps on central teeth.[14]

Males have a long, dorso-ventrally flattened penis, and correspondingly females have a large pallial oviduct and albumen gland.[14] However, geometric morphometric investigation of P. chathamensis indicates that secondary sexual dimorphism is not prominent for shell shape or size.[12]

Shells of Penion vary significantly in shape, size and colouration, making the distinction of species difficult.[2][11][12][13][14] Shells are fusiform with a tall spire of roughly equal height to the aperture and siphonal canal combined.[14] Protoconch morphology is also highly variable, from 1.5 - 4.0 whorls in height.[14] The siphonal canal of the shell is often long to protect the elongated siphon.[14] Small shells (or fossils) can be confused with those of Aeneator or Antarctoneptunea.[13][15]

Shell size can vary quite significantly among populations of Penion. A species, Penion fairfieldae was formerly recognised, but recent genetic data has demonstrated that the species is indistinguishable from Penion chathamensis.[2] Shells originally recognised as P. fairfieldae can be distinguished from P. chathamensis using shell size, but not using shell shape.[2]

Ecology edit

 
Egg capsules of Penion sulcatus at Kawau Bay, Hauraki Gulf

Most species occur in deep water,[12][13] and inhabit soft sediments on the continental shelf.[16]

All species of Penion have a wide ranging diet, and are detritivores and carnivores that actively hunt prey.[11][12] P. sulcatus is known to feed on mussels and Dosina zelandica zelandica.[11][17] Members of the genus have similar niche placement to species of Buccinum in the Northern Hemisphere.

Distribution edit

Penion species are restricted to the Southern Hemisphere.[12] Two extant species are currently classified in waters surrounding Australia[14] and five extant species are documented from New Zealand.[2][6][10][13]

Numerous fossil species are recorded in New Zealand,[15][18] Australia,[14] Argentina and Chile,[19][20] and Antarctica.[21][22][23] In New Zealand, many fossils are found in Wanganui Basin sediments.[15]

During the voyage of HMS Beagle, fossils of P. subrectus were among palaeontological samples collected by Charles Darwin from the mouth of the Santa Cruz River in Argentina.[24]

Evolution edit

 
An embedded fossil of Penion crawfordi from Cape Palliser, New Zealand

Penion is currently classified within Austrosiphonidae, a which is a family of large buccinoid whelks.[9] Penion has previously been classified within the families Buccinidae and Buccinulidae.[6][9][25]

Cladogram of Austrosiphonidae and Tudiclidae[6][9][13][25]

Molecular phylogenetic trees based on mitochondrial genomic and nuclear ribosomal DNA sequence data indicate that Penion is closely related to two genera: Kelletia found in the north Pacific Ocean and Antarctoneptunea, distributed in waters surrounding New Zealand and Antarctica.[6][9][13][25], as well as Serratifusus.[9] Radulae and opercula morphology is similar between Penion and Kelletia.[9][14] It is possible that the earliest known fossils of Penion belonging to P. proavitus from the New Zealand Paleocene (Teurian), actually represent a stem lineage that was the common ancestor of these three genera.[6]

In Australian waters, the sister species P. mandarinus and P. maximus have overlapping geographic ranges (sympatry), and may have evolved from a common ancestor via niche differentiation based on prey size and water depth.[13]

In New Zealand, the extinct species Penion exoptatus, Penion clifdenensis, and potentially also Penion marwicki, may belong to the same evolutionary lineage as the extant species Penion sulcatus.[2] This hypothesis is based on geometric morphometric analysis of shell shape and size for all four taxa, as well as the analysis of morphometric variation exhibited all living species of Penion.[2]

Human use edit

Penion shells are prized by shell collectors.

Shells found in middens of historic Māori settlements indicate that P. sulcatus may have been intentionally foraged as a food-source.[26][27]

Species edit

 
Penion mandarinus with eggs at Kennon Cove in Flinders
 
Penion sulcatus near Goat Island, New Zealand with a damaged operculum

Species and subspecies in the genus Penion include:

Nomina dubia edit

Beu 2009 lists the following Antarctic fossil species as nomina dubia:

