Abstract
ABSTRACT Xenassiminea nana n. gen. and n. sp. is described from estuaries of temperate mainland Japan (central to western Honshū, Shikoku and Kyūshū). This species has a minute, colourless, translucent, depressed and helicoid shell and resembles some so-called skeneimorphs. However, the anatomical characters of the head–foot, radula and reproductive system indicate that this species belongs to the Assimineidae, in spite of the dissimilarity in shell features. The presence of basal cusps of the central radular teeth and the extremely rudimentary cephalic tentacles indicate that it should be assigned to the subfamily Assimineinae. The shell size (0.8 mm in length, 1.1 mm in diameter) is the smallest among known assimineids. It lives beneath stones deeply buried in sandy mud flats at the innermost parts of large bays and can be regarded as threatened by the rapid loss of these habitats in recent years.
Published Version
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