Euops (Riedeliops) bowringii Jekel
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.188214 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6221705 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C84EAB6E-FFA0-FF80-64F2-01A10A9AFAB6 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Euops (Riedeliops) bowringii Jekel |
status |
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Euops (Riedeliops) bowringii Jekel View in CoL
( Figs. 5–6 View FIGURES 1 – 6 , 17–18 View FIGURES 13 – 18 , 39–53 View FIGURES 39 – 41 View FIGURES 46 – 49 , 101 View FIGURES 100 – 103 , 108–109 View FIGURES 104 – 109 , 118 View FIGURES 116 – 122 , 125 View FIGURES 123 – 129 , 132 View FIGURES 130 – 135 , 136–142 View FIGURES 136 – 142 , 159 View FIGURES 158 – 160 , 163 View FIGURES 161 – 167 , 170 View FIGURES 168 – 173 , 174, 178 View FIGURES 174 – 182 , 185 View FIGURE 185 )
Euops bowringii Jekel, 1860: 221 View in CoL (type locality: “ India Orient.”).
Euops bowringi Jekel : incorrect spelling by Voss, 1924, 1925.
“ Euops View in CoL ” bowringii Jekel View in CoL : Legalov, 2003: 407.
Pseudoeuops bowringii Jekel : Legalov, 2007: 224.
Euops armipes Voss, 1933: 117 View in CoL (type locality: Lachiwala [information from Google Earth: 30° 19´N 78° 03´E, 670m], Dehra Dun, Uttar Pradesh, India) syn. n.
Euops submetallicus Voss, 1935: 98 (type locality: Pusa [information from Google Earth: 26° 00´N 85° 40´E, 50m], Bihar, India) syn. n.
Asynaptops (Asynaptopsis) colombensis Legalov, 2007: 225 (type locality: Colombo [information from Google Earth: 6° 55´N 79° 51´E, 2m], Sri Lanka) syn. n.
Diagnosis. Pronotum markedly punctate-rugose, wrinkles medially V-shaped; mesosternum simple, without protrusion; mesotibia in male ( Fig. 125 View FIGURES 123 – 129 ) subapically with massive, spiniform dorsal extension; TA as in Figs. 138–139 View FIGURES 136 – 142 , 159 View FIGURES 158 – 160 ; spermatheca as in Fig. 178 View FIGURES 174 – 182 .
Redescription. Male (specimen from Kotagiri). Body length: 2.45 mm. Coloration bronze; abdomen black with bluish lustre; legs ferruginous with bronze lustre.
Head ( Fig. 108 View FIGURES 104 – 109 ) short. Gena 0.69 x as long as width of head behind eyes. Vertex shining, weakly rugose, sparsely punctate. Eyes dorsally contiguous in middle for 0.6 x their length. Ventral surface transversely rugose, impunctate.
Rostrum 1.46 x longer than mouthparts; sides subparallel to slightly beyond antennal insertion, anteriorly weakly diverging to apex; at widest point 1.23 x wider than at base; dorsum above antennal insertions with rounded prominence, in front of it with distinct incision, anteriorly level to apex. Clypeus without median notch; submedially to the right with broad extension bordered by incisions; sublaterally with pair of weaker lobes. Basal lateral groove distinct, evenly weakly curved, anteriorly concave, terminating at level of ventral eye margin. Venter basally without submental median carina. Submentum subglabrous; with scattered minute punctures. Prementum at base 1.8 x wider than long, ca. 3.9 x wider than at apex; sides weakly sinuate, converging apicad.
Antenna as in Fig. 118 View FIGURES 116 – 122 .
Proventriculus ( Fig. 101 View FIGURES 100 – 103 ) with eight uniform primary folds bearing thin setae.
Thorax. Prothorax 0.86 x as long as wide; subbasal constriction shallow; sides towards apex rounded; preapical constriction almost absent; anterior margin laterally simple, without collar-like extension in front of procoxa; disc markedly punctate-rugose, wrinkles medially V-shaped; sides punctate; prepectus shorter than postpectus; mesosternum simple, without protrusion. Height of pterothorax 0.77 x length of elytron.
