Doratura caucasica Melichar, 1913
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5112.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C2750D92-315A-431F-BCEB-3E20ECD03EA0 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6342963 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039C8791-BF4E-1544-E8B8-8453BB39309E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Doratura caucasica Melichar, 1913 |
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Doratura caucasica Melichar, 1913 View in CoL
( Figs 30F–H View FIGURE 30 ; 34F View FIGURE 34 ; 37F–I View FIGURE 37 ; 38E–G View FIGURE 38 ; 39C–F View FIGURE 39 )
Doratura caucasica Melichar, 1913: 329 View in CoL
Doratura arenicola Logvinenko, 1975: 462 View in CoL syn. nov.
Diagnosis. This species is very closely related to D. homophyla from which it is distinguished by a somewhat different aedeagus shape ( Figs 37F–I View FIGURE 37 ) in lateral view and above all by another shape of the genital plates ( Figs 39C–F View FIGURE 39 ) without the pronounced latero-caudal angle. The aedeagus socle, the testaceous aedeagus coloration and the presence of two rows of teeth and spines on the ventral side of the apical half of the aedeagus are features that both taxa have in common.
Remarks. The original description of D. caucasica is based on a single female, which the author figures only in dorsal view. Kusnezov (1928b) places the species near D. rusaevi . Logvinenko (1975) compares D. arenicola with D. caucasica and D. homophyla . Figures of the genital morphology do apparently not exist. In the Moravian Museum in Brno, a male specimen is present collected in Tbilisi (Tiflis), identified by Melichar himself as D. caucasica , and provided with a label “Kaukasisches Museum”, apparently corresponding to a specimen mentioned in his publication from 1914 ( Melichar, 1914: Figs 30F View FIGURE 30 ; 37H View FIGURE 37 ; 38G View FIGURE 38 ; 39E, F View FIGURE 39 ). Obviously, it belongs to the same species as the D. arenicola specimens in the Logvinenko collection in Kiew. We tried to examine the type specimen too, but without success, as this specimen was not traceable neither in Tbilisi nor in Brno. Even if the specific identity of the male from Tbilisi and the type female from Lago Lechi in northern Georgia is not sure, it is quite probable that both specimens belong to the same species. Melichar’s description of body morphology and female pregenital sternite of D. caucasica coincides well with this interpretation.
Distribution ( Fig. 62A View FIGURE 62 ). We examined specimens from Azerbaijan and Georgia. In addition, the species is recorded for Armenia ( Kusnezov, 1927), and Russia: Southern European part, Dagestan ( Logvinenko, 1975, as D. arenicola ). The presence of the species in Armenia is probable but needs confirmation.
Taxonomic remarks. D. arenicola Logvinenko, 1975 is described from Southern European Russia (Dagestan), Georgia and Azerbaijan. Logvinenko mentions D. caucasica , D. homophyla and D. littoralis as similar taxa. The only difference between D. caucasica and D. arenicola she mentioned, lies in their different size. However, in the few specimens that are left from her D. arenicola material, conspicuous variability in size is visible. Furthermore, Melichar’s D. caucasica (male) specimen from Tbilisi fits quite well with Logvinenko’s D. arenicola specimens, including the genital morphology. Therefore, we establish the synonymy of D. arenicola with D. caucasica .
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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Doratura caucasica Melichar, 1913
Bückle, Christoph & Guglielmino, Adalgisa 2022 |
Doratura arenicola Logvinenko, 1975: 462
Logvinenko, V. N. 1975: 462 |
Doratura caucasica Melichar, 1913: 329
Melichar, L. 1913: 329 |