Leptogomphus, Dow & Stokvis & Ngiam, 2017

Dow, Rory A., Stokvis, Frank & Ngiam, Robin W. J., 2017, Revision of the Genus Leptogomphus Selys in Borneo, including gene trees and a two marker molecular phylogeny (Odonata: Anisoptera: Gomphidae), Zootaxa 4358 (2), pp. 201-257 : 238

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4358.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8861BCC0-022F-4803-98E8-D28B90F666E4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631260

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3A90C-9877-FFAD-FF6A-8DE4FF7BE8C2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leptogomphus
status

 

Leptogomphus View in CoL sp. cf williamsoni Laidlaw, 1912

( Figs 1 View FIGURE1 , 3 View FIGURE 3 , 27 View FIGURES 24–27 , 35 View FIGURES 32–35 , 45 View FIGURES 42–45 , 51 View FIGURES 46–51 , 77 View FIGURES 74–77 , 87 View FIGURES 84–87 , 129 View FIGURE 129 )

Leptogomphus williamsoni Laidlaw 1912 View in CoL ;—Dow 2012: 7, 10 (♀, Gunung Penrissen and Annah Rais, Sarawak) ;— ? Dow et al. 2013b: 19, Fig. 20 View FIGURES18–23 (larvae, Kubah NP, Sarawak) .

Leptogomphus View in CoL species;—Dow et al. 2016: 11 (females and larvae from Gunung Penrissen discussed).

Material studied. Sarawak, Malaysia: 1 ♀ ( SAR 11_12_GOM59, used in illustrations), boulder stream, Borneo Highlands Resort, Gunung Penrissen, Kuching Division, 1.13641N, 110.21555E, 24 vii 2012, leg. R.A. Dow, in collection Dow; 1 ♀ ( RMNH.5008436; teneral), same location, 29 vi 2014, leg. R.A. Dow, in RMNH; 1 ♀, stream, 1.12157N, 110.22701E, same area, 26 vii 2012, leg, R.A. Dow, in collection Dow; 1 ♀, small high gradient forest stream on Mount Matang, Matang Range, Kuching Division, 1.59632N, 110.20949E, 2 vii 2017, leg. R.A. Dow, in collection Dow.

Remarks. Females of Leptogomphus collected on Gunung Penrissen and in the Matang Range but not associated with L. schieli resemble L. williamsoni , but are atypical in some respects, and may represent yet another species. The chief differences are in the head ( Figs 27 View FIGURES 24–27 , 35 View FIGURES 32–35 , 45 View FIGURES 42–45 , 51 View FIGURES 46–51 ), where the occipital horns are placed close together, and there is an approximately crescentic depression surrounding the tubercles behind the lateral ocelli except at the front. It was only possible to include one specimen of this form in the molecular analysis, and only COI was successfully amplified; the sample is distinct from the other L. williamsoni samples ( Figs 1 View FIGURE1 , 3 View FIGURE 3 ), but with only one sample and one marker we do not regard this as providing definitive support for the notion that this is a separate species. This is especially so since L. williamsoni is rather variable in the COI marker (see the Remarks under that species). In the absence of the male and more molecular data, we have decided to leave the issue of the status of this form open, nor do we provide a complete description; we do however provide a full set of illustrations. If it should prove to be a separate species, the Leptogomphus larva from Kubah National Park reported in Dow et al. (2013b) as L. williamsoni probably belongs here, since Kubah is in the Matang Range, where one of the females was collected. A female from Annah Rais at the foot of Gunung Penrissen, previously in the possession of the first author, probably belongs here as well; the specimen was not available to us to check for this study. The measurements of the three non-teneral specimens available are: abdomen without appendages 34–35mm, Hw 29– 30mm.

SAR

Department of Forestry

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Odonata

Family

Gomphidae

Loc

Leptogomphus

Dow, Rory A., Stokvis, Frank & Ngiam, Robin W. J. 2017
2017
Loc

Leptogomphus williamsoni

Dow 2013: 19
2013
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