APPLICATION OF PROTOCONCH AND APICAL ONTOGENY IN SYSTEMATICS OF THE NEW ZEALAND TURRITELLID GASTROPODS
Of crucial importance to turritellid systematics are features of the protoconch and apical ontogeny (the order in which spiral ornamentation occurs). Protoconch morphology appears to vary little within genera (despite the varying morphologies known within the family), and various workers have shown that lineages can be traced based on apical ontogeny. The technique used to describe these features in the past (light microscopy), however, has been shown to be frequently inadequate for their consistent characterization.
We have obtained new data from the first known scanning electron micrographs (SEMs) of three nominal genera of fossil and Recent New Zealand turritellids. Preliminary analysis suggests: 1) that SEMs do indeed reveal features not visible in light microscopy, and 2) that protoconch form and apical ontogeny can be used to distinguish genera in these animals. These data will form part of a larger data set that will include genetic sequences of Recent species, aiming ultimately at a phylogenetic analysis using shell and molecular characters.