Species brought into synonymy edit

Reclassified species edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fischer, P. 1884. Manuel de Conchyliologie et de Paléontologie Conchyliologique ou histoire naturelle des mollusques vivant et fossiles. Paris: F. Savy Vol. 7 pp. 609-688.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Vaux, Felix; Gemmell, Michael R.; Hills, Simon F.K.; Marshall, Bruce A.; Beu, Alan G.; Crampton, James S.; Trewick, Steven A.; Morgan-Richards, Mary (2020). "Lineage Identification Affects Estimates of Evolutionary Mode in Marine Snails". Systematic Biology. 69 (6): 1106–1121. doi:10.1093/sysbio/syaa018. PMID 32163159.
  3. ^ Iredale, T. 1924. Results from Roy Bell's molluscan collections. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 49(3): 179-279, pls 33-36.
  4. ^ Iredale, T. 1914. On some invalid molluscan generic names. Proceedings of the Malacological Society of London 11: 170-178.
  5. ^ Vaux, Felix (2017). Evolutionary lineages and the diversity of New Zealand true whelks (Doctor of Philosophy thesis). Massey University. hdl:10179/13113.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Vaux, Felix; Hills, Simon F.K.; Marshall, Bruce A.; Trewick, Steven A.; Morgan-Richards, Mary (2017). "A phylogeny of Southern Hemisphere whelks (Gastropoda: Buccinulidae) and concordance with the fossil record". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 114 (2017): 367–381. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2017.06.018. PMID 28669812.
  7. ^ a b c Marshall, Bruce A.; Hills, Simon F.K.; Vaux, Felix (2018). "A new species of Penion P. Fischer, 1884 from northern New Zealand (Mollusca: Neogastropoda: Buccinoidea)". Molluscan Research. 38 (4): 238–242. doi:10.1080/13235818.2017.1420398. S2CID 90709310.
  8. ^ MolluscaBase eds. (2021). MolluscaBase. Penion P. Fischer, 1884. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=488452 on 2021-12-24
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Kantor, Yuri I.; Fedosov, Alexander E.; Kosyan, Alisa R.; Puillandre, Nicolas; Sorokin, Pavel A.; Kano, Yasunori; Clark, Roger; Bouchet, Philippe (2022). "Molecular phylogeny and revised classification of the Buccinoidea (Neogastropoda)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 194 (3): 789–857. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab031.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Powell A. W. B., New Zealand Mollusca, William Collins Publishers Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand 1979 ISBN 0-00-216906-1
  11. ^ a b c d Willan, R.C., de C. Cook, S., Spencer, H.G., Creese, R.G., O’Shea, S., Jackson, G.D. Phylum Mollusca. In: de C. Cook, S.C. (eds.), New Zealand Coastal Marine Invertebrates 1, 406 – 407. Canterbury University Press, Christchurch, New Zealand ISBN 978-1877257-60-5
  12. ^ a b c d e f Vaux, Felix; Crampton, James S.; Marshall, Bruce A.; Trewick, Steven A.; Morgan-Richards, Mary (2017). "Geometric morphometric analysis reveals that the shells of male and female siphon whelks Penion chathamensis are the same size and shape". Molluscan Research. 37 (3): 194–201. doi:10.1080/13235818.2017.1279474. S2CID 90288210.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Vaux, Felix; Crampton, James S.C.; Trewick, Steven A.; Marshall, Bruce A.; Beu, Alan G.; Hills, Simon F.K.; Morgan-Richards, Mary (2018). "Evolutionary lineages of marine snails identified using molecular phylogenetics and geometric morphometric analysis of shells". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 127 (October 2018): 626–637. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2018.06.009. PMID 29913310. S2CID 49303166.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Ponder, W.F. 1973. A review of the Australian species of Penion Fischer (Neogastropoda: Buccinidae). Journal of the Malacological Society of Australia 2: 401–428.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Beu, Alan G.; Maxwell, P.A. (1990). "Cenozoic Mollusca of New Zealand". NZGS Paleontological Bulletin. 58 (5): 799.