Elytron 2.13 x longer than wide; intervals shining, with indistinct transverse wrinkles and row of minute punctures.
Legs. Procoxa 1.06 x longer than wide; approaching anterior margin of prothorax; in anterior aspect coxae with inner contour diverging in convex line; anterior surface microreticulate, sparsely shallowly punctate. Protibia with dorsal contour convex at base and apex, straight in middle; uncus ventral. Mesotibia ( Fig. 125 View FIGURES 123 – 129 ) with subapical dorsal extension massive, spiniform.
Abdomen. Venter weakly concave, between posterior half of ventrites 1 and 4 with setose patch of erect, centrifugally directed setae. Pygidium 1.19 x wider than long.
Terminalia. Sternite VIII ( Fig. 163 View FIGURES 161 – 167 ) medially incompletely subdivided by membrane connecting lateral sclerotised areas; with weakly concave, completely sclerotised basal rim; apex broadly bilobate, sparsely setose. Tegminal plate as in Fig. 142 View FIGURES 136 – 142 . Aedeagus with pedon ( Fig. 140 View FIGURES 136 – 142 ) at base membranous medially, side sclerotised as narrow brace, apically curving abruptly towards middle, fused to base of apical scoop, the latter ca. 0.88 x as long as wide, sides converging, apex rounded; tectum ( Fig. 141 View FIGURES 136 – 142 ) somewhat hourglass-shaped, sides concave, apex subangulate, in basal half medially weakly sclerotised; TA ( Figs. 138–139 View FIGURES 136 – 142 , 159 View FIGURES 158 – 160 ) with frame ca. 1.5 x longer than wide, sides subparallel, transfer processes short at apex of frame, with crescentshaped dorsal plate [if this homology correct], without internal support structures of ductus ejaculatorius; basal sclerite fused to frame, ca. 0.75 x of total length of TA, 2.6 x longer than wide, basally with short lateral hook-like extensions, anchor-shaped. Endophallus with cuticle densely, finely denticulate.
Female (specimen from Kotagiri). As male except: length 2.58 mm. Head ( Fig. 109 View FIGURES 104 – 109 ) with gena 0.74 x as long as width of head behind eyes. Rostrum 1.50 x longer than mouthparts. Prothorax 0.84 x as long as wide. Elytron 2.15 x longer than wide. Height of pterothorax 0.81 x length of elytron. Procoxa 0.97 x as long as wide. Protibia ( Fig. 132 View FIGURES 130 – 135 ) with dorsal contour convex at base, in straight line to apex; ventral contour sinuate, in apical third straight; uncus in middle of tibial apex. Abdomen with venter flat. Pygidium 1.17 x wider than long. Ovipositor ( Fig. 174 View FIGURES 174 – 182 ) without hemisternites. Sternite III ( Fig. 170 View FIGURES 168 – 173 ) relatively short, narrow apical rim well sclerotised, broadly convex. Spermatheca ( Fig. 178 View FIGURES 174 – 182 ) with body slender, subisodiametric from base to apex; spermathecal gland long, digitiform.
Intraspecific variation. Size: length 2.00– 2.70 mm (n=22, x =2.42 ± 0.19); prothorax 0.84–0.92 x as long as wide (n=22, x =0.87 ± 0.02); elytron 2.12–2.34 x longer than wide (n=22, x =2.19 ± 0.06); height of pterothorax 0.75–0.82 x length of elytron (n=22, x =0.79 ± 0.02); abdomen with patch of modified setae in female 1.04–1.43 x longer than wide (n=11, x =1.21 ± 0.10); pygidium 0.98–1.19 x wider than long in males (n=11, x =1.11 ± 0.05), 1.17–1.31 x in females (n=11, x =1.23 ± 0.05). Head with ventral contour of rostrum usually forming distinct angle with head ( Fig. 108 View FIGURES 104 – 109 ), this angulation deeply constricted in specimens from Nilgiri hills ( Fig. 109 View FIGURES 104 – 109 ).
