A synopsis of the Neotropical genus Protoneura (Odonata: Coenagrionidae)
Author
Ellenrieder, Natalia Von
Author
Garrison, Rosser W.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-12-01
4361
1
1
76
journal article
31258
10.11646/zootaxa.4361.1.1
b15f5f11-6a00-4158-8ec8-3d0004605c28
1175-5326
1069337
53489D29-C68F-44FD-9EA2-CFCA7B949630
Protoneura capillaris
(
Rambur, 1842
)
Figs. 6
(
♂
habitus), 30 (
♀
habitus), 52 (
♀
mes. plate), 76 (gen. lig.), 102 (
♂
app.), 119 (map)
Agrion capillare
Rambur, 1842
: 280–281 (description of
♂
).
Protoneura capillaris
—Selys
in
Sagra (1857: 200, 471, pl. 18, fig. 2; transference to new genus and subgenus
Protoneura
, illustration of wing);—Selys (1860: 461 [reprint 33]; redescription of ♂ from Cuba);—
Gundlach (1888: 218, 219; Cuba, description of color pattern of ♂ and ♀)
;—Selys (1886: 212–213; redescription of ♂, description of ♀);—
Williamson (1915: 619, 623–625,
Fig. 6
; in key, notes on variability, illustration of wings)
;—
Calvert (1919: 349; Gundlach record)
;—
Westfall (1964a: 73; Cuba)
;—
Westfall (1964b: 111–113, 115–117;
Figs. 2, 4
,
6, 8
,
10, 12
; illustrations thorax, ♀ mesostigmal plates, and ♂ S10, diagnosis from
P. viridis
)
;—
Alayo (1968a
,
b
: 73, figs 28B, 39D, 42F, 42G; key to Cuban species, records, illustrations of ♂ wings, head and thorax, and S10);—
Paulson (1982: 260; Cuba)
;—
Flint (1996: 18; Cuba)
;—
Trapero-Quintana & Naranjo-López (2003: 26, 27; Cuba)
;—López del
Castillo
et al.
(2004
: 230; Cuba);—
Paulson (2004: 176; listed as range restricted)
;—Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2004: 17; Cuba, with notes on biology);—
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2005
: 225–231; oviposition behavior);—
Westfall & May (2006: 431–437, Figs. 222, 223B, 224A, 226A; in key to northern representatives of genus, characterization of adults, illustrations of larval habitus, prementum, and caudal lamellae, ♂ thorax and S10, ♀ pronotum and mesostigmal plates)
;—Trapero-Quintana & Naranjo-
López (2004: 180; in key for Cuba)
;—
Deler
et al.
(2007
: 454; Cuba);—
Trapero-Quintana & Torres-Cambas (2008: 26; Cuba)
;—
Muñoz
et al.
(2009
: 499; Cuba);—
Paulson (2009c; IUCN assessment)
;—
Pessacq (2008: 514, 516, 527,
Figs. 2D, 4G
; in phylogenetic analysis, illustrations of wing, ♂ S10)
;—
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2010
: 105; emergence distance);—
Garrison
et al.
(2010
: 379, 381, fig. 2516; illustration ♂ S10);—
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2012
: 140, 143, 144; larval habit and morpho-functional type);—
Meurgey (2013: 300, 305; distribution)
;—
Torres-Cambas
et al.
(2015
: 2–5, 9, 12, 13; distribution, evaluation of threatened status);—
Lorenzo-Carballa
et al.
(2016
: 2, 3, 5–7; relationships based on molecular analysis).
Primary
types
.
Holotype
♂
:
Cuba
[
RBINS
, ex collection
Guérin-Méneville
].
Specimens examined.
14 ♂
4 ♀
:
CUBA
,
Pinar del Rio
Prov
.:
1 ♂
,
Las Ammas
,
27 iii 1939
[
FSCA
];
Artemisa
Prov.
:
1 ♂
,
Soroa
(
22°47'39'' N
,
83°0'38'' W
),
5 xii 1994
,
O.S. Flint Jr.
[
USNM
];
Holguín
Prov.
:
1 ♂
,
Sierra Nipe
,
Piloto River
{
20°28' N
,
75°49' W
,
600 m
},
6 vii 1990
,
M. Ivis
leg. [
FSCA
];
Cien Fuegos Prov.
: 2 ♂, Atkins Botanical Garden, Soledad {22°7' N, 80°19' W},
29 v–6 vii 1959
, M.J. Westfall Jr. [FSCA];
1 ♂
, same data but [RWG];
Sancti Spiritus
Prov.
:
4 ♂
,
Manacal
,
Topes de Collantes
(
21°55'12'' N
,
80°1'48'' W
,
748 m
),
viii 2011
,
Y. Torres
leg. [ACR];
Santiago
de
Cuba
Prov
.:
2 ♂
2 ♀
,
Santiago
de
Cuba
{
20°1' N
,
75°49' W
},
24 v 1945
,
Ward's Natural Science
expedition leg. [
UMMZ
]
;
1 ♂
1 ♀
, same data but [
CSCA
]
;
1 ♂
1 ♀
, same data but [RWG]
; 2 ♂, Dos Bocas (20°5'23'' N, 75°45'55'' W,
192 m
),
4 i 2007
, Y. Torres leg. [ACR].
Characterization.
