Rhagovelia hambletoni Drake & Harris, 1933
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https://doi.org/ 10.15560/17.2.551 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A387F4-FFAB-4557-FCF7-FB54FCDFB9E6 |
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Marcus |
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Rhagovelia hambletoni Drake & Harris, 1933 |
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Rhagovelia hambletoni Drake & Harris, 1933 View in CoL
Figure 11E–H
New records. BRAZIL • 5 ♂, 5 ♀; Maranhão, Caxias, Baixa Grande stream; −04.75722, −043.66055, 06 Aug. 2019; C.L. Franco et al. leg.; LEAq 00004 GoogleMaps • 1 ♂; Ma- ranhão, Caxias, Batatal stream; −04.96166, −043.38916; 07 Aug. 2019; C.L. Franco et al. leg.; LEAq 00008 GoogleMaps • 18 ♂, 9 ♀; Maranhão, Codó, Buriti Corrente stream; −04.75194, −043.66638; 04 Oct. 2019; C.L. Franco et al. leg.; LEAq 00184 GoogleMaps • 63 ♂, 44 ♀; Maranhão, Aldeias Altas, Poção stream; −04.67388, −043.54138; 27 Aug. 2019; C.L. Franco et al. leg.; LEAq 00107, 00113, 00119, 00221 00223, 00226, 00227, 00229, 00230 GoogleMaps .
Identification. Both males and females of R. hambletoni could be reliably identified. The pronotum is short, not covering the mesonotum ( Fig. 11E, G), like in other species of the angustipes complex ( Polhemus 1997). Males lack a spine on the fore trochanter, have black middle coxa ( Fig. 11F), bear about seven spines on the hind femur, display shiny black areas dorsally on the center of abdominal segments V–VIII ( Fig. 11E), and have laterotergites gradually tapering posteriorly ( Fig. 11E). Females have hind trochanter yellowish ( Fig. 11H), hind femur with three to five spines, and abdominal lateroter- gites reflected over the mediotergites ( Fig. 11G) (Moreira 2012).
Distribution in Brazil. MA*, BA, MT, MS, MG, ES, SP, RJ.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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