Tabanus punctipleura Hine, 1920
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5588.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E8CCE537-C883-44AA-939B-143768342A9F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14925439 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FB276A04-2058-B847-51DF-40A9FAC94EDD |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Tabanus punctipleura Hine |
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Tabanus punctipleura Hine View in CoL
( Figs 48 A–D View FIGURE 48 , 49 View FIGURE 49 )
Tabanus punctipleura Hine, 1920: 314 View in CoL (list of species); Kröber, 1930a: 261 ( Tabanus View in CoL (Lophotabanus )) (Tax. Tabanini), 1934: 296 (cat.; Tabanus View in CoL (Lophotabanus )); Fairchild, 1947: 569, figs. 4, 4a, 4b (list of species), 1961c: 32 (list of species), 1971: 100 (cat.); Hogue & Fairchild, 1974: 26 (list of species); Moucha, 1976: 134 (cat.); Fairchild, 1984: 33, map 4, 1986: 123 (rev.); Fairchild & Burger, 1994: 147 (cat.); Cambra, 2006: 124–125, table 2 (list of species); Coscarón & Papavero, 2009b: 140 (cat);
Distribution: Costa Rica, Panama.
Type-locality: Costa Rica, San Carlos.
Diagnosis: One of the largest species of Tabanus in the Americas ( Fairchild, 1984) (reaching 23mm). Frons narrow (FI: 5.6), parallel or divergent at the base (DI: 1.0). Postpedicel with a long dorsal tooth, larger than one-third of the postpedicel’s size. Scutum and scutellum integument purplish-brown with gray pruinosity and black setulae. Pleura yellowish-brown setulose except for a well-defined tuft of dark setulae below the wing base. Wing light brown infuscated. Abdomen integument darker than thorax, without any dorsal setulose or integument well-defined spots, triangles or stripes, except for pale yellow setulose tufts on the posterolateral margin of tergites I to IV or V.
Remarks: We had no specimens of T. punctipleura available for examination in this study. The species diagnosis presented here is based on Hine’s (1920 b) description, on Fairchild’s (1947, 1984, 1986) comments, and on photos of the holotype made available in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History database. T. punctipleura is easily distinguished from other species in the T. nebulosus group due to the absence of any dorsal spots, triangles or stripes on the abdomen, whether it integumental or setulose, the long postpedicel tooth, and the well-defined setulose dark tuft on the pleura (see T.lutzi ). The male is similar to the female except for the reduced mouthparts, slender antenna lacking the ventral angle found in females, holoptic eyes with the facets poorly-demarcated, and the largest ones occupying less than a half of the upper eye areal ( Fairchild, 1986). T. punctipleura has part of the Andean/Mesoamerican components of Amorim & Pires (1996, Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ), and it would not be a surprise to find the species further north in Central America and in Colombia west to the Andes in the areas of Cauca, Bojayá etc.
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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Tabanus punctipleura Hine
Dutra, Maria Carolina Pimenta, Amorim, Dalton De Souza & Carmo, Daniel Dias Dornelas Do 2025 |
Tabanus punctipleura
Coscaron, S. & Papavero, N. 2009: 140 |
Cambra, R. A. 2006: 124 |
Fairchild, G. B. & Burger, J. F. 1994: 147 |
Fairchild, G. B. 1984: 33 |
Moucha, J. 1976: 134 |
Hogue, C. L. & Fairchild, G. B. 1974: 26 |
Fairchild, G. B. 1947: 569 |
Krober, O. 1930: 261 |
Hine, J. S. 1920: 314 |