Material examined. Type specimens. E. bowringii , male, lectotype by present designation ( Figs. 39–41 View FIGURES 39 – 41 ): labels: 1) [white with black margin, rectangular] " India. or., Coll. Jekel. [handwritten]" 2) [white with black margin, rectangular] " Typus [handwritten]" 3) [white, rectangular] " Euops (Synaptops) Bowringii Jek, Ind. or. [handwritten]" 4) [white with yellow margin and lines, rectangular] " E. Bowringi , typus, Jekel, India. [handwritten]" 5) [white, rectangular] “Museo Civico di Genova [printed]”; 6) [red, rectangular] " Lectotypus, Euops bowringii Jekel , det. A.Riedel 2008 [printed]"; condition: specimen originally mounted on minuten pin, puncturing right elytron and pushing out mesothorax and left midleg, which broke off on removal of heavily corroded pin and were glued to card next to specimen; antennae broken and glued separately; genitalia in glycerol in microtube ( MCDG). E. armipes , male, lectotype by present designation ( Figs. 46–49 View FIGURES 46 – 49 ): 1) [white, rectangular] "Lachiwala, Dehra Dun, India. H.G.C. [printed]" 2) [white, rectangular] “H. G. Champion., B.M. 1930-59. [printed]”; 3) [white, rectangular] " Euops armipes n. sp. [handwritten], Det. E. Voß [printed]" 4) [white with red margin, round] " Type [printed]" 5) [red, rectangular] " Lectotypus, Euops armipes Voss , det. A.Riedel 2008 [printed]"; condition: fair; point-mounted, genitalia in glycerol in microtube ( BMNH). E. submetallicus , male, lectotype by present designation ( Figs. 50–53): 1) [white, rectangular] " India, Pusa [handwritten]" 2) [white, rectangular] “ Euops (Synaptops) submetallica m., Det E. Voss [handwritten]”; 3) [red, rectangular] "Cotypus [printed], Euops submetallica m. [handwritten]" 4) [white, rectangular] "E. Voß ded., Eing. 11 - 66 [printed]" 5) [white, rectangular, with black frame] submetallica m. [handwritten]" 6) [red, rectangular] “ Lectotypus, Euops submetallicus Voss , det. A.Riedel 2008 [printed]"; condition: fair; pinned on minuten pin through right elytron and metathorax, right hindleg missing ( ZMH). Paralectotype, male: 1) [white, rectangular] " India, Pusa [handwritten]" 2) [white, rectangular] “ Euops (Synaptops) submetallica m. [handwritten], Det E. Voss [printed]” 3) “Pres. by Imp. Inst. Ent. B.M. 1941-7. [printed]”; 4) [red, rectangular] “ Paralectotypus, Euops submetallicus Voss , det. A.Riedel 2008 [printed]". A. colombensis , male, holotype (Figs. 42–45): 1) [white, rectangular] "Colombo, Biró 1902 [printed]" 2) [red, rectangular] “ Holotype, Asynaptops (Asynaptopsis) colombensis A. Legalov sp.n. [printed]”; 3) [white, rectangular] " Euops bowringii Jekel , det. A. Riedel 2008 [printed] ( HNHM).
