Anisops debilis socotrensis Brown, 1956
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.37520/aemnp.2022.026 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BF6605C2-59C5-4F22-BB7F-357F961982A8 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10553048 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/007587E8-FF9E-0464-B2CF-63AFFD80FB4B |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Anisops debilis socotrensis Brown, 1956 |
status |
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Anisops debilis socotrensis Brown, 1956 View in CoL
( Fig. 10 View Figs 10–11. 10 )
Anisops socotrensis Brown, 1956: 142–144 View in CoL , figs 3a–f, 4a–e (original description). Holotype: ♂, Socotra, Hadibo [= Hadiboh] (BMNH).
Anisops debilis socotrensis View in CoL : LANSBURY (1964): 100 (downgraded to subspecies of A. debilis Gerstaecker, 1873 View in CoL ).
Published records. BROWN (1956): Hadibo [= Hadiboh], pool in stream; Moa bbadh [= Maabad] plain, 20 miles E of Hadibo; WRANIK (1999): Socotra (no exact locality); WRANIK (2003): Socotra (no exact records).
Material examined. SOCOTRA: Diksam [= Dixam, ca. 500–1000 m a.s.l.], xi.1997, 1 spec., 21.ii.2000, 1 spec., W. Wranik lgt. ( WWRG → NMPC); Diksam Teich [= Dixam, pond], ix.1998, 2 spec., W. Wranik lgt. ( WWRG → NMPC); Dixam plateau, wadi Zerig (12°29′36ʺN 53°59′30ʺE), pool at road bridge, Juncus marsh, 655 m a.s.l., 13.–14. vi.2012, 2 ♂♂ 27 spec., Socotra expedition 2012: J. Bezděk, J. Hájek, V. Hula, P. Kment, I. Malenovský, J. Niedobová & L. Purchart lgt. ( NMPC, MMBC, NHMW); Dixam plateau, Firmihin, small brook under Firmihin (12°28′36ʺN 54°01′06ʺE), 490 m a.s.l., 14.–15.vi.2012, 1 spec., Socotra expedition 2012: J. Bezděk, J. Hájek, V. Hula, P. Kment, I. Malenovský, J. Niedobová & L. Purchart lgt. ( NMPC); Dixam plateau, wadi Zerig (12°29′36ʺN 53°59′30ʺE), 18.i.2014, 19 ♂♂ 16 ♀♀ 1 L, A. Carapezza lgt. ( ACPI); Dixam plateau, wadi Zerig, beginning of track for Skand Mt. (12°29′15ʺN 53°59′20ʺE), 20.i.2014, 9 ♂♂ 16 ♀♀, A. Carapezza lgt. ( ACPI); Firmihin, [ca. 390–760 m a.s.l.], ii.1999, 1 spec., iii.1999, 1 spec., W.Wranik lgt. ( WWRG → NMPC); Hadibo [= Hadiboh, 10–20 m a.s.l.], 15.ii.2000, 3 spec., W. Wranik lgt. ( WWRG → NMPC); Hagher Mts., wadi Madar (12°33′12ʺN 54°00′24ʺE), brook in montane shrubland, 1170 m a.s.l., 18.vi.2012, 1 spec., Socotra expedition 2012: J. Bezděk, J. Hájek,V.Hula, P.Kment, I. Malenovský, J. Niedobová & L. Purchart lgt. ( NMPC); Halla area,Arher (12°33′00ʺN 54°27′36ʺE), freshwater spring in sand dune, 5 m a.s.l., 9.–10.vi.2012, 1 spec., Socotra expedition 2012: J. Bezděk, J. Hájek, V. Hula, P. Kment, I. Malenovský, J. Niedobová & L. Purchart lgt. ( NMPC); Homhil, [ca. 300–600 m a.s.l.], ix.1998, 1 spec., W.Wranik lgt.( WWRG → NMPC); Homhil protected area (12°34′27″N 54°18′32″E), 364 m a.s.l., 28.–29.xi.2003, 1 ♀, J. Farkač lgt., 1 ♀, D. Král lgt., Yemen – Socotra 2003 Expedition:Jan Farkač, Petr Kabátek & David Král ( JFPC, NMPC); Homhil Wadi, 600 m a.s.l., 5.vi.2008, 2♂♂, A. Carapezza lgt. ( ACPI); Noged plain, Qaareh waterfall (12°20′10″N 53°37′56″E), 57 m a.s.l., 5.–6.xii.2003, 1 spec., Yemen – Socotra 2003 Expedition: Jan Farkač, Petr Kabátek & David Král ( MMBC); Qadub, coastal salt-marsh at road (12°38′18″N 53°57′18″E), 8 m a.s.l., 14.vi.2012, 1 spec., Socotra expedition 2012: J. Bezděk, J. Hájek, V. Hula, P. Kment, I. Malenovský, J. Niedobová & L. Purchart lgt. ( NMPC); Wadi Kilisan, [365 m a.s.l.], ix.1998, 1 ♂ 5 spec., W. Wranik lgt., R. Linnavuori det., P. Kment revid. ( WWRG → NMPC).
