Erpetogomphus oxybelis sp. nov. from Veracruz, Mexico (Odonata: Gomphidae)
Author
Ortega-Salas, Héctor
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-02-12
4378
4
589
594
journal article
30775
10.11646/zootaxa.4378.4.10
3604a1c2-aff1-423b-885b-25377fd194e1
1175-5326
1171528
A62159A9-375E-42E1-9037-A9585677359A
Erpetogomphus oxybelis
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1
–
4
)
Holotype
.
♂
([
PSUC
]
PSUC
_FEM 70665),
México
:
Veracruz
state,
Tres Valles
municipality;
Río Hondo
, at bridge on
Los Naranjos
circuit,
10.6 km
NE from Mex. 145
Sayula de Alemán-Tierra Blanca Hwy.
(
18.387 N
, -
96.174 W
,
20 m
a.s.l.
)
18 August 1957
,
G.H. & A. Beatty
leg.
Etymology.
With the intention of following the historical nomenclature of the genus, this species is named
oxybelis
as in the colubrid genus.
Description of
holotype
.
Head.
Pale areas dull green, dark markings light brown. Labrum pale with dark margin, anteclypeus pale, darkening medially, postclypeus dark with lateral pale spots, antefrons pale with dark line along margin, vertex, occiput, antennae all brown, a small tubercle behind each ocellus; occiput mostly planar, slightly tumid medially, crest slightly concave covered with brown setae (
Figs. 1
; 3b, c).
Thorax.
Prothorax brown except for: anterior lobe with a yellow stripe covering half of its width along anterior margin and narrowing toward lateral 0.2 (
Fig. 1
). Pterothorax with pale areas yellow green. Middorsal stripe widening basally to collar, its upper end covering antealar sinus and extending posteriorly and connecting with both broad, well defined antehumeral and humeral stripes; second lateral stripe sinuate and ill-defined specially on its upper half; third lateral stripe present; posterior margin of metepimeron covered with thin white hairs; coxa and trochanters pale gray with slight wash of brown on joints; femur brown darkening apically; tibiae, tarsi and claws black (
Figs. 1
; 3a).
Wings
. Hyaline, venation black, pterostigma dark brown (
Fig. 1
); in FW fifth (left) and sixth (right) antenodal thickened, in HW fifth antenodal thickened; Ax: FW 14/15, HW 10/11; Px: FW 12/12, HW 11/11; crossveins under pterostigma: FW 5/4, HW 4/5; anal triangular cells: 4/4; HW
24.3 mm
.
FIGURE 1.
Erpetogomphus oxybelis
sp. nov.
, holotype ♂. Image composed digitally from fragmented specimen.
FIGURE 2.
Erpetogomphus oxybelis
sp. nov.
, holotype ♂. Details: a) caudal appendages, lateral view; b) caudal appendages, dorsal view; c) caudal appendages, ventral view; d) caudal appendages, posterior view; e) vesica spermalis fourth segment, dorsal view; f) vesica spermalis fourth segment, lateral view; g) hamules, lateral view; h) S2, ventral view.
FIGURE 3.
Erpetogomphus oxybelis
sp. nov.
, holotype ♂. Details: a) pterothorax, lateral view; b) head, frontal view; c) epicranium, dorsal view.
FIGURE 4
. Distribution map of
Erpetogomphus oxybelis
.
Abdomen.
S1 yellow with laterodorsal brown spots covering 0.5 apical of the segment length, these spots with tufts of brown hairs. S2 brown except for a yellow middorsal stripe widening at midlength, auricle yellow. S3
–
4 with a narrow middorsal yellow stripe on the basal 0.8. S5 like S3
–
4 but line is considerably narrower and diffused. S6 with a basal yellow ring on 0.25, extending as a dorsal stripe to 0.5 of the segment length. S7 like S6 but with a ring of 0.5 and stripe extending to 0.7. S8 brown with latero apical pale spots. S9
–
10 reddish brown with black transverse carina, posterior medial margin of S9 pointed; abdomen length
28 mm
(
Fig. 1
).