Other specimens. INDIA: 1 female, Uttar Pradesh, Haldwani Dn. [information from Google Earth: 29° 12´N 79° 31´E, 600m], Kumaon, III.´23, H.G. Champion coll. ( BMNH); 1 male, 2 females, Maharashtra, 120 km NE Mumbai, Igatpuri env., 19° 42´17´´N, 73° 33´06´´E, 1.–12.VIII.2002, leg. P. Šipek & M. Fikáček (PKC); 1 male, Maharashtra, 4 km S Lonavala, Bushi dam env. [information from Google Earth: 18° 42´N 73° 25´E], 500m, 24.IX.2005, leg. J. Bezdék (PKC); 1 male, Maharashtra, 70 km S of Pune, Wai env. [information from Google Earth: 17° 57´N 73° 53´E, 700m], 2.–7.X.2005, leg. J. Bezdék (PKC); 1 female, Maharashtra, 40 km W of Pune, Mulshi env. [information from Google Earth: 18° 31´N 73° 27´E, 800m], 7.–11.X.2005, leg. J. Bezdék (PKC); 32 males, 49 females, Tamil Nadu, Nilgiri Hills, 11km SE Kotagiri, 1100± 100m, Kunchappanai, N 11°24´E 76°56´, leg. L. Dembický, 3.–15.V.2002 ( ARC in SMNK, SMNK, ZSM); 2 males, 4 females, 15km SE Kotagiri, Kunchappanai, N 11°22´E 76° 56´, 17.–22.V.1997, leg. Dembický & Pacholátko ( RDCP); 7 males, 7 females, Kerala, Thekkady, Peryar Lake, N 9,34° E 77,10°, 900–1000m, 19–27.IV.1997, leg. Dembický & Pacholátko ( NHMB). SRI LANKA: 1 male, “ Ceylon ”, H.P. Green, 1916 – 157 ( BMNH).
Distribution ( Fig. 185 View FIGURE 185 ). INDIA, Uttar Pradesh (Dehra Dun; Kumaon), Bihar (Pusa), Maharashtra (Igatpuri, Lonavala, Wai, Mulshi), Tamil Nadu (Nilgiri Hills), Kerala (Peryar). SRI LANKA (Colombo); elevation 500–1000 m. No specimen could be located among large series of Euops examined from other Southeast Asian countries, and therefore it is unlikely that E. bowringii occurs in Thailand or countries further east, as the locality given in the original description might indicate.
Notes. Euops bowringii Jekel was unrecognisable from the original description and unknown to Voss when he revised the genus ( Voss, 1924, 1925). It had been recorded from “ India Orient.”, a type locality that could refer to Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia or Indonesia. No type specimens could be located in the Natural History Museum (London), where most of Jekel´s material is stored, but a syntype was found in the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale ‘G. Doria’ (Genoa), revealing that E. bowringii is widely distributed in continental India and Sri Lanka and that E. armipes and E. submetallicus , both described by Voss (1933, 1935) are junior synonyms of it. Legalov (2007) created another synonym by describing specimens from Sri Lanka as Asynaptops colombensis .
Jekel (1860) did not designate a holotype for E. bowringii nor specified the number of specimens examined, and other specimens may exist in addition to the syntype in the MCDG, which is here designated as lectotype for the species. Similarly, a lectotype is here designated for the single syntype of E. armipes located in the BMNH. Voss (1935) also did not designate a holotype for E. submetallicus but gave as depository of the types “Coll. Guy A. K. Marshall, Coll. auct.”. Two specimens identified by Voss as “ Euops submetallicus ” and housed in the BMNH could be examined. One of them is evidently not a syntype as it originates from “Haldwani Dn., Kumaon”, a locality not mentioned in the original description, but the other is from “ India, Pusa” and thus evidently a syntype. It is here designated as paralectotype. A third specimen seemingly in the BMNH could not be examined. A single specimen of E. submetallicus in the Voss collection in the ZMH, however, is from the type locality and labelled “Cotypus”. It is most likely the specimen that Voss refers to in the original description as deposited in “Coll. auct.” and is here designated as lectotype. It is remarkable that all the specimens studied by Voss are males, although he surmised them to be females in the original description. He evidently misinterpreted the setation of the venter as a female character, as suggested by his final paragraph that ends with the sentence: “Trotzdem die Tibien nur einen Enddorn aufweisen, scheint es sich bei den vorliegenden Exemplaren um Weibchen zu handeln.“ Since females have two spines at the tibial apex (uncus and premucro), his statement about a single spine in these types is incongruent with them being females.
