Rediscovery and redescription of Coenagrion persicum (Lohmann 1993) with description of the female, and some notes on habitat selection (Odonata: Coenagrionidae) Author Schneider, Thomas Author Ikemeyer, Dietmar Author Ferreira, Sónia Author Müller, Ole text Zootaxa 2016 4103 6 561 573 journal article 42249 10.11646/zootaxa.4103.6.6 ba1c7676-1730-44d7-ac92-b6feb46d345e 1175-5326 262511 C168A6E7-C938-4B78-BC7C-D84A18C569AA Rediscovery of C. persicum During a trip to southern and southwestern Iran in early summer 2015, two of us (TS and DI ) found at 4 localities in mountain regions of Lorestãn and Esfahãn Provinces a small Coenagrion that was clearly different from the only other co-occurring Coenagrion , C. vanbrinkae ( Lohmann, 1993 ) by being smaller and darker, especially on S5–7. These individuals were identified in the hand as C. persicum , because the males fit well with the description of Lohmann (1993) . As females were unknown, some female specimens suspected to be of this species were also collected, some of them in tandem with males of C. persicum . Description of the colour pattern of C. persicum males and comparison with Lohmann's description ( Figs. 1 A–E, H, I, 2A, C, E). Males of C. persicum have large postocular spots that are usually weakly toothed or serrated on the rear margin. The antehumeral stripes in C. persicum males are mostly absent, with some individuals showing residual small dots ( Fig. 1 D, E). This is in contrast to most of the C. pulchellum males ( Fig. 1 G). In accordance with Lohmann`s description, the overall colour and pattern of C. persicum males resemble that of C. pulchellum . However, in contrast to the specimen described by Lohmann (1993) , the U-marking of S 2 in all of our specimens ( Fig. 1 B) is intermediate between C. puella (see e.g. Dijkstra 2006 ) and C. pulchellum ( Fig. 1 F). Some C. persicum males have a faint to weak stalk-like connection between the base of the U-mark and the caudal marking of the caudal margin of segment 2 and the others have no connection ( Fig. 1 B). The male colour pattern of S3–10 are in accordance with Lohmann`s description ( Fig. 1 A). The pattern on the tergites of S3–5 has trident shapes and the lateral points reach nearly the upper margins of the segments. The middle point of S3 reaches over one half of the tergite, the middle point of S4 reaches to two-thirds of the tergite, and the middle point of S5 reaches nearly the upper margin of the segment. On S3 this black marking leaves ca. 70% blue, on S4 the blue is reduced to ca. 50%, and on S5 is up to 80% black. S6–7 are nearly completely black with small to very small blue dots. S8 is blue, S9 blue with black markings, and S10 is black. FIGURE 1. Males of Coenagrion persicum (A–E, H, I): (A) habitus, (B) variations in colour patterns of S2, (C) colour pattern of appendages, (D, E) colour patterns of the thorax. Coenagrion persicum : (A) 32.823649°N, 50.429044°E, 2155 m, 12.VI.2015; (H) 33.459799°N, 49.349852°E, 1817 m, 11.VI.2015; (I) 33.249639°N, 49.947417°E, 2329 m, 12.VI.2015; Coenagrion pulchellum (F, G): (F) colour patterns of S2, (G) colour patterns of the thorax. Dreiecksee, (F, G) Uckermark, Germany, 12.V.2011. Artwork by Ole Müller, Photos by Dietmar Ikemeyer. FIGURE 1. (continued) H–I. FIGURE 2. Male appendices of Coenagrion persicum (A, C, E) and Coenagrion pulchellum (B, D, F). (A, B) dorsal view, (C, D) lateral view, (E, F) ventral view. Coenagrion persicum (A) 32.823649°N, 50.429044°E, 2155 m, 12.VI.2015. Coenagrion pulchellum (F, G) Dreiecksee, Uckermark, Germany, 12.V.2011. Artwork by Ole Müller. Cerci in dorsal view resemble C. pulchellum but are coarser and chunky ( Fig. 2 A–F). At mid-length on the inner margin, there is a clearly visible tooth turned inward ( Figs. 1 C, 2A). Some C. pulchellum males have also a similar tooth on their cerci; however, it is located more distally, while other C. pulchellum males have no tooth ( Fig. 2 B). The outer branch of the paraprocts, in lateral view, are obliquely directed backwards in C. persicum , exceeding the cerci but not reaching mid-height of S10. These structures are first directed upright (ca. vertically), then backwards in C. pulchellum , in which they do not exceed the cerci but do exceed mid-height of S 10 in lateral view ( Figs. 2 C, D). This observation differs from the description by Lohmann, in which the outer branches of the lower appendages are first directed upright in both species. Description of females ( Figs. 3 A–D, F). Females of C. persicum have large postocular spots that are usually weakly toothed or serrated on the rear margin. The pterostigma is very dark, nearly black. In contrast to males, females have complete antehumeral stripes, which are blue. Some females are very dark with S3–7 black, S1–2 and S8 blue or pale ( Fig. 3 C left), reminiscent of C. armatum females (see e.g. Dijkstra 2006 ). Other females have more Genbank TABLE 1. Coenagrion specimens analysed in this study. For each we list the sample code, country, site coordinates (WGS84 datum, decimal degrees), GenBank accession number for arginine methyltransferase (PRMT) and phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI) sequence data and source of the sequence. Species Code Country Latitude Longitude Source PRMT PGI-1219 blue and and are similar to males; however, the median point in females is much longer than the lateral points, reaching nearly the upper margin of the segment ( Fig. 3 A, Fig. 3 C middle and right). In these blue females some variation was seen in the pattern of black and blue abdominal markings ( Fig. 3 A, 3C middle and right). However, unlike C. pulchellum , all females observed in C. persicum have a pattern on S2 like a spearhead ( Figs. 3 A, B) reminiscent of the S2 mark in C. hastulatum males ( Dijkstra 2006 ).
