MolluscaBase taxon details
Anatoma sahlingi L. Hoffman & C. Little, 2025 †
1830735 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1830735)
accepted
Species
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
fossil only
Little, C. T.; Kumar, R.; Johnson, J. E.; Hoffman, L. (2025). Bathyal molluscs from Upper Pleistocene methane seeps in Krishna-Godavari Basin, offshore eastern India. <em>Acta Palaeontologica Polonica.</em> 70(3): 443-477., available online at https://doi.org/10.4202/app.01179.2024
page(s): 449-450, fig. 6 [details] Available for editors
[request]
page(s): 449-450, fig. 6 [details] Available for editors

Note Northern Indian Ocean, Krishna-Godavari Basin,...
From editor or global species database
Type locality Northern Indian Ocean, Krishna-Godavari Basin, Bay of Bengal, offshore eastern India, 15°51.6335’ N, 81°50.2274’ E, 1046 m water depth. [details]
Etymology Named after Heiko Sahling (1969–2018), to celebrate his pioneering work on hydrocarbon seep community ecology.
Etymology Named after Heiko Sahling (1969–2018), to celebrate his pioneering work on hydrocarbon seep community ecology. [details]
MolluscaBase eds. (2025). MolluscaBase. Anatoma sahlingi L. Hoffman & C. Little, 2025 †. Accessed at: https://molluscabase.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1830735 on 2025-09-11
Date
action
by
The webpage text is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 License
original description
Little, C. T.; Kumar, R.; Johnson, J. E.; Hoffman, L. (2025). Bathyal molluscs from Upper Pleistocene methane seeps in Krishna-Godavari Basin, offshore eastern India. <em>Acta Palaeontologica Polonica.</em> 70(3): 443-477., available online at https://doi.org/10.4202/app.01179.2024
page(s): 449-450, fig. 6 [details] Available for editors
[request]
page(s): 449-450, fig. 6 [details] Available for editors





From editor or global species database
Etymology Named after Heiko Sahling (1969–2018), to celebrate his pioneering work on hydrocarbon seep community ecology. [details]Type locality Northern Indian Ocean, Krishna-Godavari Basin, Bay of Bengal, offshore eastern India, 15°51.6335’ N, 81°50.2274’ E, 1046 m water depth. [details]