Campsurus paraquarius Navas

Molineri, Carlos, Salles, Frederico F. & Peters, Janice G., 2015, Phylogeny and biogeography of Asthenopodinae with a revision of Asthenopus, reinstatement of Asthenopodes, and the description of the new genera Hubbardipes and Priasthenopus (Ephemeroptera, Polymitarcyidae), ZooKeys 478, pp. 45-128 : 68

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.478.8057

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EC360FAF-6BF9-4FEF-96DA-F336302D1789

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/00153CE6-6F76-ACB6-F567-78AB0E82B963

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Campsurus paraquarius Navas
status

nom. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Ephemeroptera Polymitarcyidae

Campsurus paraquarius Navas nom. n.

Campsurus paraguarius [lapsus] Navás 1920: 53; Lestage 1923: 122; Traver 1947 b: 371; Hubbard 1982 a: 271; Kluge 2004: 267.

Campsurus paraquarius ; Navás 1924 a: 359.

Material examined.

None.

Discussion.

In the forewings of Priasthenopus gilliesi , vein MP1 is basally free except on Bolivian males where this vein tends to fuse with MP2, although not completely. This last arrangement of the MP sector is also present in Campsurus paraquarius Navas (1920) and, also coincident, are the length and arrangement of the two imv (intercalary marginal veinlets) figured by Navás, the relatively short ICu veins and the vein AA basally curved to CuP; also the small size of the male described by Navás coincide with Priasthenopus size range. Navás described the color of legs without saying that middle and hind legs are reduced (as Campsurus ), so probably they were present and complete as in all Asthenopodinae. Finally Navás stated that the pronotum is wider than long (transverse), feature also present in Priasthenopus and related genera ( Asthenopus , Povilla ) but not in Campsurus males. Other species of Neotropical Asthenopodinae show shorter intercalary marginal veins ( Asthenopus s.s.) or longer ICu veins ( Asthenopodes ). Lestage (1923) noted the similiraty of Navás species with the genus Asthenopus and Kluge (2004) treated this species in Asthenopus because of the arrangement of veins in the Cu sector of FW. We here coincide with these authors and because of the bad original description by Navás, and the apparent loss of type material, we treat the name paraquarius ( Navás 1920) as a NOMEN NUDUM.