Megaphyllum kievense (Lohmander, 1928)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3741.1.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BF5EA9B8-C6F4-448A-BEF9-1976AB4EC308 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151732 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C887D3-FFEE-FFAF-FF34-9D8AFE44ADE6 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Megaphyllum kievense (Lohmander, 1928) |
status |
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Megaphyllum kievense (Lohmander, 1928) View in CoL
Fig. 14d View FIGURES 14 a – g *
Chromatoiulus transsilvanicus kievensis Lohmander, 1928: 538 –540, Figs 9–11 View FIGURES 9 a – g View FIGURES 10 a – g View FIGURES 11 a – g . Chromatoiulus transsilvanicus kievensis: Jawłowski 1930: 8 –10, 12.
Chromatoiulus kievensis: Lokšina 1969: 13 , 39, 48, 69, Fig. 39 IV.
Chromatoiulus (Chromatoiulus) kievensis: Lokšina & Golovatch 1979: 385 .
Megaphyllum kievense: Chornyi & Golovatch 1993: 7 , 30, 46, Figs 120–122; Enghoff & Kime 2009.
Distribution. Republic of Moldova: Bălţi: Corneşti; Chişinău: Căpriana (Jawłowski 1930); Abator, Socola (Jawłowski 1935); Romania: without locality (Chornyi & Golovatch 1993); Russia: Kursk Region (Lokšina 1969); Middle-Russian Upland: Gherasimovka, Stanovye, Loznoe, Nagolnoye (Prisnyi 2001); Ukraine: Podole: Malyn; Borschiv [Borshchiv]; Zalishchyky (Jawłowski 1936); PushchaVoditsa and Irpen [Irpen’], near Kijev (type locality); Chortkiv, Odessa, Chervonyi Yar Kilia, Ternopol Region, Vinnytsia Region, Kharkiv Region, Luhansk Region, Dnipropetrovsk Region (Chornyi & Golovatch 1993).
Diagnosis. Differs from the closest M. transsylvanicum by the shorter, apically serrated posterior opisthomere process (pp) and anterior solenomere process (asp) ( Fig. 14d View FIGURES 14 a – g *) (Lohmander 1928).
Males with two yellowish dorsal longitudinal bands on a dark grey ground. Females more variable—even within the same sample—but basically showing the same pattern (Lohmander 1928).
Remarks. The species was originally described as subspecies of M. transsylvanicum (Lohmander 1928) near Kijev, but Jawłowski (1930) emphasized the differences between the two forms. Lokšina (1969) discussed kievense at the species level referring to Lohmander—without any reference of year or publication— who had elevated M. kievense to species rank. We did not find this publication of Lohmander’s so this could have been personal communication.
The species lives in steppe, deciduous forests and disturbed habitats (Chornyi & Golovatch 1993). M. kievense and M. transsylvanicum can co-occur in Romania, Moldova and Ukraine, though there is no exact locality from Romania for M. kievense .
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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