A Global Mission

The mission of the Ocean Census is to accelerate the discovery of ocean life to advance fundamental science, empower conservation, and fuel innovation for the future of our planet.

Join the Census

The Ocean Census Alliance unites national and philanthropic marine institutes, museums, and universities, backed by governments, philanthropy, business and civil society partners.

Gallery

Phylum

OC-SP-0002296

No Image yet…

Species ID

OC-SP-0002296

Discovered

Phylum

Mollusca

Species ID

OC-SP-0002296

Provisional Species Name

Laevilacunaria sp_MNHNCL MOL 205496

Lowest Valid Taxon Name in WoRMS

Laevilacunaria

Lowest Known Rank

Genus

Status

Discovered

Does the taxonomist(s) intend to work on this material further?

2. I/We already have plans to publish. (For marine invertebrates please know that SOSA could support you in this too - please click the button for more details).

Embargo

No

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Littorinimorpha

Family

Littorinidae

Genus

Laevilacunaria

Date Identified

01/02/2026

Taxonomic Remarks

The South Georgia material represents Laevilacunaria sp. nov., supported by concordant evidence from shell morphology and radular characters. Although superficially similar to L. bennetti (Preston, 1916), the new species is consistently smaller (adults not exceeding 4 mm) and shows a subtle but recurrent shoulder on the body whorl near the onset of the aperture. The most diagnostic differences are in the radula (Rosenfeld et al., 2026): while both the Antarctic Peninsula L. bennetti and the South Georgia lineage have rachidian, lateral, and inner marginal teeth bearing numerous small denticles, the outer (external) marginal tooth differs markedly—it is unicuspid and lacks denticles in the South Georgia lineage, whereas in L. bennetti it bears four denticles. This combination of consistent size differences, shell profile, and diagnostic radular morphology supports recognition of the South Georgia lineage as a distinct species, and both morphological evidence and molecular data further support its status as a separate species.

Received All Minimal Data for Discovery

05/03/2026

Description of Material

Shell very small (adults ≤ 4 mm), globose to ovate, with a short spire and a large body whorl. Aperture broadly ovate, relatively large in proportion to shell size; peristome simple. Teleoconch smooth to weakly sculptured, with fine growth lines. In lateral/apertural view, the last whorl shows a weak but distinct shoulder at the onset of the aperture, producing a slight angularity in the whorl profile.

Ecology

Associated with macroalgae in coastal environments (algal-associated microhabitats; intertidal to shallow subtidal).

Distribution

Known only from South Georgia

Scientific Name Authorship

Rosenfeld

Join the census

The Ocean Census Alliance unites national and philanthropic marine institutes, museums, and universities, backed by governments, philanthropy, business and civil society partners.