Okanagana rubrobasalis Davis, 1926
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5346.5.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C8CA09D0-51A8-4E4D-A1A2-FB9E82D557B7 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8407580 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038487EB-9868-FF1E-03B6-3B19FEBE0050 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Okanagana rubrobasalis Davis, 1926 |
status |
stat. nov. |
Okanagana rubrobasalis Davis, 1926 View in CoL stat. rev.
= Okanagana tristis rubrobasalis Davis, 1926 View in CoL
Okanagana tristis rubrobasalis View in CoL — Davis, 1926: 184.
Okanagana rubrobasalis View in CoL — Katō, 1932: 175 (Revised status to species level).
Okanagana tristis rubrobasilis — [sic], Simons, 1954: 178 (Revised status to original combination and spelling error)
Okanagana rubrobasalis View in CoL stat. rev. (Revised to species level as proposed by Katō, 1932).
Type Locality: Holotype: male from Nellie , San Diego Co., CA, 24 June 1918 ; Allotype from Upland , San Bernardino Co., CA 1 July 1920 . Holotype and allotype are deposited at American Museum of Natural History ( Sanborn & Heath 2017).
Rationale for status revision: Two fresh specimens were sequenced, including one from near the allotype locality of O. tristis rubrobasalis at Upland, San Bernardino Co., California ( Davis 1926; Supp. Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). Our results found a sister relationship for O. tristis tristis + O. canescens ( Figs. 5–7 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 View FIGURE 7 ). Unlike O. tristis , this species exhibits a rainfall-mediated protoperiodical phenology ( Chatfield-Taylor & Cole 2017) and has a southern distribution that is allopatric from O. tristis tristis . There are also measurable, consistent differences in the dominant frequency of their call (unpublished data). The clear genetic separation from O. tristis tristis (COI uncorrected distance 5.56–5.68%; Supp. Table 2 View TABLE 2 ), combined with differing ecology and an allopatric distribution support revising the status of O. tristis rubrobasalis to the level of species as O. rubrobasalis stat. rev. as first proposed by Katō (1932).
Description: O. rubrobasalis was originally described as a subspecies of O. tristis ( Davis 1926) . Major separating features from O. tristis included the blood-red wing membranes in O. rubrobasalis ( Fig. 13A, B View FIGURE 13 ) compared to pale orange in O. tristis , a longer, red sternite VIII ( Fig. 13C, D View FIGURE 13 ), broader wings, and the differing geographic distribution ( Davis 1926). We here add that the front is strongly pronounced as in O. cruentifera rather than like O. tristis . The trapezoidal pattern of markings on the mesonotum are red and much less pronounced than the orange markings in typical O. tristis . In new specimens (which Davis seldom had) the sternites are also blood red ( Figs 13B, E View FIGURE 13 ) rather than orange, losing this strong color gradually over time. The tergites are lined with red along their distal margins ( Fig. 13A View FIGURE 13 ).
CA |
Chicago Academy of Sciences |
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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Okanagana rubrobasalis Davis, 1926
Cole, Jeffrey A., Chatfield-Taylor, Will, Smeds, Elliott A., Cooley, John R., Gonzalez, Valorie A. & Wong, Caressa 2023 |
Okanagana tristis rubrobasilis
Simons, J. N. 1954: 178 |
Okanagana rubrobasalis
Kato, M. 1932: 175 |
Okanagana tristis rubrobasalis
Davis, W. T. 1926: 184 |