Gibocercus Szumik, 1997, 1998
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4317.2.9 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:79Ef65Dd-Cd92-4D2D-A25C-4B825A4C5B6A |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6010069 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4B03E434-FFB8-FFD8-FF71-7FB8FB154CFE |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Gibocercus Szumik, 1997 |
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Gibocercus Szumik, 1997 View in CoL
Gibocercus Szumik, 1997:141 View in CoL , Ross, 2001: 35 (genus composition); Szumik, 2002: 444 (family composition); Szumik, 2004: 229 (phylogeny); Szumik, et al., 2008: 1003 (phylogeny); Szumik, 2012: 352 (family composition). Type species: Gibocercus chaco Szumik, 1997 View in CoL by original designation.
Diagnosis. Gibocercus iS clearly diStinguiShed by the Shape of the 10Lp with the inner tip hyperdeVeloped and the outer tip Very Short, fleShy and conical; the length of the conical LC1dp iS more than twice the width of the LC1, and haS few Setae and a clear, rounded conVexity on the dorSal face of the proceSS ( Szumik 1997).
Composition and distribution. Some of the SpecieS deScribed by RoSS (2001) are Sympatric with SpecieS preViouSly deScribed by Szumik or SpecieS deScribed by himSelf. SurpriSingly, RoSS did not make any reference to their geographic diStribution, neither to their clear Similarity; in fact there are no diagnoSeS for any of them. With the exception of G. sandrae RoSS, 2001, hiS new SpecieS are deScribed without any illuStration, aS in G. flavipes RoSS, 2001 Sympatric with G. nanai Szumik, 1997 ; G. magnus RoSS, 2001 Sympatric with G. beni Szumik, 1997 ; and G. napoa RoSS, 2001 Sympatric with G. sandrae RoSS, 2001. Gibocercus flavipes differS from G. nanai only on coloration detailS and the Sympatric diStributionS of the two SpecieS were not diScuSSed by RoSS. According to our cladiStic Study theSe SpecieS are SiSterS ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ); therefore G. flavipes iS propoSed aS a junior Synonym of G. nanai . A Similar Situation occurS with G. napoa and G. sandrae , giVen that both SpecieS were deScribed by RoSS in 2001; G. napoa iS the junior Synonym of G. sandrae baSed on page priority ( G. sandrae iS deScribed on page 39 and G. napoa on page 41), and becauSe G. sandrae waS illuStrated. The Synonymy of G. magnus with G. beni iS diScuSSed below under G. beni .
The low number of localitieS, with Some of the SpecieS known from juSt one or two recordS, SuggeStS that they are quite rare and SenSitiVe to enVironmental changeS; at leaSt thiS iS the caSe for the SpecieS preSent in Argentina. PerhapS the SenSitiVity condition iS connected with the large Size of the SpecimenS; they take almoSt a year to deVelop from egg to adult, whereaS the life cycle in other SpecieS take leSS than three monthS. After Synonymization, the genuS Gibocercus includeS 7 SpecieS: G. chaco from the Dry Chaco region of Argentina, G. beni moStly from BoliVian rain foreSt, G. nanai and G. peruviana from the North and South Amazon BaSinS of Peru, reSpectiVely, G. sandrae from the Amazon BaSin of Ecuador, G. urucumi from the Pantanal of Brazil and G. podamita n. sp. from the Amazon region of Brazil ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ). HoweVer, giVen that there are only a few locality recordS it iS not poSSible to make a deep biogeographic diScuSSion.
Relationships. According to the phylogenetic analySiS Gibocercus iS a well Supported, monophyletic genuS ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ). The SynapomorphieS that define the genuS are: male interocular elliptical area lightly depigmented (ch. 1), male poStocular Suture full deVeloped (ch. 7); Ma2 Vein deVeloped on the baSal two-thirdS (ch. 38); LC1dp conical (ch. 55), LC1dp with a conVexity on the de dorSal face (ch. 58); 10Lp1 with inner tip hyperdeVeloped (ch. 68), and microtrichia on 10Rp1 preSent (ch. 73). RoSS (2001) deScribed a few SpecieS and diVided the genuS into two Subgenera, Gibocercus and Amazonembia . According to our phylogenetic analySiS Amazonembia iS a paraphyletic group in termS of Gibocercus . RoSS’S propoSal Should be abandoned aS there iS no need to retain the paraphyletic Amazonembia . InStead, two cladeS are recognized in Gibocercus . One clade containS SpecieS preSent in a “Southern” Sector ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 , G. chaco , G. urucumi , G. beni , G. peruviana ) Supported by female prothorax pigmented (ch. 12); Ma2 and Mp completely deVeloped (chS. 38 and 39); baSal node of LC1 preSent (ch. 59); 10Rp2 broad and diScoidal (ch. 64) and Very Small maleS (ch. 84). The other clade includeS SpecieS preSent in a “northern” Sector ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 , G. sandrae , G. nanai , G. podamita n. sp.) Supported by haVing femaleS with interocular elliptical area Strongly depigmented (ch. 2); maleS with a large bladder on the hind baSitarSuS (ch. 20); 10Rp2 with longitudinal keelS (ch. 61); Hp Started on right Side of H (ch. 79) and male’S eyeS with OR>0.5 (ch. 90).
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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Gibocercus Szumik, 1997
Pereyra, Veronica 2017 |
Gibocercus
Szumik 2012: 352 |
Szumik 2008: 1003 |
Szumik 2004: 229 |
Szumik 2002: 444 |
Ross 2001: 35 |
Szumik 1997: 141 |