Coenagrion persicum Df1945_IRN Iran 33,250 49,947 KU886743 KU886749 This study
Coenagrion pulchellum Df1141_ARM Armenia 40,462 45,288 KU886744 KP272595 This study
Coenagrion pulchellum Df1142_ARM Armenia 40,433 45,107 - KM276635 Ferreira et al . 2014
Coenagrion pulchellum Df1800_FIN Finland 62,236 25,804 KM276641 - Ferreira et al . 2014
Coenagrion pulchellum Df1801_FIN Finland 62,236 25,804 KU886745 KP272719 This study
Coenagrion puella Df1778_MKD Macedonia 41,181 20,667 KU695856 KP272708 Ferreira et al . 2016/ This study
Coenagrion puella Df1792_DEU Germany 48,388 11,844 KU695858 KM276637 Ferreira et al. 2016/Ferreira et al . 2014
Coenagrion puella Df1794_RUSc Russia (Caucasus) 44,057 40,734 KU695859 - Ferreira et al. 2016
Coenagrion puella Df1795_RUSc Russia (Caucasus) 44,057 40,734 - KP272716 This study
Coenagrion ornatum Df1568_SVN Slovenia 45,961 15,129 KU886746 KP272666 This study
Coenagrion ornatum Df1788_BIH Bosnia and Herzegovina 43,254 17,612 KU886748 KM276638 This study/Ferreira et al. 2014
Coenagrion ornatum Df1789_BIH Bosnia and Herzegovina 43,254 17,612 KU886747 KP272711 This study
Coenagrion mercuriale Df830_MAR Morocco 31,060 -7,683 - KM248498 Ferreira et al . 2014
Coenagrion mercuriale Df840_MAR Morocco 33,149 -5,059 KM248522 - Ferreira et al . 2014
Coenagrion caerulescens Df1715_TUN Tunisia 36,742 8,716 - KM276636 Ferreira et al . 2014
Coenagrion caerulescens Df1713_TUN Tunisia 36,742 8,716 KM276642 - Ferreira et al . 2014
The hind margin of the pronotum in C. persicum females is deeply trilobed, and the three very distinct lobes resemble at first sight the corresponding structure in C. pulchellum ( Fig. 3 D). However, in contrast with the latter ( Fig. 3 E), the middle lobe in C. persicum is clearly longer than the two lateral ones and more rounded than in C. pulchellum , in which it is rather pointed, and the lateral lobes are curved inward only in C. persicum . The dorsal surface of the outer lobes of the pronotum has a more pronounced relief in C. persicum ( Fig. 3 D) compared with C. pulchellum ( Fig. 3 E). Measurements . Males (n =21) and females (n=5) of C. persicum are small, about 30 mm in total length ( Table 2 ). TABLE 2 . Measurements of Coenagrion persicum in mm median (range), given are total length (TL), abdomen length (AL), and hind wing length (HWL).
