Drepanoneura gen. nov. for Epipleoneura letitia and Protoneura peruviensis, with descriptions of eight new Protoneuridae from South America (Odonata: Protoneuridae)
Author
Ellenrieder, Natalia Von
Author
Garrison, Rosser W.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1842
1
34
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.183222
5f96ed66-37a9-429d-bd7d-0cb8486df61e
1175-5326
183222
Epipotoneura machadoi
sp. nov.
Figures 12
a, 25, 34, 38
Etymology.
We name this species
machadoi
(noun in the genitive case) in honor of our friend and colleague Angelo B.M. Machado, in recognition of his manifold contributions to the knowledge of neotropical
Odonata
and his continuous assistance in our studies.
Specimens examined. Total 2 ɗ.—
Holotype
ɗ:
Brazil
, Pará State, Rio Xingu Camp, ca.
60 km
S of Altamira, Igarapé Jabutí, Malaise trap (
03°39'S
,
52°22'W
),
11 x 1986
, leg. P. Spangler & O. Flint (USNM).
Paratype
ɗ, same data as
holotype
but
15 x 1986
(RWG).
Male
holotype
.
Head
. Labium, ventral fourth of labrum, base of mandibles, genae, anteclypeus, and ventral half of antefrons ivory white; remainder of head including rear of head black; dorsum of head with slight green metallic luster.
Thorax
. Largely black with metallic green luster; prothorax with rim of anterior lobe and ventral margin of propleuron light yellow; distal tip of mesostigmal plate and metathorax except for upper fourth of metepisternum pale yellow; venter of thorax, coxae, sides of femora pale yellow; posterior surfaces of femora and trochanter-femoral juncture brown, tip of femora edged with black; remainder of legs pale yellow, armature black; 4 spurs on metafemora, 6 on metatibiae. Hw (
Fig. 12
a) 5.1 times as long as wide; 9 Px in Fw, 8 Px in Hw; MP reaching wing margin slightly distal to basal third of first cell posterior to vein descending from subnodus; IR2 arising at vein descending from subnodus; IR2 and
RP
3 separated by a short crossvein one cell posterior to their origin;
RP
2 beginning closer to Px
4 in
Fw and closer to Px
3 in
Hw; pt pale brown with yellow marginal hairline, shorter than underlying cell, with costal side slightly longer than posterior side.
Abdomen
. Dorso-laterally black except for narrow yellow bands interrupted medio-dorsally by black on base of S3–7; latero-ventral portion of terga and sterna pale brown to yellow, apical third of S9 pale yellow and connecting with yellow ventrally. Genital ligula with apex entire (
Fig. 25
a) and a single bifid inner process distal to flexure (
Figs. 25
b–c). Cercus longer than male S
10 in
lateral view, widest at level of sub-basal tooth (
Figs. 34
a, c), which is prominent and visible in medio-dorsal view (
Fig. 34
b).
Dimensions
. Total length
28.7 mm
; abdomen length
24.3 mm
; Hw
13.6 mm
.
Paratype
.
Paratype
is similar to
holotype
except for stronger metallic green luster, dorso-lateral yellow on S9 replaced by dull orange and interrupted by black above. Hw is 4.95 times as long as wide; there are 8 Px in Fw, 7 Px in Hw; and MP in Fw reaches wing margin slightly distal to half length of first cell posterior to vein descending from subnodus. Female unknown.
Dimensions
. Male (n = 1): total length
27.9 mm
; abdomen
23.5 mm
; Hw
13.6 mm
.
Diagnosis.
Male of
Epipotoneura machadoi
differs from its sibling species
E. nehalennia
only by morphology of cercus and genital ligula. Cercus in
E. machadoi
is slightly longer than S10 (
Fig. 34
a) and widest at base, and there is a single well-developed medially curved sub-basal tooth which extends below ventral margin of cercus (best seen in medio-dorsal, lateral, and ventro-lateral views; st,
Figs. 34
a–c). Cercus in
E. nehalennia
is sub-equal to S10 (
Fig. 35
d), comparatively shorter than in
E. machadoi
(
Fig. 34
d) and parallelsided at base, and the medially curved sub-basal tooth is hidden in lateral view (
Fig. 35
a) but it can be seen in latero-ventral view (st,
Fig. 35
c). Genital ligula of
E. machadoi
has one bifid inner process (
Figs. 25
b–c), while there are two relatively smaller digit-like inner processes in
E. nehalennia
(
Figs. 26
b–c).
Both species superficially resemble
Epipleoneura haroldoi
Santos 1964
by caudal appendage morphology (
Figs. 33
a–b), but in that species the epiproct is large, sclerotized, and apically bifid so that the lateral margins approximate the medial margins of the cerci (
Fig. 33
c); the epiproct in
Epipotoneura
is small, not sclerotized, and its sides do not come into contact with the mesal margins of the cerci (
Figs. 34
d–e–35d–e). The genital ligula of
Epipotoneura
(
Figs. 25–26
) lacks the modified latero-posterior (
Figs. 21-23
) pedunculate processes which uniquely characterize
Epipleoneura
.
Biology.
Types
were collected at a river.
Distribution.
Pará State,
Brazil
(
Fig. 38
).