Hemicordulia tau (Selys, 1871)

Theischinger, G. & Endersby, I., 2014, Australian Dragonfly (Odonata) Larvae: Descriptive history and identification, Memoirs of Museum Victoria 72, pp. 73-120 : 96

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.24199/j.mmv.2014.72.06

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D62D39-8A1A-4446-FF77-FCB9FD09FA6F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Hemicordulia tau (Selys, 1871)
status

 

Hemicordulia tau (Selys, 1871) View in CoL

Fig. 46 View Figs 37-48

Tillyard (1914, 1915b, 1916b, 1917b, 1926, 1932); Watson (1962, 1968); O’Farrell (1970); Allbrook (1979); Williams (1980); Hawking (1986, 1993, 1995); Watson & O’Farrell (1991); Watson et al. (1991); Hawking & Smith (1997); Ingram et al. (1997); Hawking & Theischinger (1999); Gooderham & Tsyrlin (2002); Theischinger & Hawking (2003, 2006); Theischinger (2007a); Theischinger & Endersby (2009); Hawking et al. (2013).

*Genus Hemicordulia Selys, 1870

The larvae of each of H. australiae , H. flava and H. superba can be identified based on morphology ( Theischinger 2007a). Of the morpho-group H. intermedia and H. koomina only H. intermedia has a wide geographical range including northern, central and much of eastern Australia so that only identifications from the Pilbara area are doubtful. Of the morpho-group H. tau , H. continentalis and H. kalliste it appears that H. kalliste is the only species at, and restricted to, the extreme north of Australia, whereas H. tau is the only one occurring in Western Australia, central and most of southern Australia.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Odonata

Family

Corduliidae

Genus

Hemicordulia

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