  16. ^ Dell, R.K. 1962. New Zealand Marine Provinces - do they exist? Tuatara, 10: 43 - 52. Online Copy courtesy of New Zealand Electronic Text Collection
  17. ^ Wilson, B. 1994. Australian Marine Shells. Prosobranch Gastropods. Kallaroo, WA : Odyssey Publishing Vol. 2 370 pp.
  18. ^ Hayward, Bruce W.; Stolberger, Thomas F.; Collins, Nathan; Beu, Alan G.; Blom, Wilma (2023). "A diverse Late Pliocene fossil fauna and its paleoenvironment at Māngere, Auckland, New Zealand". New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics. doi:10.1080/00288306.2023.2243234.
  19. ^ a b c Frassinetti, Daniel (2000). "Upper Pliocene marine molluscks from Guafo Island, southern Chile. Part II. Gastropoda". Boletin del Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Chile. 49: 131–161.
  20. ^ a b Reichler, Valeria A. (2017). "Estratigrafía y paleontología del Cenozoico marino del Gran Bajo y Salinas del Gualicho, Argentina y descripción de 17 especies nuevas". Andean Geology. 37 (1): 177–219. doi:10.4067/S0718-71062010000100008.
  21. ^ a b Stilwell, J.D., Zinsmeister, W.J. 1992. Molluscan systematics and biostratigraphy, lower Tertiary La Meseta Formation, Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. American Geophysical Union Antarctica Research Series 55: 126-128. DOI: 10.1029/AR055 ISBN 9781118667705
  22. ^ a b c Beu, Alan G. (2009). "Before the ice: Biogeography of Antarctic Paleogene molluscan faunas". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 284 (3–4): 191–226. Bibcode:2009PPP...284..191B. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2009.09.025.
  23. ^ a b Crame, J. Alistair; Beu, Alan G.; Ineson, Jon R.; Francis, Jane E.; Whittle, Rowan J.; Bowman, Vanessa C. (2014). "The Early Origin of the Antarctic Marine Fauna and Its Evolutionary Implications". PLOS ONE. 9 (12): e114743. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...9k4743C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0114743. PMC 4262473. PMID 25493546.
  24. ^ a b Parras, Ana; Miguel, Griffin (2009). "Darwin's great Patagonian Tertiary formation at the mouth of the Río Santa Cruz: a reappraisal". Revista de la Asociación Geológica Argentina. 64 (1): 70–82.
  25. ^ a b c d e Hayashi, Seiji (2005). "The molecular phylogeny of the Buccinidae (Caenogastropoda: Neogastropoda) as inferred from the complete mitochondrial 16s rRNA gene sequences of selected representatives". Molluscan Research. 25: 85–98.
  26. ^ Green, R.C.; Pullar, W.A. (1960). "Excavations at Orongo Bay, Gisborne". The Journal of the Polynesian Society. 69 (4): 332–353.
  27. ^ Allen, Melinda S. (2012). "Molluscan foraging efficiency and patterns of mobility amongst foraging agriculturalists: a case study from northern New Zealand". Journal of Archaeological Science. 39 (2012): 295–307. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2011.09.013.
  28. ^ a b c Ponder, W.F. 1975. Identity of Penion dilatatus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1833) (Mollusca: Buccinidae). New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 9 (4): 569-571.

