Neotropical osmylids (Neuroptera, Osmylidae): Three new species of Isostenosmylus Krüger, 1913, new distributional records, redescriptions, checklist and key for the Neotropical species
Author
Martins, Caleb Califre
Author
Ardila-Camacho, Adrian
Author
Aspöck, Ulrike
text
Zootaxa
2016
4149
1
1
66
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4149.1.1
a4408b5b-0ea4-4d35-a7de-8f9694fa6e9e
1175-5326
256806
3C009047-18B7-4C79-9C22-6D7659AA533B
Gumilla longicornis
(
Walker, 1853
)
(
Fig. 4
)
Osmylus longicornis
Walker, 1853
: 235
. Refs.
Walker (1853)
,
Navás (1912)
,
Ardila-Camacho & Noriega (2014)
.
Holotype
male (BMNH).
Type-locality.
“Georgia”.
Material
examined.
Holotype
,
“
Georgia
”, (
1♂
BMNH
).
Distribution.
Country(ies) unknown, “
Georgia
”, probably northern South America.
Redescription. Head (
Fig. 4
A).
Antennae pale yellow, longer than forewing, scape brown, as wide as long, with many brown setae, flagellomeres twice as long as broad, with two rings of long setae. Ocelli absent; vertex and occiput dark brown.
Thorax (
Fig. 4
A).
Prothorax pale yellow with many dark brown spots, as long as wide; entire surface of pronotum covered with numerous light amber setae arising from protuberant bases, mainly on the sides. Mesothorax and metathorax as long as wide; meso- and metanota pale yellow with many dark brown spots, mainly close to wing bases, entire surface covered with fine pale brown setae.
Legs (
Fig. 4
A).
All segments pale yellow, procoxa almost as long as femur. Mid- and hindcoxae short; femora and tibiae with numerous small brown setae. Tarsi and tarsal claws dark brown, arolium present.
Wings (
Fig. 4
B)
. Wings broad (maximum width of forewing
7.15 mm
, hindwing
5.85 mm
) with irregular reticulation, membrane hyaline and light brown veins with some dark spots. Forewing with numerous small pale setae on the wing margin; costal field wide, narrowing near the wing apex, with 49 crossveins, none of them forked; pterostigmal area with a small pale brown spot; whitish subcostal field with some elongated brown spots; Rs forked near to wing base, with eight branches; MP forked before the midlength of wing; dark spots and nygmata absent. Hindwing with small pale setae on the wing margin; narrow costal field, with 42 crossveins, all of them simple; pterostigmal area whitish; Rs with six branches; dark spots and nygmata absent.
Abdomen.
Abdomen and genitalia of
holotype
lost and could not be located.
Female
unknown.
Remarks.
G. longicornis
is very similar to
G. adspersus
, however, the
holotype
of this species (which is the only known specimen) is in bad condition and lacks most of its abdomen.
With
respect to those facts, it is very difficult to decide whether
G. adspersus
and
G. longicornis
are conspecific.
Considering
the large distance of the records between the two taxa, one in the
Neartic
, and one in the
Neotropic region
, one can hardly imagine that they are conspecific.
However
, there are justified doubts whether the only specimen of
G. longicornis
has really been found in
Georgia
(in USA).
The British Museum
in
London
was in the possession of
John Abbot’s
collection, when
Walker
described the species.
John Abbot
was born in
London
on
1 June 1752
, he moved to
Bulloch County
in
Georgia
(USA), where he lived until his death in
December 1840
.
He
was an entomologist and an ornithologist, and he collected a lot of insects there, which were later deposited in the
British Museum. In
the 19th century, it was quite usual that entomologists labelled material which they had received from elsewhere with the places where they lived.
This
could have happened with the
holotype
of
G. longicornis
.
Possibly J.
Abbot had received the specimen from somebody who had collected it somewhere in
South America
.
Oswald (2013)
argues that
Georgia
in Walker’s description is not in the USA, but somewhere in
northern South America
.
There is no proof of this statement; moreover, we have not found a locality named
Georgia
in
northern South America. In
our opinion, the specimen simply was wrongly labeled.