Sawadaeuops (Rugosoeuops) indicus Legalov 2004: 71 –72; Legalov 2007: 249 (type locality: 10km SE of Virajpet, near road Virajpet - Cannanore (75° 46´E, 12° 06´N), Coorg district, Karnataka st.).
Diagnosis. Pronotum relatively long, 0.81–0.88 x as long as wide; anterior margin of prothorax in front of procoxa simple; mesosternum with apically rounded, cone-shaped protrusion directed anteriad ( Fig. 77 View FIGURES 71 – 78 ); protibia in female ( Fig. 133 View FIGURES 130 – 135 ) with dorsal contour convex at base, straight towards apex; ventrite 4 in male in middle with inconspicuous cluster of erect setae pointing backwards ( Figs. 93–94 View FIGURES 93 – 99 ); mesotibia ( Fig. 126 View FIGURES 123 – 129 ) with subapical dorsal extension long, spiniform; aedeagus with apical scoop of pedon apically truncate ( Figs. 143, 146 View FIGURES 143 – 147 ).
Redescription. Holotype, male. Body length: 2.26 mm. Coloration greenish-bronze, elytral apex with bluish lustre.
Head ( Fig. 110 View FIGURES 110 – 115 ) short. Gena 0.73 x as long as width of head behind eyes. Vertex weakly microreticulate, punctate, laterally weakly rugose. Eyes dorsally contiguous for 0.6 x their length. Ventral surface weakly transversely rugose, impunctate.
Rostrum 1.67 x longer than mouthparts; sides subparallel to antennal insertion, then diverging anteriad and subapically rounded; at widest point 1.27 x wider than at base; dorsum above antennal insertions with weakly rounded prominence, in front of it weakly concave, sinuate to apex. Clypeus medially with simple notch. Basal lateral groove distinct, straight, terminating at level of ventral eye margin. Venter basally without submental median carina. Submentum posteriorly microreticulate, anteriorly shining, with two long, stiff, suberect setae. Prementum at base 1.7 x wider than long, ca. 3.9 x wider than at apex; with straight lateral margins converging apicad.
Antenna as in Fig. 119 View FIGURES 116 – 122 .
Proventriculus with eight uniform primary folds bearing spiniform processes.
Thorax. Prothorax 0.85 x as long as wide; subbasal constriction laterally absent, dorsally shallow; sides converging in straight line, weakly rounded in apical third; without preapical constriction; anterior margin laterally simple, without collar-like extension in front of procoxa; disc markedly punctate-rugose, with transverse concave wrinkles; sides punctate; prepectus shorter than postpectus; mesosternum with apically rounded, cone-shaped protrusion directed anteriad. Height of pterothorax 0.87 x length of elytron.
Elytron 2.09 x longer than wide; intervals shining, with irregularly transverse wrinkles ( Fig. 87 View FIGURES 87 – 92 ).
Legs. Procoxa as long as wide (1.00 x); approaching anterior margin of prothorax; in anterior aspect coxae with inner contour diverging in straight line, rounded to apex; anterior surface microreticulate, sparsely shallowly punctate. Protibia with dorsal contour convex at base and apex, straight in middle; uncus terminal. Mesotibia ( Fig. 126 View FIGURES 123 – 129 ) with subapical dorsal extension long, spiniform.
Abdomen. Venter weakly concave, surface medially sparsely punctate, sparsely setose with recumbent setae; ventrite 4 in middle with inconspicuous cluster of erect setae pointing backwards ( Figs. 93–94 View FIGURES 93 – 99 ). Pygidium 1.08 x wider than long.
