Opisthacanthus fischeri

Monod, Lionel, Duperre, Nadine & Harms, Danilo, 2019, An annotated catalogue of the scorpion types (Arachnida, Scorpiones) held in the Zoological Museum Hamburg. Part I: Parvorder Iurida Soleglad & Fet, 2003, Evolutionary Systematics 3 (2), pp. 109-200 : 109

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.3.37464

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:87602625-AF8D-4A3F-BAE5-F35C09FB6C00

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5BF8C7A1-5B6F-56F8-8505-0E6B1A056492

treatment provided by

Evolutionary Systematics by Pensoft

scientific name

Opisthacanthus fischeri
status

 

Opisthacanthus fischeri Fig. 36 View Figure 36

Opisthacanthus fischeri Kraepelin, 1911: 74, 79

Current senior synonym.

Opisthacanthus (Nepabellus) rugiceps Pocock, 1897 [synonymized by Lourenço 1987: 915]

Lectotype.

( Fig. 36 A–C View Figure 36 ) ♂ ( ZMH-A0001092), Deutsch-Ostafrika [German East Africa = Kenya-Tanzania border], Nguruman [1°54 ’09” S, 36°00 ’18” E], Gebiet des Kilimandjaro [Kilimanjaro area], Maragoya-Tembo [3°26 ’30” S, 37°15 ’37” E], 19.01.1884, Gustav A. Fischer leg. ( ZMH, typ. Kat. Scorpio . Nr. 79 (9211-9212)).

Paralectotype.

1 ♂ ( ZMH-A0001066), 1 ♀ ( Fig. 36 D–F View Figure 36 , ZMH-A0001091) same data as lectotype.

Remarks.

A male is designated as lectotype and the two remaining specimens as paralectotypes.

Remarks on collector.

Gustav Adolf Fischer (1848-1886) was a German explorer who practiced as a military physician. In October 1882, he travelled to western Africa with the support of the Geographical Society of Hamburg ( Fischer 1885a, b). He reached the Maasai Country from the mouth of the Pangani River, traveling all the way up to Lake Naivasha and the southern foothills of Kilimandjaro. He returned to Germany in November 1883.