Bidessodes elongatus (Sharp, 1882)
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.658.10928 |
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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FE249A99-3CC0-4168-9DFF-BE2575F4481B |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/90CEA756-57AD-0CFB-D56C-98047A4C046C |
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Bidessodes elongatus (Sharp, 1882) |
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Bidessodes elongatus (Sharp, 1882) View in CoL Figs 35-40, 101
Bidessus elongatus Sharp, 1882:25; Blackwelder, 1944;76.
Bidessus (Bidessodes) elongatus , Zimmermann, 1919: 61; 1921: 200.
Bidessodes elongatus , Young: 1969: 2.
Bidessodes (Bidessodes) elongatus , Young, 1986: 216; Biström, 1988: 7; Nilsson, 2016: 98.
Diagnosis.
This species does not have a carinate prosternum in either male or female. The prosternal process is somewhat medially longitudinally sulcate, the lateral margins are slightly convergent to the rounded apex. The male mesotibia is unmodified. The male metatrochanter is medially transversely somewhat ridged, but the metafemur is not noticeably modified (Fig. 40). The male abdominal ventrite VI is apically and laterally slightly impressed. The male median lobe is basally moderately broad and apically robust and strongly curved to a narrowly rounded apex (Fig. 36). In ventral aspect it is broad and laterally broadly sinuate with the apex shallowly emarginate with each ramus short and sharply pointed (Fig. 37). The basal segment of the lateral lobe is small and transverse (Fig. 38). The apical segment is formed as a slender stalk basally with a very large, transverse apical lobe that is abruptly curved on the ventral apex (Fig. 39). Specimens are elongate slender with maculate elytra (Fig. 35).
Discussion.
Sharp (1882) mentioned that this species, “… will no doubt form a distinct genus." That eventually proved to be the case as Bidessus elongatus became the type of Bidessodes .
Distribution.
The type locality for this species is somewhat ambiguous. The specimens were evidently collected by Champion, but the localities, "Paso Antonio" and “Tortola” are not easily identified today. In a letter from Champion (http://james-champion.com/diary-2012/thursday-14th-june-2012-letter-13th-march-1881/) he mentions the "Rio Michotoya," which is more easily located, and the star on the map included here reflects that locality (Fig. 101). Known from Guatemala and Costa Rica (Fig. 101).
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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