Odonatos of Chile
Odonatos of Chile
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ZOOLOGICAL SERIES
OF
FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
Volume 24 CHICAGO, NOVEMBER 20, 1943 No. 32
AND
DILLMAN S. BULLOCK
DIRECTOR, AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL, "EL VERGEL," CHILE
Libellulidae
Gomphomacromia paradoxa Brauer 1864 Erythrodiplax connate Burmeister 1839
Anticordulia villosa Rambur 1842 Orthemis ferruginea Fabricius 1775
Erythrodiplax chloropleura Brauer 1866 Tholymis citrina Hagen 1867
ZYGOPTERA
Coenagrionidae
Lestes undulatus Say 1839 Ischnura fluviatilis Selys 1876
Antiagrion blanchardi Selys 1876 Oxyagrion rufulum Hagen 1861
Antiagrion gayi Selys 1876 Acanthagrion interruption Selys 1876
3. Face with a heavy black crossbar above the mouth; hind wing 52 mm.
Phenes raptor
Face all pale yellowish; hind wing 26 mm Neogomphus, 4
4. Male with inferior appendage as long as the superior N. molestus
Male with inferior appendage half as long as the superior N. bidens
5. Fore wing triangle divided into 2-3 cells; six or seven brown spots along the
fore border of the wing; hind wing 48 mm Hypopetalia pestilens
Fore wing triangle of two cells; five spots on border 6
6. Frons very high in front (three times the postclypeus) and divided by a deep
longitudinal groove; hind wing 35 mm Petalia punctata
Frons moderate, not deeply grooved Phyllopetalia, 7
8. Male with anal triangle 4-celled; frons a little notched above .P. decorata
Male with anal triangle 3-celled; frons not notched at all 9
-2,-t-
// r hi /ST A / 8
1943 ODONATA OF CHILE NEEDHAM AND BULLOCK 359
10. Hind wings with four to seven cubito-anal cross veins; stigma with brace
vein; triangles similar in fore and hind wing ............. Aeschnidae, 11
Hind wings with one or two cubito-anal cross veins; no brace vein to stigma;
triangles of fore and hind wings unlike ................. Libellulidae, 14
11. Vein Rs simple; wings streaked at base with brown; hind wing 51-58 mm.
Allopetalia reticulosa
'
Vein Rs forked; wings hyaline ...................... ....... Aeschna, 12
13. Thorax olivaceous in front, clothed with whitish hairs ........... A. diffinis
Thorax reddish, with two yellow stripes in front ............... A. cow/wsa
14. Fore wing with eight antenodal cross veins and no planates ............. 15
Fore wing with ten or more antenodal cross veins and with well-developed
planates ....................................................... 16
Triangle and subtriangle both divided by cross veins .... Anticordulia villosa
17. Colored area of base of hind wing golden; hind wing 25 mm. E. chloropleura
.
18. Arculus in fore wing at or beyond the second antenodal cross vein; hind
wing 40 mm
....................................... Orthemis ferruginea
Arculus in fore wing before the second antenodal cross vein; hind wing
35 mm ............................................. Tholymis citrina
19. Middle fork nearer to the arculus than to the nodus; hind wing 21 mm.
Lestes undulatus
Middle fork nearer to the nodus than to the arculus ................... 20
20. Front side of quadrangle longer than half the rear side; postnodal cross
veins 14 or more ...................................... Antiagrion, 21
Front side of quadrangle less than half the length of the rear side; postnodal
cross veins 12 or fewer ........................................... 22
22. Wings not stalked to anal crossing; hind wing 22 mm ..... Ischnura fluviatilis
Wings stalked to anal crossing ...................................... 23
Nymphs
1. Body stout; gills internal , Anisoptera, 2
Body slender; gills three, caudal, leaf-like Zygoptera, 10
6. Head parallel-sided for a distance behind the eyes; lateral lobe of the labium
broad, concave internally; abdomen with rows of conspicuous hair tufts;
end squarely truncated Phenes raptor
Head strongly narrowed from the eyes backward; lateral labial lobe narrow,
1
taper-pointed Phyllopetalia
Unknown Peialia and Hypopetalia
8. Abdomen with huge lateral spines, longer than the segments that bear them.
Tholymis ciirina?
Abdomen with very short and inconspicuous lateral spines 9
9. Teeth on the opposed edges of the lateral labial lobes deeply incised and
very distinct Orthemis
These teeth obsolete Erythrodiplax
10. Labium excessively long and slender, spoon-shaped at tip, its mentum
narrowest in the middle Lestes
Labium shorter, its mentum narrowest at its basal hinge 11
11. Gills widest near the base, and regularly tapering to long and very slender
tips Antiagrion
Gills widest beyond the middle and abruptly tapered near the tip 12
These characters are taken from Tillyard's description and figure (Biology
1
far from each other as from the eyes, dwindling and converging
caudad; also two lateral more continuous rows at the sides, more
uniformly tufted.
