Podaena latipalpis
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2678.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FB43BE83-EBB8-4D58-85CF-CBE73DD683FE |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A1C83B-FFDB-8F0B-CCC2-0D3DFCA4FECA |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Podaena latipalpis |
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Podaena latipalpis View in CoL complex
This complex includes four species which share a very similar morphology in most characters, and can only be separated by differences in the male maxillary palps ( Figs 1−10 View FIGURES 1−24 ) and in the male foretibiae ( Figs 39−46 View FIGURES 39−46 ). Furthermore, these four species have a serrate distal edge in the elytra ( Fig. 94 View FIGURES 83−94 ), not present in the remaining seven species ( Fig. 93 View FIGURES 83−94 ). The male foretibiae in the species of this complex show an expansion of the proximal half and a constriction of the distal half, both best observed in the lateral view ( Figs 43−46 View FIGURES 39−46 ), a marked invagination between the expanded proximal half and the constricted distal half, and two thick spines (tibial spines 1 and 2) also best seen in the lateral view. In addition, there is a lateral expansion bearing rows of thin setae and some thicker setae at the distal end, best seen in the anterior view ( Figs 39−42 View FIGURES 39−46 ).
Besides differences among the male maxillary palps ( Figs 1−10 View FIGURES 1−24 ), the four species in this complex can be separated by the morphology of the male foretibiae, in particular by a combination of characters such as the shape and position of the invagination, the relative length and width of the proximal expansion and the distal constriction ( Figs 43−46 View FIGURES 39−46 ), and the shape and chaetotaxy of the distal expansion ( Figs 39−42 View FIGURES 39−46 ). Admittedly, differences among species are subtle and should be studied under high magnification, but they are consistent and sufficient for a satisfactory species diagnosis.
Three of the four species placed in this complex are described as new, and are mostly based on material identified by Ordish (1984: 16) as Podaena latipalpis . Ordish appears to have interpreted the subtle differences we found in the male maxillary palps and foretibiae as intraspecific variability. All the species of this complex have been found in the North Island, with the exception of one population of P. latipalpis recorded from Nelson, in the north of the South Island.
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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