Terminalia. Sternite VIII ( Fig. 165 View FIGURES 161 – 167 ) medially subdivided by membrane connecting lateral sclerotised areas; apex broadly bilobate, densely setose with long setae; base medially with marked constriction. Tegminal plate as in Fig. 147 View FIGURES 143 – 147 . Aedeagus with sclerotised sides of pedon widening mesoapicad, connected to subtriangular plate fused with its short side to apical scoop, the latter ( Fig. 146 View FIGURES 143 – 147 ) ca. 0.86 x as long as wide, sides sinuate, subapically constricted, widened towards subtruncate apex, subapically weakly sclerotised; tectum with sides converging, apically pointed; TA ( Figs. 144–145 View FIGURES 143 – 147 ) flagelliform, insertion of ductus ejaculatorius ventrally; basal sclerite long, narrow, folded dorsoapicad, dorsally fitting to basal half of long, Sshaped flagellum formed by fusion of extended transfer processes. Endophallus with cuticle densely minutely denticulate.
Female (specimen from Kotagiri). As male except: Length 2.03 mm. Head as in Fig. 111 View FIGURES 110 – 115 . Gena 0.67 x as long as width of head behind eyes. Rostrum 1.45 x longer than mouthparts. Prothorax 0.83 x as long as wide. Elytron 2.12 x longer than wide. Height of pterothorax 0.85 x length of elytron. Procoxa 1.08 x longer than wide. Protibia ( Fig. 133 View FIGURES 130 – 135 ) with dorsal contour convex at base, in straight line to apex; ventral contour evenly sinuate; uncus dorsal. Abdomen flat. Pygidium 1.06 x wider than long. Ovipositor ( Fig. 176 View FIGURES 174 – 182 ) without hemisternites. Sternite VIII as in Fig. 171 View FIGURES 168 – 173 . Spermatheca as in Fig. 180 View FIGURES 174 – 182 ; with body robust, weakly tapering apicad; spermathecal gland long, digitiform.
Intraspecific variation. Size: length 1.52–2.26 mm (n=22, x =2.00 ± 0.19); prothorax 0.81–0.88 x as long as wide (n=22, x =0.85 ± 0.02); elytron 2.05–2.27 x longer than wide (n=22, x =2.16 ± 0.05); height of pterothorax 0.82–0.88 x length of elytron (n=22, x =0.85 ± 0.02); abdomen with patch of modified setae in female 1.20–1.40 x longer than wide (n=10, x =1.32 ± 0.06); pygidium 0.91–1.08 x wider than long in males (n=12, x =1.00 ± 0.04), 0.98–1.12 x in females (n=10, x =1.04 ± 0.04). Coloration variable, usually greenish bronze, some specimens rather coppery, others partly or completely dark blue; blue colour relatively common among specimens from Shimoga district. Elytral intervals usually shining and with shallow microsculpture as in holotype but sometimes weakly shining, somewhat dull, with distinct coriarious sculpture of irregularly transverse wrinkles (as in E. pseudoindicus ).
Material examined. Holotype, male ( Figs. 54–56 View FIGURES 54 – 56 ): labels: 1) [white, rectangular] upper side of label: “S INDIA, Karnataka st., Coorg district, 700m, 10km SE of Virajpet, 75° 46´E, 12° 06´N ”; lower side of label: “near road Virajpet - Cannanore, 5.–7.VI.1999, Kejval & Trýzna leg. [printed]”, 2) [red, rectangular] “ Holotypus, Sawadaeuops (Rugosoeuops) indicus Legalov sp.n. [printed]”; condition: fair, glued to card, pygidium detached and glued to same card, sternite IX glued to card, segment VIII missing; genitalia transferred to glycerol in microtube (PKC).