Accessory genitalia.
Anterior hamule light to dark brown, branched at distal 0.25, superior branch larger than inferior, superior branch with inner margin black; posterior hamule roughly triangular, apical tooth acute and straight (
Fig.
2g
, h
); fourth segment of vesica spermalis with cornuae bilobed (right lobe of
holotype
broken), posterior lobe triangular and twice as long as proximal lobe, proximal lobe round and directed laterally; prepuce well developed, lateral lobe a small rounded tooth (
Fig. 2e, f
).
Caudal appendages
. Cerci reddish-brown becoming dark brown posteriorly, arcuate with a prominent laterally compressed dorsal tubercle on distal 0.75, extreme base with a ventral blunt tooth (mostly hidden by posterior margin of S10), a ventral convex carina on distal 0.25 of cercus armed with an apical black tooth preceded by a small notch; epiproct light brown with a dorsal tubercle at 0.5 and its posterior 0.3 curved upward at 90° angle, tips triangular when viewed posteriorly, with black points directed laterally, its dorsal margin transverse to the medial axis of the abdomen (
Figs. 1–2a, b, c, d
).
Diagnosis.
Males of
E. oxybelis
are easily separated from most species of
Erpetogomphus
by the presence of a laterally compressed dorsal tubercle on the 0.25 distal of the cercus (
Fig. 2a, b d
). It can be distinguished from its closest allies of the
ophibolus
group:
Erpetogomphus constrictor
Ris, 1917,
E. sabaleticus
Williamson, 1918,
E. tristani
Calvert, 1912 and
E. ophibolus
Calvert, 1905 by the shape of the vesica spermalis.
In
E.
oxybelis this structure has a well-developed bilobed cornuae (
Fig. 2e, f
), while in the other four species the cornuae is lost (Garrison 1994: Figs
.
70–73
).
The shape of the epiproct separates this species from
E. constrictor
,
E. sabaleticus
and
E. tristani
; in these species this structure has the tips recurved so as to lie parallel to the base (Garrison 1994: Figs. 92–94), while in
E. oxybelis
is gently curved upwards at a 90° angle (
Fig. 2a
). In
E. oxybelis
the cerci have a small notch proximal to the apical tooth (
Fig. 2a
), which is not present in
E. constrictor
and
E. ophibolus
(Garrison 1994: Figs. 92, 95). The shape of the epiproct further separate
E. oxybelis
from
E. ophibolus
; in the first this structure is ca. 0.4 the length of the cerci (
Fig. 2a, b, c
), while in the latter is ca. 0.9 (Garrison
1994
: fig.
95
).
Habitat and ecology
. The only data available on this species is that from G.
H
. &
A. Beatty’s field notes: Large muddy creek, sand, mud and gravel bottom, 10
–
15’ ft. wide; 3
–
4’ deep, high dirt banks. Evidence of water rising
10
–
12
’ during rainy season. Other gomphid species collected at the same site:
Progomphus clendoni
Calvert,
1905
,
Phyllocycla volsella
(Calvert, 1905),
Erpetogomphus bothrops
Garrison
,
1994
,
E. ophibolus
,
Agriogomphus tumens
(Calvert, 1905), and
Phyllogomphoides
sp.
Distribution.
Known only from the
type
locality (
Fig. 4
).
Notes.
In an unpublished report from 1962, G.H. and A.F. Beatty made reference to this individual as
Erpetogomphus
sp.
nov.
3, later they gave it the ms. name “zookie” after Lester Zook, a rural missionary. Among the material collected in the Beatty’s expeditions there was a female individual labeled as
Erpetogomphus
“zooki” which after closer inspection turns out to be a misidentified female of
Erpetogomphus eutainia
Calvert, 1905
.