First record and a new species of the fossil dragonfly genus Proinogomphus (Odonata: Liassogomphidae) from the Early Jurassic of Bascharage in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
Author
Bechly, Günter
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-07-23
4450
1
108
114
journal article
29321
10.11646/zootaxa.4450.1.7
851d1f38-f621-4f26-8fd4-40d3a6976b2e
1175-5326
1444626
1F034BB7-919B-4AC8-9682-09F64D73A94F
Elattogomphus
Bode, 1953
.
Heterothemis
Handlirsch, 1906
(=
Gomphites
Handlirsch, 1920
,
Liassogomphus
Cowley, 1934
,
Palaeogomphus
Handlirsch, 1939
) with the single type species
H. brodiei
(Buckman, 1843)
.
Comment: The synonymy of
Liassogomphus
with
Heterothemis
Handlirsch, 1906
was established by
Ansorge (2004)
.
Phthitogomphus
Cowley, 1942
(=
Paragomphus
Handlirsch, 1939
).
Proinogomphus
Cowley, 1942
(=
Proinogomphus
Handlirsch, 1939
numen nudum).
A key was provided by
Cowley (1942)
, and the family was first revised by
Nel
et al.
(1993)
, who removed the genera
Strongylogomphus
Bode, 1953
and
Necygomphus
Cowley, 1942
(=
Necrogomphus
Handlirsch, 1939
) from
Liassogomphidae
and transferred them to
Myopophlebiidae
within Heterophlebioidea. A second revision by
Etter & Kuhn (2000)
retained these remaining four genera, but reduced the number of species from 9 to 4 based on assumed wing venational variability similar to extant
Aeshnidae
. An additional genus
Chrysogomphus
Ren, 1994
was described from the Early Cretaceous of China, but later identified as a basal Aeshnoptera (
Huang
et al.
2003
). According to the cladistic analysis by
Fleck
et al.
(2003)
,
Liassogomphidae
represents the sister group of crown group Anisoptera.
The present study describes a new species of the liassogomphid genus
Proinogomphus
. Its
type
species
P. brodei
was described by
Handlirsch (1939)
, based on a figure of
Bode (1907)
, but his introduction of the genus
Proinogomphus
was considered a nomen nudum by
Cowley (1942)
because “Handlirsch has not complied with Art. 25c 1–3 of the International Code, so that Cowley redescribed this genus. Cowley’s view was ignored by
Carpenter (1992)
and the revision of
Nel
et al.
(1993)
(adopted in the Paleobiology Database PaleoDB taxon number
180639
), but accepted in the latest revision by
Etter & Kuhn (2000)
.
Bode (1953)
described two further species
P. aequalicellatus
and
P. bicellatus
, which have been synonymized with the
type
species by
Etter & Kuhn (2000)
, because they shall not differ in any major character from the
type
species, which appears to be at least a bit dubious concerning
P. aequalicellatus
because this species differs from
P. brodei
in the fact that the triangle and subtriangle seem to be free in as in the new species described here. Nevertheless, I herein tentatively retain this synonymy, as there are sufficient other diagnostic characters to distinguish the new species.