Male: Epicranium and dorsum of thorax and abdomen except base of S3–6 and most of S7 black with metallic blue-purple reflections; pale colors pale blue and yellow (
Fig. 6
). Pronotum black with anterior margin of anterior lobe and lateral margins of middle lobe pale blue. Mesepisternum black; mesepimeron pale blue with ventral and dorsal edges black; metepisternum light blue margined posteriorly with black; metepimeron pale yellow. Coxa and trochanter pale yellow, outer surface of femur pale blue, remainder of leg pale brown; tibial spurs shorter than twice intervening spaces. Genital ligula lacking lateral lobes and with a straight distal margin, with laterodistal corners of distal segment projected ventrally (
Fig. 76
). Cercus longer than S10 length, about as long as paraproct, longer than wide in lateral view, with a longitudinal split along dorsal portion of external surface, delimiting a medial sclerotized branch that ends on a strong tooth directed medioventrally (
Fig. 102a
); remainder of cercus foliaceous, medially concave, with a small triangular tooth at ventrobasal edge, and a long, curved thick pointed tooth at mediobasal edge directed medioposteriorly, preceded by a smaller pointed tooth (
Fig. 102b, c
). Paraproct longer than S10 length, at midlength narrowing to half its basal width and with tip widened and medially concave (
Fig. 102
). TL 33.5–38.5; Hw 15–17.6.
Female: As male but dark areas metallic green with copper reflections, except for metallic blue-purple labrum, postclypeus and dorsum of S2; pale areas yellow; pale on S7 limited to small basal spot; posterior lobe of pronotum yellow; mesepimeron mostly green with yellow limited to ventroposterior edge; metepisternum yellow margined dorsally and posteriorly by green; outer surface of femora yellow with basal 1/2 to 1/3 black to brown; pruinescence present on inner surface of legs and venter of thorax; pale lateral area of S9 extended dorsally medially to about 2/3 of segment height (
Fig. 30
). Middle lobe of pronotum with pronounced lateral depressions (as in
Figs. 67a, c
), posterior lobe directed anterodorsally, entire and smoothly convex. Mesostigmal plate upright and inflated, with anterior and posterior surfaces convex and dorsal margin narrowly carinate, almost touching opposite plate anteromedially; paired mesepisternal swollen protuberance almost as high as mesostigmal plates located between their posteromedial corners (
Fig. 52
). TL 33–36.5; Hw 18.2–20.5.
Diagnosis.
Male cercus morphology, with a medial sclerotized branch that ends on a tooth directed medioventrally and remainder of cercus foliaceous, medially concave, with a small triangular tooth on outer ventrobasal edge, and a long, curved thick pointed tooth at medial ventrobasal edge directed medially (
Fig. 102
), is shared with
P. caligata
,
P. dunklei
,
P. sanguinipes
, and
P. viridis
(
Figs. 100
; 106; 113; 117). Within this group,
P. capillaris
resembles
P. caligata
and
P. viridis
by the medial sclerotized branch of male cercus ending on a tooth directed medioventrally located at cercus tip (
Figs. 100
; 102; 117) and by distal margin of genital ligula straight with laterodistal corners projected ventrally (
Figs. 74
; 76; 93); in
P. dunklei
and
P. sanguinipes
the medial branch ends on a broad triangular tip located at about midlength of cercus (
Figs. 106
; 113), and distal margin of genital ligula is convex triangular with laterodistal corners not projected ventrally (
Figs. 80
; 87).
Protoneura caligata
differs from males of all four species by pale blue color of thorax and abdomen (
Fig. 6
), which is orange or yellow in the other four species (
Figs. 4
; 10; 17; 21), and by second tooth on ventro medial margin preceding long basal tooth (
Fig. 102b
vs.
Figs. 100b
; 106b; 113b; 117b). Female can be distinguished from all congeners by its upright inflated mesostigmal plates, with both anterior and posterior surfaces convex (
Fig. 52a
);
P. viridis
also has upright mesostigmal plates adjacent to paired mesepisternal protuberances, but the plates are only slightly convex posteriorly and concave anteriorly (
Fig. 67b
).
Habitat and biology.
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2004) reported adults flying slowly among branches of shoreline vegetation of mountain torrents in
Cuba
, males perching on sun-lit leaf tips, females ovipositing while still in tandem on stems, fallen leaves, or woody tissue at water level, and larvae found in very shallow pools covered with abundant vegetation.
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2005)
provided a detailed study of oviposition behavior. The female selects floating objects such as twigs, leaf petioles, pieces of bark, fruits of
Spondias
(Anacardiacea)
, or partially submerged liana roots, and oviposits in them bending its abdomen between its open wings, still in tandem with male, who continues to beat its wings. They documented copulation taking place between 10:30–15:00 with a peak between 12:00–13:30, during which time several pairs usually oviposited simultaneously, with a marked decrease of activity in overcast weather. Sperm transfer and copula were not observed, and were presumed to occur away from the water in the vegetation (
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
2005
). The larva was illustrated by
Westfall & May (2006)
, but it has not yet been formally described.
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2010)
determined that emergence distance from water surface does not surpass
10 cm
, and
Trapero-Quintana
et al.
(2012)
found larvae in lentic permanent, lentic temporary, and lotic habitats, typically with filtered insolation provided by gallery forests, and characterized them as climbers-graspers of rocks and vegetation.
Distribution.
Endemic to
Cuba
(
Fig. 119
). Assessed as Data Deficient by IUCN (
Paulson 2009c
); Torres- Cambas
et al.
(2015) suggested reassessing it as Vulnerable.