Rediscovery of Mantellias pubicornis Westwood, 1889, a rare praying mantis from the Amazon (Mantodea, Thespidae, Oligonicinae)
Author
Maldaner, Caroline
Author
Agudelo, Antonio A.
Author
Rafael, José Albertino
text
Zootaxa
2015
3973
1
195
199
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3973.1.9
77f34b4a-6664-49e9-bf20-77b48f56fb89
1175-5326
233349
D46485A6-EE90-427D-A370-68FD5726DF55
Mantellias
Westwood, 1889
Type
species:
Mantellias pubicornis
Westwood, 1889
(monotypy)
Westwood 1889
:38 (Miomantides);
Kirby 1904
: 225 (
Mantinae
);
Giglio-Tos 1919
: 62 (
Pseudomiopteryginae
, Pseudomiopteriges);
Giglio-Tos 1927
: 257 (
Pseudomiopteryginae
, Pseudomiopteriges);
Beier 1935
: 5; 1964: 944; 1968: 8 (
Thespinae
, Pseudomioterygini);
Terra 1995
: 51 (
Thespidae
,
insertae sedis
);
Cerdá 1996
: 6 (Pseudomioterygini);
Ehrmann 2002
: 213, 375 (
Oligonicinae
, Pogonogasterini);
Agudelo
et al.
2007
: 110, 118 (
Thespidae
,
Oligonicinae
, Pogonogasterini);
Ehrmann & Koçak, 2009
: 16 (
Thespidae
,
Oligonicinae
, Pogonogasterini);
Rivera 2010
: 53 (
Thespidae
,
Oligonicinae
).
Our examination of the
type
series (three
syntypes
,
Figs.1A
,
2A
–B) confirmed
Mantellias pubicornis
as a member of the
Thespidae
; all specimens were found to be males.
Westwood (1889)
mentioned characteristics of wing venation in relation to females; however, thespid females are wingless. Furthermore, two
syntypes
do not fit Westwood’s description and they are attributable to
Bantiella
instead, as they exhibit robust and triangular prothoracic femora, prothoracic tibiae with seven postero-ventral spines, all tibial spines ventrally inserted, and meso- and metathoracic wings with acute apex (
Fig. 2A
–B). The specimen Westwood used for the description of the taxon
Mantellias
bears a label with the following data: “
Type
Orth: 427 1/3,
Mantellias pubicornis
Westwood
” (
Fig. 1A
). This specimen clearly exhibits wing and prothoracic leg characters mentioned in pages 38 and 39:
“Alae tegminibus majores, praesertim in maribus, area postcostali magna, apice lato […] femoribus anticis compressis sulcatis, in medio dilatatis spinisque subbrevibus armatis; tibiis perbrevibus spinis perpaucis.”
(“wings larger than tegminae, particularly in males, post-costal area large, apex broad […] prothoracic femora compressed and furrowed, dilated in the middle, armed with short spines; tibiae pilose with few spines.”).
FIGURE 1.
A,
Mantellias pubicornis
(♂ lectotype), dorsal habitus; B, male genitalia of
Bantiella
sp. dissected from abdomen glued to the lectotype of
M. pubicornis
; C,
M. pubicornis
, prothoracic femur anterior view (♂ lectotype); D, male genitalia of
M. pubicornis
(specimen from Amazonas state).
Therefore, in agreement with
ICZN
Article 74 (
ICZN
1999), this specimen is hereby designated as the
lectotype
for the taxon
Mantellias pubicornis
(
Fig. 1A
); the other two
syntypes
(
Fig. 2A
–B), now attributable to
Bantiella
, become
paralectotypes
. The
lectotype
had the abdomen originally glued to the body; however, upon closer examination we recognized that this abdomen does not belong to
Mantellias
but rather to an undertermined species of
Bantiella
. We corroborated this after comparing the lectotype’s abdomen and genitalia (
Fig. 1
B) with those of other specimens of
Bantiella
and
Mantellias
, the latter from Amazonas state,
Brazil
(
Fig. 1
D). Therefore, we consider the
lectotype
as a composite specimen and purposely remove its abdomen from our redescription of
M
.
pubicornis
, in agreement to
ICNZ
Article 73.1.5, which states: “If a subsequent author finds that a
holotype
which consists of a set of components (e.g. disarticulated body parts) is not derived from an individual animal, the extraneous components may, by appropriate citation, be excluded from the
holotype
.”
FIGURE 2.
A,
Bantiella
sp.1, dorsal habitus (♂ paralectotype); B,
Bantiella
sp. 2, dorsal habitus (♂ paralectotype); C.
Thrinaconyx fumosa
(♂ syntype), dorsal habitus; D.
Bantia werneri
(♂ holotype), dorsal habitus.