Other specimens. INDIA: 176 males, 156 females, Karnataka, W Ghats, 20 km W Talguppa, Jog Falls, N 14°14´E 74° 44´, 500± 200m, leg. P. Pacholátko, 22–28.V.2002 ( ARC in SMNK, SMNK, ZSM); 8 males, 6 females, same data as holotype (PCK); 9 males, 12 females, Mysore state, Shimoga Dist., Agumbe Ghat, 2000ft., [information from Google Earth: ca. 14° 04´N, 75° 12´E] T.R.S. Nathan Coll., VI.1990 ( ARC in SMNK, CMNC); 2 males, Tamil Nadu, Kodaikanal, 20 km -> Madurai, [information from Google Earth: ca. 10° 19´N 77° 29´E] ca. 1400m, 28.VIII.1989, leg. A.Riedel ( ARC in SMNK); 22 males, 19 females, Tamil Nadu, 11 km SE Kotagiri, Kunchappanai, 11°24´N, 76° 56´E, 1100± 100m, leg. P. Pacholátko, 3.–15.V.2002 ( ARC in SMNK); 152 males, 137 females, Tamil Nadu, 15 km SE Kotagiri, Kunchappanai, 11°22´N, 76° 56´E, 900m, leg. D. Hauck ( ARC in SMNK, SMNK, ZSM); 9 males, 2 females, Tamil Nadu, 15 km SE Kotagiri, Kunchappanai, 11°22´N, 76° 56´E, leg. L. Dembický & P. Pacholátko, 17.–22.V.1997 ( RDCP); 3 males, Kerala, 15 km SW Munnar, N 10,02° E 76,58°, 1250m, 1–9.V.1997, leg. Dembický & Pacholátko ( NHMB); 8 males, 2 females, Kerala, Thekkady, Peryar Lake, N 9,34° E 77,10°, 900–1000m, 19–27.IV.1997, leg. Dembický & Pacholátko ( NHMB); 1 female, Kerala, Peryar Lake, 900 m, 13–20.V.1991, leg. J. Kolibáč ( NHMB).
Distribution ( Fig. 186 View FIGURE 186 ). INDIA, Karnataka (Jog Falls, Agumbe Ghat, Coorg), Tamil Nadu (Kodaikanal, Nilgiri Hills). Elevation: 700–1400 m.
Notes. Until recently there stood in many collections long series of an undescribed Euops species that agree relatively well with the descriptions of E. armipes and E. submetallicus , two Indian species described by ( Voss, 1933, 1935). Legalov (2004) boldly described this species as E. indicus , based only on a few specimens. He was fortunate to describe a valid species, because E. armipes and E. submetallicus turned out to be conspecific with E. bowringii . The identity of E. indicus however still was confused, because three sibling species are involved. An excellent diagnostic character of one of them is the subtruncate apex of the pedon of the aedeagus. In Legalov´s original description of E. indicus ( Legalov 2004, Fig. 113 View FIGURES 110 – 115 ) this was figured as being pointed, but examination of the holotype showed that it is subtruncate, while one of the paratypes examined belongs to a different species. Legalov’s illustration were evidently not prepared from the holotype of E. indicus , but from a specimen here designated as a paratype of E. pseudoindicus sp.n.. The third sibling of the indicus -group could be identified as E. keiseri , originally described by Voss (1957) from Sri Lanka.
ZMH |
Zoologisches Museum Hamburg |
HNHM |
Hungarian Natural History Museum (Termeszettudomanyi Muzeum) |
ARC |
Atlantic Reference Centre |
SMNK |
Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkunde Karlsruhe (State Museum of Natural History) |
ZSM |
Bavarian State Collection of Zoology |
NHMB |
Naturhistorisches Museum, Basel |
SRI |
Serengetti Research Institute |
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Euops (Riedeliops) bowringii Jekel
Riedel, Alexander 2009 |
Pseudoeuops bowringii
Legalov 2007: 224 |
Asynaptops (Asynaptopsis) colombensis
Legalov 2007: 225 |
Sawadaeuops (Rugosoeuops) indicus
Legalov 2007: 249 |
Legalov 2004: 71 |
Euops
Legalov 2003: 407 |
Euops submetallicus
Voss 1935: 98 |
Euops armipes
Voss 1933: 117 |
Euops bowringii
Jekel 1860: 221 |