Taurodemus sharpi ( Blandford, 1898 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4442.2.11 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EBF34BC5-0CE9-4FD3-B623-DCF0E1A3894B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5960032 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/55119B4D-A423-FFED-C8A5-FF5A08EF0D4B |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Taurodemus sharpi ( Blandford, 1898 ) |
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Taurodemus sharpi ( Blandford, 1898) View in CoL
Xyleborus sharpi Blandford, 1898: 199 View in CoL .
Xyleborus sharpi sharpi Blandford, 1898 View in CoL . Subspecies designation: Wood 1974: 35.
Taurodemus sharpi sharpi Blandford, 1898 View in CoL . Combination: Wood, 1982: 792.
Xyleborus sharpi lenis Wood, 1974: 35 View in CoL . new synonymy.
Taurodemus sharpi lenis ( Wood, 1974) View in CoL . Combination: Wood 1982: 792.
Blandford (1898: 199) described X. sharpi View in CoL from three syntypes: two from Veracruz (Toxpam, Atoyac) and one from Paraiso, Guatemala. Blandford refers to slight differences in the degree of “gloss” in the elytral excavation without direct reference to individual specimens. Wood (1974: 35) described Xyleborus sharpi lenis View in CoL as a new subspecies from Veracruz, Mexico, thereby implicitly designating a nominate subspecies, X. sharpi sharpi View in CoL . Wood (1974, 1982, 1992, 2007) based his recognition of subspecies lenis View in CoL (Veracruz, Mexico) and sharpi View in CoL ( Costa Rica, Panama) on slight morphological differences and geographic separation. In subsequent treatments ( Wood 1982: 791, Wood & Bright 1992: 786, Wood 2007: 460) he treated the two subspecies as having disjunct distributions with X. sharpi lenis View in CoL occurring in southeastern Mexico and X. sharpi sharpi View in CoL occurring in Costa Rica and Panama.
In 1982 (p. 792) Wood designated a lectotype for X. sharpi sharpi citing the specimen from “Paraiso, prob. Panama ”, explicitly choosing to interpret the lectotype locality of sharpi Blandford as Panama, despite acknowledging that Blandford (1896: 199) stated that the locality was in Guatemala, later confirmed by Selander and Vaurie (1962). Among other considerations, this renders his arguments on disjunction of the two “subspecies” irrelevant. Subsequent collections in Oaxaca and Chiapas ( Mexico) have closed the geographical gap between Veracruz (type locality of lenis ) and Guatemala (type locality of sharpi ). A new record from Honduras reported below further reduces any geographical disjunction. Some of Wood’s specimens labeled as T. sharpi sharpi have the declivity more shagreened in appearance, but this character is variable in both Mexican and Costa Rican specimens. In none of his publications did Wood make any mention of the specimens cited by Blandford from Veracruz.
Minute morphological differences may seem to justify taxonomic recognition when allopatry is involved. However I have examined numerous specimens from the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Chiapas and all specimens in the NMNH identified as either sharpi or lenis . In my opinion the minute differences cited by Wood simply do not merit subspecific recognition and I believe that there is a single species found from southeastern Mexico to Panama.
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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Taurodemus sharpi ( Blandford, 1898 )
Atkinson, Thomas H. 2018 |
Xyleborus sharpi
Blandford, 1898 : 199 |
Xyleborus sharpi sharpi Blandford, 1898
Wood 1974 : 35 |
Taurodemus sharpi sharpi
Wood, 1982 : 792 |
Xyleborus sharpi lenis
Wood, 1974 : 35 |
Taurodemus sharpi lenis ( Wood, 1974 )
Wood 1982 : 792 |