Gone with the wind: westward dispersal across the Indian Ocean and island speciation in Hemicordulia dragonflies (Odonata: Corduliidae)
Author
Dijkstra, Klaas-Douwe B.
text
Zootaxa
2007
1438
27
48
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.175929
d280489c-4168-4888-ac6d-ea85f3b362e7
1175-5326
175929
Hemicordulia virens
(Rambur)
Figs 3, 8
,
13
.
Cordulia virens
Rambur, 1842
: 147
.
Holotype
Ψ:
Mauritius
(UMO) [not examined].
Cordulia
(
Hemicordulia
?)
virens
(
Rambur, 1842
)
–
Selys (1871: 253 (bulletin)
, 19 (reprint)).
Hemicordulia
(?)
virens
(
Rambur, 1842
)
–
Kirby (1890: 47)
.
Further material
:
MAURITIUS
: 4 ď, 4 Ψ, Moka,
30.vi.1945
–
30.xii.1948
; J. M. Vinson (
BMNH
); 1 ď, Macak’Rd,
11.v.1959
, leg. unknown (
MNHN
); 1 Ψ, F[ôre]t de Machabée,
19.iii.1981
, L. Matilé (
MNHN
); 1 ď, Cachette, Ruisseau Saint-Denis,
350 m
a.s.l.,
2.ii.1999
, D. Grand (Coll. D. Grand); 1 ď, Cachette, ruisselet forestier,
300 m
a.s.l.,
2.ii.1999
, D. Grand (
MNHN
); 1 ď, Rivière Tamarin,
1 m
a.s.l.,
2.ii.1999
, D. Grand (
MNHN
); 1 Ψ (head missing), Black River,
120 m
a.s.l.,
7.iv.1999
, A. Martens (Coll. A. Martens); 1 ď, Rivière du Poste, W Grand Bassin,
645 m
a.s.l.,
12.iv.1999
, A. Martens (Coll. A. Martens); 2 ď, Black River, spring area,
680 m
a.s.l.,
16.iv.1999
, A. Martens (Coll. A. Martens).
Diagnosis.
Palest and one of the largest species.
H. atrovirens
from neighbouring
Réunion
, by contrast, is the darkest known. The two species agree in their large size, high Ax and Px counts, thick blunt-tipped cerci (
Figs 3, 8
) and the basal position of the vulvar scale (
Fig. 13
).
Remarks.
The
holotype
was not seen, but is described as a large, pale specimen from
Mauritius
, conforming with the diagnosis.
As
morphological and geographic proximity suggest,
Hemicordulia
populations on
Mauritius
and
Réunion
are closely related. The extreme difference in coloration makes separation straightforward and warrants recognition at the species level. Similar differences separate Micronesian species (e.g. Buden & Paulson 2003). All specimens listed by
Fraser (1949
;
1950
) were re-examined, and inconsistencies between my
Fig. 13
and Fraser’s (1949) illustration of the vulvar scale and S9 (where the segment is very short) result from a degree of variability in this structure and Fraser’s inaccurate depiction thereof.
Range and ecology.
Endemic to
Mauritius
, where restricted to the mountains in the south-west, which harbour the island’s main forest remnants. It is notable that records are from an altitudinal range of
120 to 680 m
(
Mauritius
is only up to
823 m
high), lower than most sites of its sibling species
H. atrovirens
. Breeds in pools in rocky streams and rivers, which are mostly forested. Males have been observed patrolling such streams in search of females. Adults have been observed from December to June (D. Grand & A. Martens in litt.).