External links edit

  • Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Taxon: Penion (Genus)
  • Auckland War Memorial Museum: Penion specimens
  • Revised descriptions of New Zealand Cenozoic Mollusca from Beu and Maxwell (1990)
  • Checklist of the Recent Mollusca Recorded from the New Zealand Exclusive Economic Zone
  • Molluscs of Tasmania: Buccinidae - Siphonaliinae: Genus Penion Fischer, 1884 - “whelks”

Further reading edit

penion, genus, large, marine, snails, commonly, known, siphon, whelks, classified, within, mollusc, family, austrosiphonidae, temporal, range, early, paleocene, recent, preꞒ, siphon, whelk, ormesi, collected, from, golden, zealandscientific, classificationdoma. Penion is a genus of large marine snails commonly known as siphon whelks classified within the mollusc family Austrosiphonidae 2 5 6 7 8 9 PenionTemporal range Early Paleocene to Recent 66 0 0 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NA siphon whelk Penion ormesi 2 collected from Golden Bay in New ZealandScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum MolluscaClass GastropodaSubclass CaenogastropodaOrder NeogastropodaFamily AustrosiphonidaeGenus PenionP Fischer 1884 1 SpeciesSee textSynonymsAustrosipho Cossmann 1906 Austrosipho Verconella Iredale 1914 Berylsma Iredale 1924 3 Largisipho Iredale 1929 Penion Austrosipho Cossmann 1906 Verconella Iredale 1914 4 Contents 1 Description 2 Ecology 3 Distribution 4 Evolution 5 Human use 6 Species 6 1 Nomina dubia 6 2 Species brought into synonymy 6 3 Reclassified species 7 References 8 External links 9 Further readingDescription edit nbsp An apertural view of a shell of Penion maximusSiphon whelks are large benthic marine snails or whelks 7 10 11 12 13 Penion are commonly called siphon whelks because they have a very long siphon Species typically have a large pointed operculum 14 Radulae have 3 or 4 cusps on lateral teeth and 3 cusps on central teeth 14 Males have a long dorso ventrally flattened penis and correspondingly females have a large pallial oviduct and albumen gland 14 However geometric morphometric investigation of P chathamensis indicates that secondary sexual dimorphism is not prominent for shell shape or size 12 Shells of Penion vary significantly in shape size and colouration making the distinction of species difficult 2 11 12 13 14 Shells are fusiform with a tall spire of roughly equal height to the aperture and siphonal canal combined 14 Protoconch morphology is also highly variable from 1 5 4 0 whorls in height 14 The siphonal canal of the shell is often long to protect the elongated siphon 14 Small shells or fossils can be confused with those of Aeneator or Antarctoneptunea 13 15 Shell size can vary quite significantly among populations of Penion A species Penion fairfieldae was formerly recognised but recent genetic data has demonstrated that the species is indistinguishable from Penion chathamensis 2 Shells originally recognised as P fairfieldae can be distinguished from P chathamensis using shell size but not using shell shape 2 Ecology edit nbsp Egg capsules of Penion sulcatus at Kawau Bay Hauraki GulfMost species occur in deep water 12 13 and inhabit soft sediments on the continental shelf 16 All species of Penion have a wide ranging diet and are detritivores and carnivores that actively hunt prey 11 12 P sulcatus is known to feed on mussels and Dosina zelandica zelandica 11 17 Members of the genus have similar niche placement to species of Buccinum in the Northern Hemisphere Distribution editPenion species are restricted to the Southern Hemisphere 12 Two extant species are currently classified in waters surrounding Australia 14 and five extant species are documented from New Zealand 2 6 10 13 Numerous fossil species are recorded in New Zealand 15 18 Australia 14 Argentina and Chile 19 20 and Antarctica 21 22 23 In New Zealand many fossils are found in Wanganui Basin sediments 15 During the voyage of HMS Beagle fossils of P subrectus were among palaeontological samples collected by Charles Darwin from the mouth of the Santa Cruz River in Argentina 24 Evolution edit nbsp An embedded fossil of Penion crawfordi from Cape Palliser New ZealandPenion is currently classified within Austrosiphonidae a which is a family of large buccinoid whelks 9 Penion has previously been classified within the families Buccinidae and Buccinulidae 6 9 25 Cladogram of Austrosiphonidae and Tudiclidae 6 9 13 25 AntarctoneptuneaKelletiaPenionSerratifususAeneatorBuccinulumEuthriaTasmeuthria Molecular phylogenetic trees based on mitochondrial genomic and nuclear ribosomal DNA sequence data indicate that Penion is closely related to two genera Kelletia found in the north Pacific Ocean and Antarctoneptunea distributed in waters surrounding New Zealand and Antarctica 6 9 13 25 as well as Serratifusus 9 Radulae and opercula morphology is similar between Penion and Kelletia 9 14 It is possible that the earliest known fossils of Penion belonging to P proavitus from the New Zealand Paleocene Teurian actually represent