Mesoconius garleppi Enderlein, 1922
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.548 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7BA0D937-437E-4252-8EF4-4F35E6B59445 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DB2535-6F45-FFAE-097B-F95FFE0CFB56 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Mesoconius garleppi Enderlein, 1922 |
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Mesoconius garleppi Enderlein, 1922 View in CoL
Fig. 23 View Fig D–F
Mesoconius garleppi Enderlein, 1922: 177 View in CoL .
Diagnosis (based on holotype only)
Length. 15 mm. Orange, except as follows: frontal vitta black, triangular and sharply demarcated with a straight anterior margin; face, lower frons and ocellar tubercle and fore tarsus yellow; fore and hind femora with dark but weakly demarcated broad middle bands; mid tarsus, distal tarsomeres of hind tarsus, T4, side of S7 and top of epandrium black. Postocellar bristles strong, closely spaced and far behind level of inner vertical bristles. Male abdominal segment 1 and base of segment 2 petiolate. Sternite 8 twice as large as epandrium, at least laterally dark and shiny, in contrast to dull T6 and epandrium, sparsely setulose.
Material examined
Holotype
PERU • ♂; Cusco Department, Callanga, Piñipiñi Valley ; 1800 m a.s.l.; O. Garlepp leg.; MNBG.
Remarks
The Peruvian type locality of M. garleppi , “Callanga, Piñipiñi Valley”, is the type locality for several species. Gade (1999) discussed the valley and gave an altitude of about 1500 m a.s.l., while discussing the confusion over the place name “Callanga”. According to Peruvian entomologist Julio Rivera (pers. comm.) the ʻcorrectʼ Callanga is in Cusco Province at coordinates 12°50ʹ16.80ʺ S, 71°48ʹ28.20ʺ W. Several species are known only from older type material at that locality, so it would be very useful to have new specimens from the area. The collector is listed as Otto Garlepp, but Papavero (1973) did not mention the highlands of Peru among the localities at which Otto Garlepp collected. Otto Garlepp’s brother, Gustav Garlepp, is known to have collected at the “High Ucayali River, Peru ”. Piñipiñi specimens also appear in the type series of Mesoconius infestus , M. obtusiconus Enderlein, 1922 View in CoL , M. albimanus , and M. rufithorax , as well as in those of many species of other micropezid genera. Almost all of these are rare species, known only from one or a few low-quality specimens. In most cases, the Piñipiñi localities are cited as “ 1500 m high, 1900”, and most are attributed to O. Garlepp, although Papavero’s (1973) summary of the Garlepp brothers’ travels in South America does not place either of them in Peru in 1900.
Tanypoda garleppi Enderlein, 1922 View in CoL , until recently treated as belonging to Zelatractodes , is here treated as a secondary junior homonym of Mesoconius garleppi View in CoL ; it is redescribed below as M. ottoi View in CoL nom. nov. in the M. nono View in CoL group.
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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Mesoconius garleppi Enderlein, 1922
Marshall, Stephen A. 2019 |
Mesoconius garleppi
Enderlein 1922: 60 |