Oreiallagma gen. nov. with a redefinition of Cyanallagma Kennedy 1920 and Mesamphiagrion Kennedy 1920, and the description of M. dunklei sp. nov. and M. ecuatoriale sp. nov. from Ecuador (Odonata: Coenagrionidae)
Author
Ellenrieder, Natalia Von
Author
Garrison, Rosser W.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1805
1
51
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.182666
d1698b4a-ec6b-4a5f-96cf-956535545e85
1175-5326
182666
Oreiallagma
gen. nov.
Figures 5
; 8; 25–29; 49–53; 85–94; 101; 104; 110–111
Type
species:
Cyanallagma thelkterion
De Marmels 1997
by present designation.
Other species included:
O. acutum
(
Ris 1918
)
comb. nov.
,
O. oreas
(
Ris 1918
)
comb. nov.
,
O. prothoracicum
(
Kimmins 1945
)
comb. nov.
, and
O. quadricolor
(
Ris 1918
)
comb. nov.
.
Etymology:
From '
oreios
' (Greek): of or from the mountains, and '
allagma
' (Greek): a neuter noun used for many damselfly names, allusion that was originally chosen by
Charpentier (1840)
to denote the possibility of mistaking coenagrionid genera with blue and black males with those of the genus
Enallagma
(
Fliedner 2006
)
. The name refers to the habitat of these species, which inhabit the Andean mountain range.
Generic characterization. Head
. Color of dorsum dark brown to black with pale blue to olive postocular spots (
Fig. 5
), no pale postocular bar, rear of head pale. Frons rounded, occipital lobes not protruding posteriorly so that most posterior point of head is at eyes (
Fig. 5
).
Thorax
. Medial lobe of posterior lobe of prothorax developed into caudally projected foliate plate (
Figs. 25–29
). Female mesostigmal plates rectangular and narrow with ratio of maximum width/length of less than 0.5 (
Fig. 28
c). Pterothorax with dark mid-dorsal and humeral stripes, sometimes with a dark stripe over metapleural suture (absent in
O. acutum
,
O. prothoracicum
, and
O. quadricolor
); with pale blue antehumeral stripe usually complete but interrupted distally in
O. acutum
and
O. thelkterion
(
Fig. 5
). Legs long with femur 1 always longer than distance between eyes at level of antennifer (
Fig. 5
; ratio = 1.08), tibial spurs shorter than or as long as distance between them, pretarsal claw with well developed supplementary tooth. Wings in most examined specimens smoky especially along costal area; CuP reaching CuPAA, proximal to hind margin of wing for a distance as long as CuP or shorter; vein descending from quadrangle not forming a straight line to wing margin (
Fig. 8
).
Abdomen
. Color reddish-orange, black, and blue (
Fig. 5
); relatively long with a ratio of 4.4–6.5 to head plus thorax length. Genital ligula distal segment with one (
O. oreas
and
O. prothoracicum
) or two (
O. acutum
,
O. quadricolor
, and
O. thelkterion
) ental transverse folds and usually lacking inner process (inner process observed only in
O. thelkterion
,
Fig. 49
c), always with paired latero-apical lobes and usually with a pair of small accessory latero-medial lobes (absent in
O. acutum
;
Fig. 51
); second segment with unique wide paired latero-apical folds with sclerotized margins (
Figs. 49–53
). Postero-dorsal margin of male S10 recessed in dorsal view, with very slight (
O quadricolor
,
O. thelkterion
;
Figs. 86
; 88) to more pronounced (
O. acutum
,
O. oreas
,
O. prothoracicum
;
Figs. 85
; 87; 89) 'v'-shaped cleft lacking a lateral pair of tubercles. Male cercus with a long blade-like ventral process bent medio-anteriorly each of which converges with the one on opposite cercus before finally diverging at tip (
Figs. 85–94
), and a dorsal process directed posteriorly of variable length: very short and subapical in
O. oreas
and
O. quadricolor
(
Figs. 93
a–94a), long and apical in
O. prothoracicum
,
O. thelkterion
, and
O. acutum
(
Figs. 90
a–92a). Patch of differentiated scalariform-like cuticle on posterior surface of male cercus present (
O. oreas
,
O. quadricolor
, and
O. prothoracicum
) or absent (
O. thelkterion
and
O. acutum
). Male paraproct with a dorsal branch ending on a sclerotized tip or ridge (
Figs. 90–94
). Female (known only for
O. thelkterion
and incompletely for
O. quadricolor
) with vulvar spine on S8; ovipositor not reaching tips of cerci.
Generic diagnosis.
Oreiallagma
is unique among all genera of New World
Coenagrionidae
by the presence of a pair of wide latero-apical folds with sclerotized margins on second segment of genital ligula (
Figs. 49–53
), and by the forked male cercus combining a dorsal process and a long blade-like ventral process bent medio-anteriorly (
Figs. 85–94
).
Oreiallagma
differs from
Cyanallagma
by having the rear of head surrounding occipital foramen pale (as in
Fig. 1
b) and by the male cercus having a dorsal process (
Figs. 85–94
).
Oreiallagma
differs from
Mesamphiagrion
by having a forked male cercus combining a dorsal process and a long blade-like ventral process bent medio-anteriorly (
Figs. 85–94
). Further differences are given in
Table 2
. As mentioned under the previous two genera, the combination of a rounded frons, presence of pale postocular spots, a trilobate prothoracic posterior lobe, striped pterothorax, and male cerci provided with some kind of processes is shared among New World
Coenagrionidae
not only with
Cyanallagma
and
Mesamphiagrion
but also with
Apanisagrion
,
Chrysobasis
,
Hesperagrion
,
Homeoura
, some
Ischnura
species,
Leptobasis
, and
Telagrion
.
Oreiallagma
differs from all except
Chrysobasis
,
Leptobasis
, and
Telagrion
by its long abdomen in relation to length of head plus thorax with a ratio of over 4.4 versus less than 4.4. It differs from
Chrysobasis
,
Leptobasis
, and
Telagrion
by the presence of well developed supplementary teeth on pretarsal claws (vestigial or forming a right angular notch in the other three genera) and by female ovipositor not surpassing tip of cerci (extending beyond tip of cerci in other genera).
Remarks.
Specimens are rare in collections, females are known for only two species, and all but two (
O. quadricolor
and
O. thelkterion
) have not been collected since their original descriptions. Species vary considerably in total length; their ranges from longest to shortest are:
O. prothoracicum
(=
55 mm
),
O. oreas
and
O. thelkterion
(
44–46 mm
),
O. quadricolor
(
40 mm
), and
O. acutum
(
37 mm
). If breeding biology for the genus mirrors that for
O. quadricolor
(within bromeliads in high elevation forest areas), we suspect future collecting in these forest zones will yield more specimens, and intraspecific adult size variation will be considerable due to differences in space and food availability within phytotelmata habitats.
Distribution.
Narrow mountainous corridor in Andes from
Venezuela
to
Bolivia
, from
800 to 2300 m
above sea level (
Fig. 104
).