Denticulobasis and Tuberculobasis, new genera close to Leptobasis, with description of ten new species (Odonata: Coenagrionidae).
Author
Machado, Angelo B. M.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2108
1
36
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.187806
9a495f32-3eb8-4b35-bd46-adca3b5db2d2
1175-5326
187806
Tuberculobasis inversa
(
Selys, 1876
)
comb. nov.
Figures 31–32
,
49
,
63
, 66–68
Telagrion inversum
Selys (1876: 969)
;
Kirby (1890: 155)
.
Leptobasis tuberculata
Santos (1961: 171)
.
Leptobasis inversum
Santos (1965: 9)
;
Bridges (1994: VII:119)
.
Leptobasis inversa
Davies & Tobin (1984: 77)
;
Garrison (1991: 13)
;
Tsuda (2000: 38)
;
Lencioni (2006: 156)
.
Specimens examined:
Holotype
3.
BRASIL
, Pará State, Santarém (
2º25´S
,
54º42´W
) (IRSN). 1 3, Amazonas State, Tefé (
3º22´S
,
64º42´W
),
XII.1960
, Carvalho leg. (A.B.M.M.). 1 Ƥ,
PERU
, Loreto Department. Explorama Lodge,
50 miles
NE of Iquitos on Amazon River at the junction with Yanomano River,
30.VIII.1989
, S.W. Dunkle leg (SWD).
Distribution
.
Brazil
, Amazonas, Pará, and Rondônia States.
Peru
, Loreto Department.
Remarks
.
Tuberculobasis inversa
was described by
Selys (1876)
based on a single male from Santarém, Pará,
Brazil
.
Santos (1961)
described and illustrated both sexes of
Leptobasis tuberculata
from Porto Velho, Rondônia,
Brazil
but after examining the
holotype
of
T. inversa
synonymized
L. tuberculata
with
L. inversa
(
Santos, 1965
)
. The
holotype
lacks head and right wings, but color is well preserved. The descriptions made by
Selys (1876)
and
Santos (1961)
are adequate. Until recently the only illustrations known for females specimen of
T. inversa
were those provided by
Santos (1961)
under
L. tuberculata
.
I had the opportunity to study and provide an illustration of the thoracic structures of a specimen from
Peru
that agreed well with the specimen described by
Santos (1961)
especially on the unique shape of the hind prothoracic lobe (
Fig. 49
). R.W. Garrison identified as
T. inversa
a male in his collection found in the same month and at the same place where the female illustrated herein had been collected and suggested, and I agree, that it is the female of
T. inversa
.
However, the Peruvian specimen has a pair of small but very evident mesepisternal tubercles that are apparently lacking in the Brazilian specimen described by Santos. I believe these small tubercle might have been overlooked by
Santos (1961)
as he did with the tubercles of the females of
T. costalimai
(see Remarks under
T. costalimai
). Besides, by its male character
T.
inversa
belongs in the
costalimai
group in which the known females (
T. costalimai
,
T. williamsoni
)
have tubercles, whereas the known females (
T.mammilaris
,
T. tirio
and
T. yanomami
) of the
mammilaris
group the known females (
T. mammilaris
,
T. tirio
and
T. yanomami
) have no tubercles. In the
costalimai
species group
T. inversa
can be easily separated from the other species by its subparallel mesepisternal tubercles, with anterior borders connected to mesostigmal plate by a curved plate (
Figs. 31, 32
).