Melligomphus ardens ( Needham 1930 )

Wilson, Keith Duncan Peter & Xu, Zaifu, 2009, Gomphidae of Guangdong & Hong Kong, China (Odonata: Anisoptera) 2177, Zootaxa 2177, pp. 1-62 : 36-39

publication ID

1175­5334

persistent identifier

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scientific name

Melligomphus ardens ( Needham 1930 )
status

 

Melligomphus ardens ( Needham 1930) View in CoL

Figs. 18 (a–i), Figs. 19 (a–c)

Onychogomphus ardens Needham 1930 View in CoL : Needham (1930: 39 pl. 5. figs 7–7a, Fujian); Chao (1953: 1–52, figs 1–50, Fujian); Chao (1954: 257, figs 413–426); Sui & Sun (1986: 96–98, figs 64a–g, Fujian).

Lamelligomphus camelus View in CoL nec Martin: Fraser (1942: 340).

Melligomphus ardens ( Needham 1930) View in CoL : Chao (1990: 370–374, figs 1–13, Fujian, Guizhou & Zhejiang); Zhang (1999: 244–245, figs 24.71a–i, Fujian, Guangdong, Guizhou & Zhejiang); Hua (2000: 11, Fujian, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hunan & Zhejiang); Wilson (2005: 111, Guangxi).

Specimens: 8 ♂ (Nos. 21359, 21379, 21318, 21328, 21307, 21339, 21340 & 21320), 5 v 2002, Yangchun, SW Guangdong, coll. ZX .

Description of ♂: Chao (1953b) has provided an exhaustive description of M. ardens but in the form of a monograph detailing its external morphology. An abbreviated description is provided here. Male. – Labium pale cream with pale brownish edges. Labrum black with a pair of large yellow spots ( Fig. 18a). Anteclypeus yellow, postclypeus black. Antefrons black. Postfrons broadly black at base; distal half occupied by narrowly divided yellow transerse, crest stripe. Synthorax black with a yellow dorsal stripe connected to yellow collar stripe ( Figs. 18b–c), the latter narrowly divided at centre. Pair of additional, narrowly isolated, yellow stripes located adjacent and anterior to the collar on the spiracular dorsum ( Fig. 18c). Small isolated superior yellow spot. Mesepimeron with a broad yellow stripe. Metepisternum black with yellow stripe reduced to small isolated superior spot (below wing base) and small isolated central stripe ( Fig 18b). Metepimeron and metaposternum yellow. Legs black. Wings hyaline with amber-enfumed bases to triangle. Base of hindwing illustrated in Fig. 18i. Abdomen S1 black above, yellow below. S2 black above with a yellow triangularshaped spot just above the auricle; auricle yellow; ventero-lateral, basal black spot and L-shaped yellow spot at distal, venter-lateral margin. S3–6 black with a large yellow dorsal, triangular spot at base. Dorsum S8 with pair of prominent, rounded-tipped, conical humps, located at centre of segment ( Figs. 18e–f). S7 yellow basal half, black distally. S8–10 black and anal appendages black. Hamules illustrated in Fig. 18g –h. Superior appendages slightly curved at tip but not hooked and reflexed into the inferior appendages as in Lamelligomphus . Valules prominent, rounded and oblong, illustrated in Fig. 18d. Inferior appendages acutely angled at ventero-basal corner extending well beyond the length of the superior appendages. Penile organ is illutrated in Fig. 19c.

Measurements (mm): abd. + app. 46.0–47.0, hw 35.0–39.0.

Differential diagnosis: This species is very similar to species of Lamelligomphus but has a dorsal stripe on the synthorax linked to the collar stripe to form a 7-shaped mark, whereas all species of Lamelligomphus have isolated dorsal stripes. Like Lamelligomphus camelus , abdominal S8 has a pair of dorsal humps. In camelus these are located at the basal margin of S8, are much larger, with the tips curved anteriorly (cf Fig. 17j), whereas the humps are located at the middle of S 8 in M. ardens , and are not curved anteriorly at their tips. The distal, dorsal margin of S7 of M. ardens is unformly flat and not markedly upturned as in L. camelus and also L. formosanus ( Fig. 15c). All other species of Melligomphus lack prominent humps on S8.

Distribution: China (Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hunan & Zhejiang).

Chao, H. - F. (1953 b) The external morphology of the dragonfly Onychogomphus ardens Needham. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 122 (6), 1 - 56, figs 1 - 50.

Chao, H. - F. (1954) Classification of Chinese dragonflies of the family Gomphidae. II - IV. Acta entomologica sinica, 4, 23 - 82, 213 - 275, 399 - 426.

Chao, H. - F. [= Zhao, X. - F.] (1990) The gomphid dragonflies of China (Odonata: Gomphidae). The Science and Technology Publishing House, Fuzhou, Fujian. [In Chinese; English summary and keys].

Fraser, F. C. (1942) Notes on the genus Heliogomphus Laidlaw, with descriptions of two new species (Odonata). Transactions of the Royal entolomological Society of London, 92 (2), 333 - 341.

Hua, L. (2000). List of Chinese Insects Vol. 1. Zhongshan University Press, Guangzhou.

Needham, J. G. (1930) A manual of the dragonflies of China. Zoologia Sinica 11 (1), i - xi, 1 - 344, 2 figs, 20 pls.

Wilson, K. D. P. (2005) Odonata of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China, part II: Anisoptera. International Journal of Odonatology, 8 (1), 107 - 168.

Zhang, J. (1999) Odonata. In: Huang, B. (Ed.) Fauna of insects in Fujian Province of China, vol. 3. Fujian Agricultural University, Fuzhou, pp 187 - 300.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Odonata

Family

Gomphidae

Genus

Melligomphus