Vadonia saucia (Mulsant & Godart, 1855)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.12807355 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12807359 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C0084442-FFB8-FFA9-FE8A-2ECEEC9CAC0F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Vadonia saucia (Mulsant & Godart, 1855) |
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Vadonia saucia (Mulsant & Godart, 1855) View in CoL ( Fig. 1 View Fig )
Material examined: Yambol (in Cyrillic), 21.5.[19]59, 1 ♂, 1 ♀, [collector unknown], D. Gradinarov det. ( NMNHS) .
Vadonia saucia View in CoL was described from Crimean Peninsula based on unicoloured black specimens and subsequently was misinterpreted as a melanistic form of V. bipunctata (Fabricius, 1781) View in CoL (after Danilevsky 2009: 696). The species was revalidated by Danilevsky in 2009 after reexamined the specimens from the type series of V. bipunctata mulsantiana (Plavilstshikov, 1936) ( Danilevsky 2009: 696) View in CoL .
The examined specimens from the Yambol town area in appearance and color are similar to common form of V. unipunctata unipunctata View in CoL ( Fig. 1A, B View Fig ). The spines of the hind tibiae of the male specimen are paired. The reliable identification of V. saucia View in CoL is possible only by morphology of the male genitalia ( Fig. 1C, D, E View Fig ) ( Danilevsky 2009: 696; 2014a: 262- 263; 2014b: 241). Arrow-like penis apex with sharply pronounced lateral edges is the most peculiar character of the species (Fig, 1 D). Parameres are less widened than in V. unipunctata View in CoL ( Fig. 1 E View Fig ).
Until now V. saucia was known from a number of localities along the southern coast of the Crimean Peninsula ( Danilevsky 2014b: 241) and from Romanian Dobrudzha ( Serafim 2006: 230, as V. hirsuta (K. Daniel & J. Daniel, 1891) ; Danilevsky 2014a: 262-263). In Crimea totally black forms are common, but rather rare in the Romanian population ( Danilevsky 2014a: 263).
The present record extends substantially the known range of V. saucia to the south. It is possible that the species is even more widespread in the region. It is not unlikely that the report of a closely related species V. insidiosa Holzschuh, 1984 from Fruška Gora, Serbia ( Pil & Stojanović 2007: 41), later considered doubtful ( Ilić & Ćurčić 2015: 23), to actually concerns V. saucia .
Collection of new specimens of the species in Bulgaria, as well as investigation of the population for the presence of black forms is desirable.
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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Vadonia saucia (Mulsant & Godart, 1855)
Gradinarov, Denis 2018 |
V. bipunctata mulsantiana (Plavilstshikov, 1936) (
Danilevsky 2009 |