Amblytropidia australis Bruner, 1904
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https://doi.org/ 10.15560/16.3.597 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A86B2A-FFF3-7306-9794-FD86B778FB25 |
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Marcus |
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Amblytropidia australis Bruner, 1904 |
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Amblytropidia australis Bruner, 1904 View in CoL
Figure 3J View Figure 3
Material examined. URUGUAY • 75 nymphs; Monte- video, Área Protegida de los Humedales de Santa Lucía; 34°47′07″S, 056 ° 20′04″W; 29–30 Dec. 2012; S.Greco and E. Lorier leg.; FCE-AC 4099, 4107, 4109–4111, 4113, 4114, 4116, 4117 GoogleMaps • 44 nymphs, 11 ♂, 5 ♀; same locality; 27 Jan. 2013; S. Greco, W. S. Serra and G. Lecuona leg.; FCE- - AC 4100–4102 , 4104–4106 , 4108 , 4112 , 4118 , 4119 , 4332 , 4333 , 4345–4349 GoogleMaps • 7 nymphs, 22 ♂, 5 ♀; same locality; 27 Feb. 2013; S. Greco and W. S. Serra leg.; FCE-AC 4098, 4103, 4115, 4240, 4241–4245, 4273, 4275–4277, 4296 GoogleMaps • 21 ♂, 10 ♀; same locality; 23 Mar. 2013; S. Greco and W. S. Serra leg.; FCE-AC 4299–4303, 4313, 4375–4377 GoogleMaps .
Geographic distribution. Along the Paraná River in Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay ( Carbonell 2003; COPR 1982)
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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