Macromia siamensis, a new species from North Thailand (Odonata: Anisoptera Macromiidae)
Author
Makbun, Noppadon
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-05-05
5133
3
346
354
journal article
55711
10.11646/zootaxa.5133.3.2
637a139f-7734-4d00-b27a-9e01d794cb2e
1175-5326
6522526
7A7C9379-36FA-4BEE-9031-3ADDD7D1561F
Macromia siamensis
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1–11
)
Holotype
.
1 ♂
,
Thailand
,
Chiang Mai province
,
Chom Thong
,
Ban Luang
(altitude
580 m
),
13–iii–2015
,
N. Makbun
leg.
Paratypes
.
2 ♂♂
,
14–iii–2013
, locality, data and collector the same as for the
holotype
.
Etymology.
The new species is named after Siamensis, a Thai non-profit organization, in recognition of their continued support for my work, and in honor of
Siam
, the former name of
Thailand
, the country in which the new taxon was found. Siamensis is a group of taxonomists in various fields and keen enthusiasts who contribute and give public awareness on biodiversity and the environment in
Thailand
. Also, ‘siamensis’ is a Latin adjective derived from
Siam
.
FIGURE 1.
General habitus of
Macromia siamensis
sp. nov.
holotype. Bar = 10 mm.
Description of
holotype
Head
(
Figs. 1–3
). Face black with yellow pattern. Compound eyes dark brown. Vertex with two pointed metallic black protuberances. Antenna black. Postfrons yellow with black upper margin and with a groove in the middle. Antefrons metallic black with yellow lower margin. Postclypeus wholly yellow. Anteclypeus black with both sides pale. Labrum and base of mandible black. Labium yellow with darkened upper part on the inner margin.
Thorax
(
Figs. 4–5
). Prothorax black with yellow markings, as follows: middle lobe with lateral spot, posterior lobe entirely black. Synthorax black with iridescent blue reflection and covered with white setae. Antealar sinus yellow. Mesepisternum with broad, dorsally tapering antehumeral stripe and extended throughout its length, upper margin almost touching antealar sinus, lower margin running down across mesokatepisternum. Broad yellow lateral stripe cover metepisternum and metastigma except for upper and posterior margins. Posterior margin of metepimeron yellow, occupying about one fourth of its area. Poststernum is entire yellow. Leg black except for coxae largely yellow. Tibial keels yellowish.
Wings
hyaline with dark veins (
Fig. 7
). Ax 13 on FW, 8 on HW. Px 6 (right), 7 (left) on FW, 8 (right), 10 (left) on HW. The anal angle of the wing rather rounded. Anal triangle with one crossvein. Anal loop 5-celled, without central cell. Two crossveins in cubital space. Discoidal field widening from one to ten cells in both wings. Triangles in both wings without crossvein. Supratriangles with 2 (right) –3 (left) cells in FW, and one cell in HW. Pt black.
Abdomen
black with yellow markings (
Figs. 8, 10
) as follows: S1 with large anterolateral spot, S2 with basal ring covering auricle, S3 with large middorsal spot and anterolateral spot separated from each other, S4–6 each with a large basal ring, S7 with basal ring connected to irregular markings at some points. S8 with dorsal irregular triangle, and a ventrolateral spot extending to basal half. S9 with anterolateral spot. The posterior margin of S9 pointed when seen laterally. S10 entirely black, its dorsal outline slightly arched but do not form a protuberance.
FIGURES 2–7.
Morphological features of
Macromia siamensis
sp. nov.
holotype: (2) head, frontal view; (3) head, dorsal view; (4) synthorax, oblique frontal view; (5) synthorax, lateral view; (6) secondary genitalia, lateral view; (7) fore- and hindwing, lateral view.
Caudal appendages
blackish brown, pale at the base, longer than S10 (
Figs. 9, 11
). Cerci slightly longer than paraprocts. In lateral view, cerci broad basally and slightly tapering to its apex, ventral margin of posterior half possesses small blunt spines. Their tips acute and pointing upward. Paraprocts curved, broadest at middle, with pointed apex, directed inward. In dorsal view, cerci slightly diverge from base and gently curved inward at their half-length, their outer margin furnished with lateral spines with tips pointing outward. Paraprocts triangle-shaped with a small hook pointing inward.
Secondary genitalia
(
Fig. 6
). Vesicle triangle-shaped, covered densely with thick short setae. Posterior hamulus basally pale and dark apically, broad at base and distinctly tapered to its apex furnished with a hook on its posterior side and expanded on its anterior side, forming a hammer-like shape.
FIGURES 8–11.
Abdomen (8, 10) and caudal appendages (9, 11) of
Macromia siamensis
sp. nov.
holotype: (8, 9) lateral view; (10, 11) dorsal view.
Measurements
(in mm). HW 39.0, abdomen including anal appendages 45.0, total length (with head and anal appendages) 63.5
Variations in male
paratypes
.