a stem lineage that was the common ancestor of these three genera 6 In Australian waters the sister species P mandarinus and P maximus have overlapping geographic ranges sympatry and may have evolved from a common ancestor via niche differentiation based on prey size and water depth 13 In New Zealand the extinct species Penion exoptatus Penion clifdenensis and potentially also Penion marwicki may belong to the same evolutionary lineage as the extant species Penion sulcatus 2 This hypothesis is based on geometric morphometric analysis of shell shape and size for all four taxa as well as the analysis of morphometric variation exhibited all living species of Penion 2 Human use editPenion shells are prized by shell collectors Shells found in middens of historic Maori settlements indicate that P sulcatus may have been intentionally foraged as a food source 26 27 Species edit nbsp Penion mandarinus with eggs at Kennon Cove in Flinders nbsp Penion sulcatus near Goat Island New Zealand with a damaged operculumSpecies and subspecies in the genus Penion include Penion affixus Finlay 1930 15 Penion antarctocarinatus Stilwell amp Zinsmeister 1992 Penion asper Marwick 1928 15 Penion australocapax Stilwell amp Zinsmeister 1992 21 22 23 Penion bartrumi Laws 1941 15 Penion brazieri Fleming 1955 15 Penion chathamensis Powell 1938 25 Penion clifdenensis Finlay 1930 15 Penion crassus Frassinetti 2000 19 Penion crawfordi Hutton 1873 15 Penion cuvierianus Powell 1927 10 15 28 Penion darwinianus Philippi 1887 Penion diversus Frassinetti 2000 19 Penion domeykoanus Philippi 1887 14 Penion exoptatus Powell amp Bartrum 1929 15 Penion finlayi Laws 1930 15 Penion gauli Marwick 1928 15 Penion haweraensis Powell 1931 15 Penion hiatulus Powell 1947 15 Penion huttoni L R King 1934 15 Penion imperfectus Powell 1947 15 Penion interjunctus Finlay 1930 15 Penion koruahinensis Powell amp Bartrum 1928 15 Penion lineatus Marshall Hills amp Vaux 2018 7 13 Penion longirostris Tate 1888 14 Penion macsporrani Philippi 1887 Penion mandarinus Duclos P L 1831 14 Penion marwicki Finlay 1930 15 Penion maximus Tryon G W 1881 14 Penion oncodes Philippi 1887 Penion ormesi Powell 1927 Penion parans Finlay 1930 15 Penion patagonensis Reichler 2010 20 Penion petitianus d Orbigny 1842 Penion proavitus Finlay amp Marwick 1937 15 Penion roblini Tenison Woods 1876 14 Penion spatiosus Tate 1888 14 Penion subrectus Ihering 1899 14 24 Penion subreflexus G B Sowerby I 1846 14 Penion subregularis d Orbigny 1852 Penion sulcatus Lamarck 1816 10 15 25 Penion winthropi Marwick 1965 15 Nomina dubia edit Beu 2009 lists the following Antarctic fossil species as nomina dubia Penion gazdzicki Karczewski 1987 previously Neptunea and Beringius potentially Antarctoneptunea 22 Species brought into synonymy edit Penion adustus Philippi 1845 synonym of Penion sulcatus Lamarck 1816 28 Penion cuvierianus jeakingsi Powell 1947 10 synonym of Penion ormesi Powell 1927 2 Penion dilatatus Quoy amp Gaimard 1833 synonym of Penion sulcatus Lamarck 1816 28 Penion fairfieldae Powell 1947 10 15 synonym of Penion chathamensis Powell 1938 2 Reclassified species edit Penion benthicolus Dell 1956 accepted as Antarctoneptunea benthicola Dell 1956 6 References edit Fischer P 1884 Manuel de Conchyliologie et de Paleontologie Conchyliologique ou histoire naturelle des mollusques vivant et fossiles Paris F Savy Vol 7 pp 609 688 a b c d e f g h i j Vaux Felix Gemmell Michael R Hills Simon F K Marshall Bruce A Beu Alan G Crampton James S Trewick Steven A Morgan Richards Mary 2020 Lineage Identification Affects Estimates of Evolutionary Mode in Marine Snails Systematic Biology 69 6 1106 1121 doi 10 1093 sysbio syaa018 PMID 32163159 Iredale T 1924 Results from Roy Bell s molluscan collections Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 49 3 179 279 pls 33 36 Iredale T 1914 On some invalid molluscan generic names Proceedings of the Malacological Society of London 11 170 178 Vaux Felix 2017 Evolutionary lineages and the diversity of New Zealand true whelks Doctor of Philosophy thesis Massey University hdl 10179 13113 a b c d e f g Vaux Felix Hills Simon F K Marshall Bruce A Trewick Steven A Morgan Richards Mary 2017 A phylogeny of Southern Hemisphere whelks Gastropoda Buccinulidae and concordance with the fossil record Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 114 2017 367 381 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2017 06 018 PMID 28669812 a b c Marshall Bruce A Hills Simon F K Vaux Felix 2018 A new species of Penion P Fischer 1884 from northern New Zealand Mollusca Neogastropoda Buccinoidea Molluscan Research 38 4 238 242 doi 10 1080 13235818 2017 1420398 S2CID 90709310 MolluscaBase eds 2021 MolluscaBase Penion P Fischer 1884 Accessed through World Register of Marine Species at http www marinespecies org aphia php p taxdetails amp id 488452 on 2021 12 24 a b c d e f g Kantor Yuri I Fedosov Alexander E Kosyan Alisa R Puillandre Nicolas Sorokin Pavel A Kano Yasunori Clark Roger Bouchet Philippe 2022 Molecular phylogeny