The damselfly genus Mecistogaster (Odonata: Pseudostigmatidae) from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest with a description of three new species and a neotype designation for M. amalia (Burmeister, 1839)
Author
Soldati Lacerda, Déborah S.
Author
Monteiro Machado, Angelo B.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-09-10
4668
2
207
228
journal article
25488
10.11646/zootaxa.4668.2.3
49eab955-d6ae-4253-bae3-ab650f77fcfc
1175-5326
3449229
F41E013A-A2B0-4642-AED6-27777DA950B5
The
Mecistogaster amalia
of
Selys (1860
,
1886
)
The first author to redescribe
M. amalia
after
Burmeister (1839)
was
Selys (1860
,
1886
), based on specimens from his own collection and that of Hagen, without seeing the
holotype
. The main characters in Selys’ description are: pseudostigma in both wings with 5
-
7 cells and 1 or 2 cells in the row below, on adults black, and yellowish, dark brown on young; apex of wings of adult fully hyaline, of semi-adult infuscate, and milky on young; median lobe of prothorax with two large rounded reddish markings; two yellowish humeral lines originating in opposite directions, inner one touching the anterior border, but not the sinus, and outer one touching the sinus, but not the anterior border; mesepimeron reddish-brown; lower part of thorax with a large black median stripe not surrounded by black. According to
Selys (1860
,
1886
), the species occurs in
Rio de Janeiro
,
São Paulo
,
Bahia
and
Minas Gerais
.
This description is quite different from that of
Burmeister (1839)
by the whole mesepimeron reddish-brown, as well as similar color on the curved marking on the median lobe of the prothorax whereas in the
M. amalia
holotype
these areas are supposedly bronze black. Another difference is the median black stripe on the venter in Selys’ specimens, and white in
Burmeister’s (1839)
description.
Selys (1860
,
1886
) comments that the identification is very easy because of the reddish-brown mesepimeron, which is black in all other
Mecistogaster
. It is reasonable to assume that Selys’ description (1860, 1886) of
M. amalia
and not that of
Burmeister (1839)
has been used by all subsequent authors. This description fits well with that of
M. amalia
neotype
described herein.