Identification. BROWN (1956) (description, figures); LANSBURY (1964) (measurements, figures); WRANIK (2003) 439 (habitus photo).
Habitat. Part of the type series was collected in a pool in a stream ( BROWN 1956). During the recent collecting effort, a large population was found in a large pool with sparse littoral vegetation in a drying wadi ( Fig. 53 View Figs 49–53.49 ). Additional specimens were collected in small brooks from coastal (5 m a.s.l., Fig. 49 View Figs 49–53.49 ) up to montane zone in Hagher Mts. (1170 m a.s.l., Fig. 50 View Figs 49–53.49 ) as well as at light.
Distribution. Palaearctic Region: Socotra ( BROWN 1956).
There are four additional valid subspecies of A. debilis (see LANSBURY 1964, LINNAVUORI 1971, J. T. POLHEMUS 1995): A. debilis debilis Gerstaecker, 1873 is widely distributed in the continental Subsaharan Africa from Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Chad, Sudan and Ethiopia to South Africa ( HUTCHINSON 1929, 1930a; POISSON 1936, 1937, 1939, 1949a, 1950a, 1951c, 1952b, 1954a, 1955b, 1957 a, 1960b, 1961, 1963, 1965 a, 1968a,b; BROOKS 1951; LANSBURY 1961a,b, 1964; WEIR 1966; POISSON & SALLIER DUPIN 1970; LINNAVUORI 1971, 1975, 1981), in North Africa: Algeria ( POISSON 1953) and Arabian Peninsula: Saudi Arabia (J. T. POLHEMUS 1995), United Arab Emirates ( BROWN 1950, as Oman; LINNAVUORI et al. 2011), and Yemen ( LANSBURY 1966).
Anisops debilis canariensis Noualhier, 1893 occurs in Macaronesia: Canary Islands ( LINDBERG 1953, NIESER & MONTES 1984, BAENA & BÁEZ 1990, ROCA- CUSACHS et al. 2020), Cape Verde Islands ( LINDBERG 1959, POISSON 1966), Madeira ( POISSON 1966, HOBERLANDT 1967, NIESER & MONTES 1984), as well as in Morocco ( LANSBURY 1961b), and Mauritania ( POISSON 1939). The record from Ghana ( POISSON 1966) is apparently erroneous, as it referes to LINDBERG’ s (1922) record of A. canariensis from the Greek island of Corfu, which actually belongs to A. crinitus Brooks, 1951 ( CIANFERONI 2019).
Anisops debilis perplexus Poisson, 1929 occurs in SW Europe: Portugal ( NIESER & MONTES 1984), Spain ( NIESER & MONTES 1984), Italy (Sicily) ( CARAPEZZA 1988); Macaronesia: Cape Verde Islands ( LANSBURY 1964), Madeira ( LANSBURY 1964); North Africa: Algeria ( POISSON 1929, 1948b; BROOKS 1951), Egypt ( LINNAVUORI 1964, ECKERLEIN & WAGNER 1970), Libya ( POISSON 1948b, BROOKS 1951, LANSBURY 1964, ECKERLEIN & WAGNER 1970), Morocco ( LANSBURY 1964; GHEIT 1994, 1995; TAYBI et al. 2018), Tunisia ( CARAPEZZA 1997, SLIMANI et al. 2015); Near East: Iran ( LANSBURY 1964, GHAHARI et al. 2013), Iraq ( LINNAVUORI 1994b), Israel ( LARSEN & BLAUSTEIN 2005), Jordan ( KATBEH et al. 2000), Saudi Arabia (LINNAVUORI 1986a),? Turkey (Asian Part) (see FENT et al. 2011), Yemen ( LINNAVUORI 1989b; LINNAVUORI & VAN HARTEN 1997 , 2002a); Afrotropical Region: Senegal (J. T. POLHEMUS 1995), Djibouti ( BROOKS 1951, as A. coutieri ), Niger ( LINNAVUORI 1981), and Sudan ( LINNAVUORI 1971).
Anisops debilis sudanica Lansbury, 1964 is confined to Sudan and South Sudan ( LANSBURY 1964, LINNAVUORI 1971). As there is a considerable overlap in distribution of the individual ‘subspecies’, it is evident that this complex of taxa requires a modern revision.
NMPC |
National Museum Prague |
MMBC |
Moravske Muzeum [Moravian Museum] |
NHMW |
Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien |
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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Anisops debilis socotrensis Brown, 1956
Kment, Petr & Carapezza, Attilio 2022 |
Anisops debilis socotrensis
LANSBURY I. 1964: 100 |
Anisops socotrensis
BROWN E. S. 1956: 144 |