TL AL HWL
males (n = 21) 30 mm (27–31 mm) 23 mm (22–26 mm) 17 mm (15–19 mm)
females (n = 5) 29 mm (29–30 mm) 23 mm (23–24 mm) 18 mm (17–19 mm)
FIGURE 3. Females (A–D, F) and oviposition (G) of Coenagrion persicum . (A) habitus, (B) variation of colour patterns of S2, (C) variations of colour patterns of the abdomen, (D) pronotum: (A, B right, C middle) 33.180695°N, 50.064721°E, 2235 m, 12.VI.2015; (B left, C left) 33.459799°N, 49.349852°E, 1817 m, 11.VI.2015; (D, C right, F, G) 33.249639°N, 49.947417°E; 2329m, 12.VI.2015. (E) pronotum C. pulchellum : Nudower Teiche near Potsdam, Germany, 03.V.2009. Artwork by Ole Müller, Photos by Dietmar Ikemeyer. FIGURE 3 . (continued) F–G Molecular analysis . The final dataset consisted of two alignments of 12 sequences (PRMT—706 bp long; PGI-1219—605 bp long) from 6 Coenagrion species ( Table 1 ). The most appropriate models for the PRMT and PGI sequences were HKY+I and HKY respectively. Tree topologies from both ML and BI approaches were identical in both markers, and thus we present results from the BI majority-rule consensus tree only ( Fig. 4 ). All of the species were recovered as distinct and well-supported branches ( BI pp>0.90), although relations between species varied with the marker used. FIGURE 4 . Phylogenetic trees obtained by Bayesian inference (BI) analysis of samples of Coenagrion sp., based on gene sequences of two nDNA fragments: arginine methyltransferase (PRMT) (n=12, 706 bp) and phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI- 1219) (n=12, 605 bp), Bayesian posterior probabilities and bootstrap values for maximum likelihood are indicated at tree nodes. Tree topologies from ML analysis were identical to the BI analysis at both genes. Species pairs exhibited distinct levels of genetic divergence at both PRMT and PGI datasets given the differences in relatedness between species (1.2% ≤ PRMT uncorrected p-distance ≥ 6.2%; 0.7% ≤ PGI uncorrected p-distance ≥ 9.9 %) ( Tables 3 and 4 ). Regarding the PRMT fragment, C. persicum exhibited approximately 1.2% sequence divergence with respect to C. pulchellum , which was the same divergence observed between the latter and either C. puella or C. ornatum . The minimum divergence observed in the PGI fragment was between C. ornatum and C. pulchellum (0.7%), while C. persicum exhibited approximately 1.9% sequence divergence with respect to either C. pulchellum or C. ornatum . TABLE 3. Mean (below diagonal) and standard deviation (above diagonal) sequence divergence (uncorrected pdistances) at a 706 bp fragment of arginine methyltransferase (PRMT) among pairs of species of Coenagrion .
PRMT C. persicum C. pulchellum C. puella C. ornatum C. mercuriale C. caerulescens
C. persicum 0,004 0,005 0,005 0,007 0,008
C. pulchellum 0,012 0,004 0,004 0,007 0,008
C. puella 0,017 0,012 0,004 0,007 0,008
C. ornatum 0,017 0,012 0,014 0,007 0,008
C. mercuriale 0,040 0,035 0,039 0,035 0,009
C. caerulescens 0,055 0,049 0,053 0,050 0,062
TABLE 4 . Mean (below diagonal) and standard deviation (above diagonal) sequence divergence (uncorrected pdistances) at a 706 bp fragment of phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI) among pairs of species of Coenagrion .
PGI-1219 C. persicum C. pulchellum C. puella C. ornatum C. mercuriale C. caerulescens
C. persicum 0,006 0,008 0,006 0,010 0,011
C. pulchellum 0,019 0,008 0,003 0,010 0,011
C. puella 0,039 0,038 0,008 0,010 0,011
C. ornatum 0,019 0,007 0,038 0,010 0,011
C. mercuriale 0,068 0,062 0,068 0,065 0,012
C. caerulescens 0,086 0,082 0,086 0,080 0,099
Characterization of the habitat and some notes on the behaviour . Coenagrion persicum seems to prefer running waters of small springs with rich herbaceous vegetation in and around the water ( Fig. 5 , above). We found C. persicum at four sites in mountain regions in Iran ( Fig. 5 , map), with two flourishing populations showing about one hundred individuals. One of the latter was near the type locality in Lorestãn Province ( Fig. 5 (1): 33.459799°N , 49.349852°E ; 1817 m ; 11.VI.2015 ), and the other was in Esfahãn Province near Dari Sari ( Fig. 5 (2): 33.249639°N , 49.947417°E ; 2329 m ; 12.VI.2015 ). These two localities were characterized as headwater areas with herb-rich brooks and ditches surrounded by wet meadows. Two further small populations with not more than 10 individuals during our visit were located in Esfahãn Province on the Annaarbar River near Noqan ( Fig. 5 (3): 33.180695°N , 50.064721°E ; 2235 m ; 12.VI.2015 ) and Pelasjan River near Singerd ( Fig. 5 (4): 32.823649°N , 50.429044°E ; 2155 m ; 12.VI.2015 ). Coenagrion persicum individuals were not observed flying distances of more than 2 meters, and were found resting in the vegetation in and around the water most of the time. One pair was observed laying eggs in floating vegetation ( Fig. 3 G). No territorial behaviour was observed. Coenagrion persicum co-occurs with other rheophilic species such as Coenagrion vanbrinkae , Calopteryx intermedia Selys, 1887 , Caliaeschna microstigma (Schneider, 1845) and Cordulegaster insignis nobilis Morton, 1916 . At all localities it was much rarer than C. vanbrinkae .