86. Diphascon pingue (Marcus, 1936) sensu lato [T]
H. (D.) pinguis Marcus, 1936 (du Bois-Reymond Marcus 1944)
Hypsibius pinguis Marcus (Iharos 1963)
Diphascon pinguis Marcus, 1936 (Claps & Rossi 1984)
D. (D.) pingue Marcus, 1936 (Rossi & Claps 1989)
Diphascon (Diphascon) pingue (Marcus, 1936) (Garitano-Zavala 1995) D. (D.) pingue (Garitano-Zavala 1996)
Diphascon pingue (Marcus, 1936) (Pilato et al. 2003a)
Terra typica: Germany (Europe)
Argentina:
• 24°07′S, 65°24′W; 1,450 m asl: Jujuy Province, road to Yala, moss on tree. Claps & Rossi (1984)
• 26°47′S, 65°20′W; 750 m asl: Tucumán Province, Horco Molle, mosses on tree and soil (2 samples). Claps & Rossi (1984)
• 41°11′S, 714°9′W; 1,800 m asl: Rio Negro Province, Nahuel Huapi National Park, Monte Tronador, lichens form tree. Rossi & Claps (1989)
• 41°59′S, 71°34′W; 300 m asl: Rio Negro Province, El Bolsón, Valley of Rio Azul, mosses on decaying tree trunks in Nothofagus dombeyi grove. Iharos (1963)
Bolivia:
• 16°13'S, 68°13'W; 4,550–4,700 m asl: La Paz Department, Cordillera de la Real de los Andes, Tuni, subnival floor, cushion moss. Garitano-Zavala (1995, 1996)
• 16°20'S, 68°23'W; 4,650–4,700m asl: La Paz Department, Cordillera de la Real de los Andes, La Cumbre, subnival floor, cushion moss. Garitano-Zavala (1995, 1996)
Brazil:
• 22°44′S, 45°35′W; 1,650 m asl: São Paulo State, Campos do Jordão, mosses or aquatic plants. du Bois-Reymond Marcus (1944)
• 23°35′S, 46°41′W; 750 m asl: São Paulo State, near Itaím, mosses or aquatic plants. du Bois-Reymond Marcus (1944)
Ecuador:
• 00°54′N, 78°33′W; 800 m asl: Esmeraldas Province, Alto Tambo, liverwort ( Plagiochila punctata). Pilato et al. (2003a)
Record numbers: Argentina: 4, Bolivia: 2, Brazil: 2, Ecuador: 1; total: 9.
Remarks: The pingue group is a complex of similar species (Pilato & Binda 1998, 1999, see Fontoura & Pilato (2007) for diagnostic key). Diphascon pingue sensu lato was believed to be cosmopolitan (McInnes 1994a), but the recent group revision suggests the nominal species has probably Holarctic distribution (Pilato & Binda 1998, 1999), so the presence Diphascon pingue sensu stricto in South America is questionable and requires verification.