Cinctura is a genus of fasciolariid sea snails known as the banded tulip shells. Species in this genus were previously grouped in the closely related genus Fasciolaria.

Cinctura
Temporal range: Piacenzian–Recent
Shell of Cinctura hunteria
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
(unranked):
Superfamily:
Family:
Subfamily:
Fasciolariinae
Genus:
Cinctura

Type species
Pyrula hunteria
G. Perry, 1811

Taxonomy

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Cinctura was originally proposed as a subgenus of Fasciolaria in 1957 by Solomon Cady Hollister.[1] It was raised to the rank of genus by Snyder et al. in 2012.[2] Cinctura are known as "banded tulip shells"[3]

Species

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Species within the genus Cinctura include:

Identification

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Cinctura differ from the closely related Fasciolaria in bearing a prominent parietal ridge within the aperture of the shell and in lacking an inflected sutural ramp.[4]

Evolution

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Cinctura is closely related to Fasciolaria.[5] The earliest known fossils of Cinctura date to the Piacenzian age of the Pliocene.[6]

Range

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The range of Cinctura species is restricted to the Gulf of Mexico and off the southeastern United States. No known species, living or extinct, are known from the Caribbean.[7]

References

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Works cited

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  • Couto, Diogo R.; Bouchet, Philippe; Kantor, Yuri I.; Simone, Luiz R.L.; Giribet, Gonzalo (2016-03-23). "A multilocus molecular phylogeny of Fasciolariidae (Neogastropoda: Buccinoidea)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 99: 309–322. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2016.03.025. ISSN 1055-7903. PMID 27033950.
  • Hollister, S. C. (1957). "On the status of Fasciolaria distans Lamarck". The Nautilus. 70 (3): 73–84.
  • Petuch, Edward; Berschauer, David (2020-11-01). "A review of the living Cinctura Banded Tulip Shells (Gastropoda: Fasciolariidae), with the descriptions of four new subspecies and a new subgenus". The Festivus. 52 (4): 316–334. doi:10.54173/F524316. ISSN 0738-9388. S2CID 242412872.
  • Snyder, Martin Avery; Vermeij, Geerat J; Lyons, William G (2012). "The genera and biogeography of Fasciolariinae (Gastropoda, Neogastropoda, Fasciolariidae)". Basteria. 76 (1–3): 31–70.