All
paratype
males are smaller than the
holotype
(HW: 36.8–37.8, abdomen including caudal appendages: 43.5–45.9, total length: 61.1–63.0). One specimen has a pale spot in middle of the anteclypeus. One specimen with two cells in triangle on left HW. Ax with
13 in
FW and
7–8 in
HW, Px with
5–7 in
FW and
7–10 in
HW. Cubital crossveins 4–5 on FW and 3 on HW. Supratriangle with 1–2 crossveins on FW.
Female.
Unknown
Differential diagnosis.
The new species is easily separated from all
Macromia
species
so far known from
Thailand
by the antehumeral stripe reaching the antealar sinus. So far, this long and broad stripe is unique among the species in the Indomalayan realm reported in
Laidlaw (1922)
,
Fraser (1924
,
1936
),
Lieftinck (1929
,
1955
,
1971
),
Muraki (2009
, 2010, 2014, 2015, 2017),
Yokoi & Souphanthong (2014
,
2019
),
Sumanapala (2021)
. Furthermore, there are two ‘
Macromia
sp.
’ species from
Chiang Mai province
listed in the book “Atlas of the dragonflies of
Thailand
– distribution maps by provinces” (
Hämäläinen & Pinratana 1999
, p. 95). One of those species is probably
M. siamensis
.
FIGURES 12–13.
Habitat of
Macromia siamensis
sp. nov.
in type locality.
Using the diagnostic characters and distribution records of the
Macromia
species
in Asia in
Lieftinck (1955)
,
Asahina (1968)
,
Vick (1988)
,
Zhou
et al.
(1994)
,
Karube (2020)
,
Wilson (2020)
,
M. siamensis
is found to be closest to the following congeners:
M. amphigena
Selys, 1871
from
Kazakhstan
,
Russia
,
China
,
Mongolia
,
Japan
,
North Korea
and
South Korea
,
M. sombui
Vick, 1988
from
Nepal
,
M. cydippe
Laidlaw, 1922
from
Indonesia
,
Malaysia
and
Thailand
,
M. vangviengensis
Yokoi et Mitamura, 2002
from
Thailand
and
Laos
,
M. clio
Ris, 1916
from
China
,
Taiwan
, and
Japan
, and also
M. malleifera
Lieftinck, 1955
, and
M. macula
Zhou, Wang, Shuai & Liu, 1994
from
China
.All these species share the hammer-shaped tip of posterior hamulus. However,
M. siamensis
can be separated from all of these by a combination of characters: a broad antehumeral stripe reaching antealar sinus (a short and narrower stripe in
M. amphigena
,
M. clio
,
M. macula
,
M. sombui
; absent in
M. malleifera
,
M. vangviengensis
), postfrons yellow with black upper margin (dark brown to black with green/blue iridescent reflection in
M. amphigena
,
M. clio
,
M. cydippe
,
M. malleifera
,
M. sombui
; black with blue iridescent reflection with two small yellow spots in
M. macula
; dark brown in
M. vangviengensis
), S10 without distinct protuberance (the same in
M. macula
; a strongly raised protuberance with pointed apex in
M. sombui
,
M. malleifera
,
M. vangviengensis
; a strongly raised protuberance with blunt apex in
M. clio
,
M. cydippe
; absent in
M. amphigena
), S4–6 with a large basal ring (S3–6 with dorsal spots in
M. amphigena
,
M. clio
,
M. macula
,
M. malleifera
,
M. sombui
; S3–5 with dorsal spots in
M. vangviengensis
; S3–6 unmarked in
M. cydippe
), postclypeus entirely yellow (the same in
M. amphigena
,
M. clio
,
M. macula
; yellow with dark brown lower margin in
M. malleifera
,
M. vangviengensis
; entirely dark brown in
M. cydippe
; dark brown with wedge-shape spots in
M. sombui
).
FIGURE 14.
Distribution map of
Macromia siamensis
sp. nov.
Habitat and Ecology.
Macromia siamensis
was found patrolling above a shallow and small stream in an open area at 580 meters above sea level (
Figs. 12–13
). I found this species a few times and only one or
two males
were encountered each time.
M. flavocolorata
and
M. chaiyaphumensis
are also present in this stream but at different periods in a year. Other interesting species found at this stream were
Microgomphus farrelli
Makbun & Fleck, 2018
,
Lamelligomphus
sp.
,
Nihonogomphus pulcherrimus
(Fraser, 1927)
,
Stylogomphus
sp.
,
Phaenandrogomphus tokinicus
(Fraser, 1926)
,
Philoganga montana
(Hagen in Selys, 1859), and
Prodasineura doisuthepensis
Hoess, 2007
.
Distribution.
To date, it is only known from the
type
locality,
Chiang Mai province
, North
Thailand
(
Fig. 14
).