Epigomphus wagneri, Haber, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4282.1.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:473BB1D9-438F-47FF-9717-D95EE950412E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5999737 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0F7B8794-FFB9-FFF7-AFC1-E29C04B1909E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Epigomphus wagneri |
status |
sp. nov. |
Epigomphus wagneri View in CoL new species
Figures 1 View FIGURE 1 d; 3c; 4c; 5e, f; 9c; 10c; 12.
Specimens examined. Holotype male: COSTA RICA, Provincia Puntarenas, Monteverde, Río Guacimal (10.27, - 84.82), 725 m, 27 June 2010, leg. WAH ( INBIO; INB 0004319188 About INB ).
Etymology. This species is named for David Wagner, a brilliant entomologist, naturalist, and gomphid enthusiast, who roused my passion for the Odonata , and who has proven to be a trusted friend and travel companion on many expeditions in Costa Rica and Ecuador.
Description. Male holotype. Head with maximum width 7.0 mm ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 d), dark brown above; labrum with a pair of large pale spots near lateral margins; base of mandible and gena pale; top of frons with a pale stripe covering anterior 2/3, indented in middle but unbroken; antennae all dark; eyes blue in life; lateral ocelli slightly closer to eye margin than to center line; postocellar area with only a shallow central depression; posterior margin of occiput with a rounded ridge, the ridge bearing a pair of collapsed small tubercles on dorsum; rear margin of ridge weakly indented in dorsal view; underside of head pale in anterior half, shading to dark in posterior half.
Thorax dark brown with a pattern of pale markings similar to E. subobtusus ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 d; 9c). Prothorax fore lobe with pale anterior margin; midlobe with a pair of contiguous pale spots in center and a pale spot on each side; hind lobe dark; propleuron pale on lower margin. Pterothorax with mesepisternum bearing two complete pale antehumeral stripes, both separate from collar stripe; mesepimeron with a complete pale stripe in center; metepisternum with a broad stripe that narrows posteriorly and ends almost separated from a posterior spot; metepimeron mostly pale bordered above by brown and with a thick central brown stripe about 2/3 as long as the segment; mesinfraepisternum with a pale spot at upper end and a larger pale triangle at lower end; metinfraepisternum all pale; metasternum pale; underside pale, unmarked. Legs. Fore and mid legs with femur mostly black, shading to brown at base and to lighter brown on posterior side; interior side of foreleg pale; hind femur light brown, shading to dark brown at apex. Wings hyaline ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 c) with brown to black venation; basal subcostal veins present; cubito-anal crossveins 3 in all wings; FW Ax 18, 17 with 6, 6 thickened; Px 13, 14; HW Ax 13, 14 with 6, 7 thickened; Px 13, 13; pterostigma dark red-brown, opaque, 3.3 mm in FW, 3.6 mm in HW; crossveins above supratriangle between arculus and point of branching of RP 6, 6 in FW, 4, 4 in HW; posttriangular cell space in FW with two rows of cells for 9, 8 cells.
Abdomen dark brown with pale markings; S1–4 with a pale dorsal mid line (wider on S1–2); S1–2 mostly pale on sides, S3 with a pale lateral stripe 3/4 length of segment; S4–6 with a basal pale triangle on sides; S7 2 /3 pale; S8–10 and appendages unmarked; S10 with a low dorsal hump barely grooved on mid line.
Abdominal appendages. Cercus ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 c; 10c) 2.2 mm long, shaped as in E. subobtusus ; distal transverse edge with 7 small teeth; epiproct forming a thick fused plate with short branches and a short, broad U-shaped sinus; in lateral view a hump at mid length where branches curve downward, then directed rearward to an abrupt dull acute apex; in ventral view the sinus indented at two levels ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 c).
Secondary genitalia. Vesica spermalis ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 e, f) similar to other Costa Rican species in having a ventral protuberance on the dorsal lobe, but differs from others in that the horns are pointed vertically as in E. camelus ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 g) and E. quadracies ( Calvert 1903) ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 h), while those of other Costa Rican species are directed rearward.
Measurements (mm). Total length 47; abdomen 36; FW 33; HW 31, maximum width 8.0.
Female. Unknown.
Diagnosis. Thoracic pattern and cercus shape as in E. subobtusus , epiproct shorter than cercus with short, weakly differentiated branches, and the sinus between the branches shallow and broadly U-shaped.
Natural history. E. wagneri is known only from the male holotype. The specimen was a mature male that was perched at 11:00 hr, apparently on a territory, on a dead stick projecting from a shallow, partly shaded pool in a spring stream at the interface of forest and pasture. No larvae of E. wagneri were found during numerous visits to the area spanning seven years.
INB |
Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad |
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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