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Barbatia domingensis (Lamarck 1819)

Comprehensive Description

provided by Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology
Acar domingensis (Lamarck, 1819)

Arca domingensis Lamarck, 1819:40 [l’Ocean des Antilles, à S. Domingue].

Arca (Acar) domingensis Lamarck.—E. A. Smith, 1890a: 305; 1890b:322 [St. Helena; Ascension].

Barbatia (Acar) domingensis Lamarck.—Woodring, 1925:36–38.—Warmke and Abbott. 1961:158.—Waller, 1973:40.

Arca plicata Chemnitz [Dillwyn, 1817:227]. Nicklès, 1955:115; 1958:44 [in part?].

Acar reticulata (Gmelin).—Nordsieck, 1969:21.

Acar domingensis (Lamarck).—Woodring, 1973:497.

PREVIOUS ASCENSION RECORDS.—Smith (1890a, b).

PRESENT MATERIAL.—3 specimens (2 paired and 1 single right valve, 16.4 mm) Ascension, K. M. Hutchfield; 14 (22 mm) ASC 5; 2 (14.7 mm) ASC 8; 1 (20.2 mm) ASC 10; 3 (9.7 mm) ASC 11; 10 (15.1 mm) ASC 12; 12 (13.4 mm) ASC 13; 13 (23.6 mm) ASC 15; 1 (11.8 mm) ASC 18; 1 (9.7 mm) ASC 21, R. B. Manning, May 1971.

DISTRIBUTION.—North Carolina to West Indies (Woodring, 1973), Cape Verde Islands (Nordsieck, 1969), St. Helena and Ascension (Smith, 1890a,b).
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bibliographic citation
Rosewater, Joseph. 1975. "An annotated list of the marine mollusks of Ascension Island, South Atlantic Ocean." Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology. 1-41. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810282.189

Barbatia domingensis

provided by wikipedia EN

Barbatia domingensis, or the White miniature ark clam, was for many years a name that was commonly used for a marine clam in the family Arcidae.

That species was found along the Atlantic coast of North America, ranging from Cape Hatteras to the West Indies and Bermuda.[1]

However, Huber (2015, p.367-368) determined that the type material of Arca domingensis Lamarck, 1819 represents the species that had been usually treated as Barbatia cancellaria (Lamarck, 1819) in the literature. Huber argued that because Arca cancellaria Lamarck, 1819 does not have a type locality and bears doubtful type material, use of Arca domingensis is preferred, even though it upsets prevailing usage. Moreover, the correct name for the large, whitish, Caribbean species of Acar that had been previously identified as "Acar domingensis" (Lamarck, 1819) is currently unresolved. Source: Huber M. (2015). Compendium of Bivalves 2. Harxheim: ConchBooks. 907 pp.

References

  1. ^ Abbott, R.T. & Morris, P.A. A Field Guide to Shells: Atlantic and Gulf Coasts and the West Indies. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1995. 9.
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Barbatia domingensis: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Barbatia domingensis, or the White miniature ark clam, was for many years a name that was commonly used for a marine clam in the family Arcidae.

That species was found along the Atlantic coast of North America, ranging from Cape Hatteras to the West Indies and Bermuda.

However, Huber (2015, p.367-368) determined that the type material of Arca domingensis Lamarck, 1819 represents the species that had been usually treated as Barbatia cancellaria (Lamarck, 1819) in the literature. Huber argued that because Arca cancellaria Lamarck, 1819 does not have a type locality and bears doubtful type material, use of Arca domingensis is preferred, even though it upsets prevailing usage. Moreover, the correct name for the large, whitish, Caribbean species of Acar that had been previously identified as "Acar domingensis" (Lamarck, 1819) is currently unresolved. Source: Huber M. (2015). Compendium of Bivalves 2. Harxheim: ConchBooks. 907 pp.

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