Redescription of male
Lectotype
(here designated)
. Color dark brown. Head small, almost as long as wide, without projections, post-clypeus short. Antennae thin and moniliform, longer than body and with conspicuous pilosity; general color brown, scape with pale base and dark apex, pedicel dark; first flagellomere slightly longer than the rest, maculated, central flagellomeres more rhomboidal. Vertex narrow, arched and slightly more elevated than eyes, the latter globosus. Juxtaocular tubercles not developed. Cuticle under ocelli dark; lateral ocelli oval, central ocellus more rounded. Ocellar tubercle developed, pale, dorsal section slightly elevated. Frontal shield flat, hexagonal, upper margin arched and elevated. Pronotum relatively slender and with marginal denticles, prozone as elevated as metazone in lateral view; metazone 1.5 times the size of the prozone, slightly longer than prothoracic coxae, with well-defined median carina; pronotum disc slightly granulated; supracoxal swelling marked; terminal tubercles of pronotum marked. Prothoracic coxae short, smooth, with dark maculae, the latter more pronounced on the posterior surface; genicular lobule present. Prothoracic femora triangular, slightly dilated dorsally, dark, its posterior surface thoroughly maculated, anterior surface with a black and shiny central macula, proximal and distal margins pale (
Fig. 1
C); four postero-ventral spines, all with black apex; eight antero-ventral spines, all black apically but basally maculated; four discoidal spines, dark, tibial claw groove medial. Prothoracic tibiae shorter than metazone, smooth, anterior surface dark; five anteroventral, dark spines, these are separated and erect (not curved), first two spines clearly separated from the rest, and distalmost spine displaced into a more dorsolateral position; four postero-ventral, dark spines, separated, erect (not curved), the first small, the second slightly separated from the rest; tibial claw short, slightly convex, dark, pale anteriorly; prothoracic metatarsi longer than remaining tarsomeres altogether and bearing long, dark setae, tarsomeres II and III dark and maculated. Metathoracic femora and tibiae smooth, lacking keels or lobes; tibiae slightly pilose; metathoracic tarsi with distal maculae. Mesothoracic wings narrow longer than abdomen, hyaline-brown, stigma brown, central part whitish, slightly shorter than the metathoracic pair, apex narrow and almost as wide as proximal end, margins conspicuously pilose; costal area narrow, slightly arched, costal area veins reticulate; discoidal area with pale maculae. Metathoracic wings longer than the abdomen, hyaline-brown, weakly maculated, apically more opaque and discoidal area with distal margin broad, truncated.
Measurements (mm)
: body length, 16.5; pronotum, 4.7 mm; metazone,
3 mm
; mesothoracic wing,
13 mm
; metathoracic wing, 13.5 mm; prothoracic coxa, 4.2 mm; prothoracic femur,
4 mm
.
Remarks.
We concur with
Ehrmann (2002)
and retain
Mantellias
within the
Oligonicinae
, as our own examination of the
lectotype
confirmed the dorsolateral displacement of the distal-most posteroventral spine of the foretibiae, a distinct feature of the
Oligonicinae (
Terra 1995
)
. Furthermore, we recognized morphological similarities between
Mantellias
,
Thrynaconyx
and
Bantia
, which suggests a close relationship among these three genera. These can be distinguished on the basis of characters found in the forelegs and wings. For instance, the prothoracic femora of
Mantellias
are distinct. Overall, these are triangular but somewhat distally tapered, the dorsal edge is slightly but decidedly expanded, forming a sort of lamella, and exhibit a black, shiny macula on its anterior aspect (
Fig. 1
C).
Thrynaconyx
(
Fig. 2
C), exhibits rather slender prothoracic femora (its distal half is notoriously narrower than the proximal half, whereas the same are clearly and strongly triangular in
Bantia
(
Fig. 2
D); both
Thrynaconyx
and
Bantia
lack the macula on their anterior side or any indication of a dorsal lamella.
Mantellias
further differs from
Thrinaconyx
in having only one of its distal-most anteroventral spines slightly displaced into a more dorsolateral position, whereas
Thrinaconyx
exhibits two of the same and clearly dorsally positioned. The mesothoracic wings of both
Mantellias
(
Fig. 1A
) and
Bantia
(
Fig. 2
D) are notoriously narrower than those of
Trinaconyx
(
Fig. 2
C); the metathoracic wings of
Mantellias
are distinct for having a continuous, distal outline, as there is no break between the discoidal and anal areas (
Fig. 1A
), whereas the same is notorious in
Bantia
(
Fig. 2
D).
Mantellias
is known only from the Amazon rainforest, specifically from
the States
of Amazonas and Pará, in
Brazil
. Despite intense historical prospection of the Amazon, specimens of
Mantellias
are virtually absent in insect collections; this, in addition to the lack of further records outside the Amazon, make of
Mantellias
one of the rarest Neotropical praying mantis taxon.
The present study addresses the importance of revisiting mantodean taxa rarely cited in the literature, or that remain known from
type
specimens only (e.g.
Agudelo & Rafael 2014
). Unfortunately, such taxa still make up a large proportion of known praying mantis diversity. The eventual assessment and taxonomic reinterpretation of these rarely seen species will prove to be highly informative in future systematic treatments of the
Mantodea
.