A review of the damselfly genus Megalestes Selys, 1862 (Insecta: Odonata Zygoptera: Synlestidae) using integrative taxonomic methods
Author
Yu, Xin
College of Life Sciences, Chongqing Normal University, Chongqing, 401331, China
Author
Xue, Junli
0000-0003-0696-2596
Key Laboratory of Atherosclerosis in Universities of Shandong Province, Shandong First Medical University & Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences, Tai'an, China. https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 0696 - 2596
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-09-10
4851
2
245
270
journal article
8529
10.11646/zootaxa.4851.2.2
0c2aa01d-58eb-498b-a278-8b6b4367c1a2
1175-5326
4407479
DCD23BAB-CBF9-48F0-90C9-E490803F0757
Megalestes micans
Needham, 1930
(
Figs. 3
k–l; 4k–l; 5i, m, w–x, ab; 6i–j)
Megalestes micans
Needham, 1930: 230–231
[Sichuan];
Asahina 1985b: 8–10
;
Karube 2014: 73
, fig. 1 [Sapa,
Lao Cai
,
Vietnam
];
Phan & To 2018: 1–6
, figs. 1–3, 10–11, 19–21 [Hoang Lien National Park,
Lao Cai
,
Vietnam
].
Megalestes chengi
Chao, 1947: 15–25
, figs. 2, 4, 6, 8, 10–11, 14, 16–17, 21;
Chao 1965: 190–191
;
Asahina 1985b: 9–12
.
Syn. nov.
Megalestes discus
Wilson, 2004: 424–427
, figs. 4–8, [Mangshan,
Hunan
,
China
];
Wilson & Xu 2007: 102–103
, “Nanling,
Guangdong
,” key to species.
Syn. nov.
Megalestes raychoudhurii
Lahiri, 1987: 54–56
, figs. 131–132, 298–299, 519 [
Meghalaya
,
India
].
Syn. nov.
Megalestes irma
[nec.
Fraser, 1926
]:
Gyeltshen
et al.
, 2017: 588–594
, fig. 4e–f [
Bhutan
].
This is the most widespread species of
Megalestes
, occurring throughout South
China
(
Fujian
,
Guangdong
,
Guangxi
,
Guizhou
,
Henan
,
Hunan
,
Jiangxi
,
Sichuan
,
Yunnan
, and
Zhejiang
) extending to
Vietnam
,
Bhutan
, and
India
. It is also the only species distributed on both sides of the Himalayas. The diagnostic character for this mid-sized species is the base of the basal tooth on the paraproct bulged, covered in dense setae (
Fig. 6
i-j). This species is closely related to
M. riccii
, and this was confirmed by molecular analysis (
Fig. 7
).
In the description of
M. chengi
,
Chao (1947)
only compared his material with
M. heros
, a totally different species. Later,
Chao (1965)
stated that the differences between
M. chengi
and
M. micans
included the middle portion of the middle lobe of the pronotum green, not yellow (feature 2), and the base of the basal tooth of the paraproct slightly, but not greatly, bulged (feature 15). However, all these characters occur in intraspecies variation (Discussion section). Although both
Chao (1965)
and
Asahina (1985b)
have emphasized that
M. chengi
was very similar to
M. micans
, neither author confirmed that they are really the same species. We examined eight of the type specimens of
M. chengi
deposited in
IZAS
and
IEAS
including the
holotype
and found no evident morphological differences with
M. micans
. The molecular analyses also suggested that these two are the same species (
Fig. 7
). Therefore, based on both morphological and molecular evidence (
Fig. 8
), we confirm that
M. chengi
is a junior synonym of
M. micans
.
As we have previously discussed, diagnostic characters of
M. discus
cannot separate it from
M. micans
.
Wilson & Xu (2007)
mentioned that
M. discus
have “inferior appendages without a basal pair of stout spines or robust teeth,” which is incorrect, and “occipital margin with/without transverse yellow spot” (feature 1) supports our opinion that this character is not stable. We examined the diagnostic character photos of the
paratype
of
discus
(
1 m
#, Mangshan (near Babaoshan), Shikengkong, S
Hunan
,
China
,
26-VI-2000
, K.D.P. Wilson leg.), which were kindly sent by K. D. P. Wilson, and found that all the characters are consistent with
M. micans
. No further information on
M. raychoudhurii
has been published after its original description. According to the features of caudal appendages and genital ligula in the original description and figures, there is no difference between
M. raychoudhurii
and
M. micans
. We believe that both
discus
and
M. raychoudhurii
are junior synonyms of
M. micans
.