Dyscolus denigratus ( Bates, 1891 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.646 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4C9F63B2-DB17-4EDB-ADEE-13AC9EFB921B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3848371 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B7726A-1362-5319-FDBD-FBA3FAF0FAD4 |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar |
scientific name |
Dyscolus denigratus ( Bates, 1891 ) |
status |
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Dyscolus denigratus ( Bates, 1891) View in CoL
Figs 45–50 View Figs 45–50
Colpodes denigratus Bates, 1891: 17 View in CoL .
Dyscolus palatus Moret, 1998: 18 View in CoL . syn. nov.
Dyscolus (Dyscolus) denigratus View in CoL – Moret 2005: 128.
Dyscolus (Dyscolus) palatus View in CoL – Moret 2005: 130.
Dyscolus denigratus View in CoL is a highly variable species, with a broad range of variation within each population regarding body size, form of the pronotum, length of the legs, and form of the apex of the male aedeagus ( Figs 45–46, 48–50 View Figs 45–50 ). The tree based on the COI sequences separates two clades (Fig. 2): one in the south-west part of the area of D. denigratus View in CoL , represented in our dataset by the Cotopaxi and Pichincha populations, vs a north and north-east zone represented by the Cotacachi, Cayambe and Guamaní populations. Additionally, three species-level units are recognized through BIN analysis: the first one embraces the populations of the south-western clade, including specimens identified as D. palatus View in CoL . The northern clade is split into two BIN units: one for the Guamaní population, and another for the Cotacachi and Cayambe populations. However, we were unable to find any morphological character that reliably reflects these divisions. According to the form of the apex of the median lobe, the Cotacachi population ( Fig. 49 View Figs 45–50 ) seems to be closer to the Pichincha population ( Fig. 50 View Figs 45–50 ) than to the Guamaní one ( Fig. 48 View Figs 45–50 ), in contradiction with the molecular results. Obviously, the phylogeny of the denigratus View in CoL complex cannot be resolved from the COI sequences alone.
We thus take a conservative approach, with no taxonomic decision regarding the specific or subspecific status of the components of the denigratus complex, except for the synonymy of Dyscolus palatus with Dyscolus denigratus . Dyscolus palatus was described from specimens from the Pichincha, Atacazo and Corazón volcanoes in the Western Cordillera ( Fig. 47 View Figs 45–50 ). This taxon was then thought to be more closely related to D. altarensis ( Bates, 1891) than to D. denigratus , due to its relatively broader and shorter body. The specimen of D. palatus included in our analysis (COI voucher PM359-01, BOLD sequence SUM168- 18) instead suggests that D. palatus and D. denigratus are conspecific. A re-examination of the type series of D. palatus and of large series of specimens recently collected on the Pichincha shows that the body dimensions of the two taxa partly overlap ( Fig. 51 View Fig ). Owing to the existence of these transition forms, D. palatus cannot be maintained as a good species and we therefore treat it as a synonym of D. denigratus .
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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SubFamily |
Harpalinae |
Tribe |
Platynini |
Genus |
Dyscolus denigratus ( Bates, 1891 )
Moret, Pierre & Murienne, Jérôme 2020 |
Dyscolus (Dyscolus) denigratus
Moret P. 2005: 128 |
Dyscolus (Dyscolus) palatus
Moret P. 2005: 130 |
Dyscolus palatus
Moret P. 1998: 18 |
Colpodes denigratus
Bates H. W. 1891: 17 |