and revised classification of the Buccinoidea Neogastropoda Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 194 3 789 857 doi 10 1093 zoolinnean zlab031 a b c d e f Powell A W B New Zealand Mollusca William Collins Publishers Ltd Auckland New Zealand 1979 ISBN 0 00 216906 1 a b c d Willan R C de C Cook S Spencer H G Creese R G O Shea S Jackson G D Phylum Mollusca In de C Cook S C eds New Zealand Coastal Marine Invertebrates 1 406 407 Canterbury University Press Christchurch New Zealand ISBN 978 1877257 60 5 a b c d e f Vaux Felix Crampton James S Marshall Bruce A Trewick Steven A Morgan Richards Mary 2017 Geometric morphometric analysis reveals that the shells of male and female siphon whelks Penion chathamensis are the same size and shape Molluscan Research 37 3 194 201 doi 10 1080 13235818 2017 1279474 S2CID 90288210 a b c d e f g h i Vaux Felix Crampton James S C Trewick Steven A Marshall Bruce A Beu Alan G Hills Simon F K Morgan Richards Mary 2018 Evolutionary lineages of marine snails identified using molecular phylogenetics and geometric morphometric analysis of shells Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 127 October 2018 626 637 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2018 06 009 PMID 29913310 S2CID 49303166 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Ponder W F 1973 A review of the Australian species of Penion Fischer Neogastropoda Buccinidae Journal of the Malacological Society of Australia 2 401 428 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Beu Alan G Maxwell P A 1990 Cenozoic Mollusca of New Zealand NZGS Paleontological Bulletin 58 5 799 Dell R K 1962 New Zealand Marine Provinces do they exist Tuatara 10 43 52 Online Copy courtesy of New Zealand Electronic Text Collection Wilson B 1994 Australian Marine Shells Prosobranch Gastropods Kallaroo WA Odyssey Publishing Vol 2 370 pp Hayward Bruce W Stolberger Thomas F Collins Nathan Beu Alan G Blom Wilma 2023 A diverse Late Pliocene fossil fauna and its paleoenvironment at Mangere Auckland New Zealand New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics doi 10 1080 00288306 2023 2243234 a b c Frassinetti Daniel 2000 Upper Pliocene marine molluscks from Guafo Island southern Chile Part II Gastropoda Boletin del Museo Nacional de Historia Natural Chile 49 131 161 a b Reichler Valeria A 2017 Estratigrafia y paleontologia del Cenozoico marino del Gran Bajo y Salinas del Gualicho Argentina y descripcion de 17 especies nuevas Andean Geology 37 1 177 219 doi 10 4067 S0718 71062010000100008 a b Stilwell J D Zinsmeister W J 1992 Molluscan systematics and biostratigraphy lower Tertiary La Meseta Formation Seymour Island Antarctic Peninsula American Geophysical Union Antarctica Research Series 55 126 128 DOI 10 1029 AR055 ISBN 9781118667705 a b c Beu Alan G 2009 Before the ice Biogeography of Antarctic Paleogene molluscan faunas Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 284 3 4 191 226 Bibcode 2009PPP 284 191B doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2009 09 025 a b Crame J Alistair Beu Alan G Ineson Jon R Francis Jane E Whittle Rowan J Bowman Vanessa C 2014 The Early Origin of the Antarctic Marine Fauna and Its Evolutionary Implications PLOS ONE 9 12 e114743 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 9k4743C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0114743 PMC 4262473 PMID 25493546 a b Parras Ana Miguel Griffin 2009 Darwin s great Patagonian Tertiary formation at the mouth of the Rio Santa Cruz a reappraisal Revista de la Asociacion Geologica Argentina 64 1 70 82 a b c d e Hayashi Seiji 2005 The molecular phylogeny of the Buccinidae Caenogastropoda Neogastropoda as inferred from the complete mitochondrial 16s rRNA gene sequences of selected representatives Molluscan Research 25 85 98 Green R C Pullar W A 1960 Excavations at Orongo Bay Gisborne The Journal of the Polynesian Society 69 4 332 353 Allen Melinda S 2012 Molluscan foraging efficiency and patterns of mobility amongst foraging agriculturalists a case study from northern New Zealand Journal of Archaeological Science 39 2012 295 307 doi 10 1016 j jas 2011 09 013 a b c Ponder W F 1975 Identity of Penion dilatatus Quoy amp Gaimard 1833 Mollusca Buccinidae New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 9 4 569 571 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Penion Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa Taxon Penion Genus Auckland War Memorial Museum Penion specimens Revised descriptions of New Zealand Cenozoic Mollusca from Beu and Maxwell 1990 Checklist of the Recent Mollusca Recorded from the New Zealand Exclusive Economic Zone Molluscs of Tasmania Buccinidae Siphonaliinae Genus Penion Fischer 1884 whelks Further reading editPowell A W B New Zealand Mollusca William Collins Publishers Ltd Auckland New Zealand 1979 ISBN 0 00 216906 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Penion amp oldid 1212437927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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