The disk of the prothorax is small, about half as long as wide,
and bears a short row of low tubercles on its projecting lateral
margins. Below these there are tufted tubercles projecting above
the front coxae. Above the base of each middle and hind leg there
is a shelf-like, hair-fringed prominence, and farther caudad on the
ABBREVIATIONS
A. anal vein mr. midrib (bisector of anal
Ac. anal crossing loop)
Al. or al. anal loop n. nodus
an. antenodal cross veins o. oblique vein
a. pi. apical planate P- patella
or. arculus <7- quadrangle
&. basal subcostal cross vein R- radius
br. bridge Rs. radial sector
Bs. mid-basal space; space f- pi- radial planate
before the arculus s. subtriangle
Brs. basal radial space Sc. subcosta
C. costa set. sectors of arculus
Cu. cubitus sn. subnodus
g. gaff (fused portion of veins sq. subquadrangle
Cu 2 and Ai) si. stigma
h. hyper triangular space t. triangle
M. media tr. pi. trigonal planate
m. membranule .
point at which petiolation
Ma. medio-anal link (stalk) of wing base ceases
Mf. middle fork x. brace vein to the stigma
m. pi. median planate
FIG. 28. Diagrams illustrating the terminology of Odonate wing
venation. See explanation on opposite page.
363
364 FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY ZOOLOGY, VOL. 24
stout spines at the base of the tarsi, two on each side. Each of the
two basal tarsal segments bears beneath a double row of smaller
spines (fig. 30, No. 1) growing larger distally, and the third joint bears
a pair of strong smooth claws. The wing cases reach backward to
the fifth abdominal segment.
The abdomen is moderately depressed and widest on segment 6.
There are no dorsal hooks at all; instead there is a mid-dorsal low
streak that lies between two submedian lines of double, large, con-
spicuous hair tufts, the outermost row on tubercles. There are no
lateral spines; instead, the sides of the segments are broadly rounded
with a slight notch in the midst of their tufted margins toward the
rear. There are two additional lines of hair tufts on each side of the
abdomen; one midlateral on the apical carinae, larger; and a minute
tuft of a few hairs farther out and toward the antero-lateral angle
of each segment. The mid-dorsal length of abdominal segments 6
to 10 is about as 10:9:9:8. The caudal appendages have a remark-
able development in this male specimen, corresponding to those
of the adult insect. The forked laterals are blunt-tipped and have
something of the downy appearance of budding staghorns in the
velvet. The superior is already decurved between the laterals and
greatly elongated. The inferiors are shorter, invisible when viewed
from above, triquetral and sharp-pointed, but densely clothed with
tawny hair externally and covered at the base by a yellow hair
fringe that springs from the apical margin of segment 10.
Length 48 mm.; abdomen 30; hind femur 10. Width of head 10;
of abdomen 13.
365
366 FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY ZOOLOGY, VOL. 24
Neogomphus Leach
The drying up of a mill run on the farm at "El Vergel" made it
nymph, grayish brown and somewhat covered with The head silt.
The third joint of the antennae is about twice as long as the two
basal joints taken together, dilated to an oval form and fringed at
the edges with long soft hair. The button-like fourth joint is very
rudimentary and occupies a notch in the middle of the terminal
margin of the third. The mentum of the labium is a third longer
than wide and rather regularly narrowed from outer end to basal
hinge, with a very slight basal narrowing. The median lobe of the
labium (fig. 30, No. 5) is convex and in the middle of its front margin
bears three minute brown denticles and a bordering fringe of hairs.
The lateral labial lobe is scarcely hooked at the tip where its outer
margin beyond the movable hook is regularly incurved to end at a
terminal denticle on the inner margin. There are about nine denti-
cles on that margin, each truncated so as to point caudad, and they
diminish in size proximally and end at its basal third.
The prothorax is about as wide as the head, with its roundish
dorsal disk about a third narrower. The fore and middle tibiae bear
strong end hooks. All femora bear the usual longitudinal scars,
and all the legs are fringed with hairs.
The fore wings lie parallel upon the back, and the hind wings
above them lie with their tips a little convergent.
The abdomen widest on segment 5, beyond which level it is
is
slowly and regularly tapered to the tip. There are no dorsal hooks
at all, but there are some mid-dorsal hair tufts on the basal segments,
also some scattered hairs below the wing pads at the sides. There
are short triangular lateral spines on segments 8 and 9. The mid-
dorsal length of the last three abdominal segments is about as
10:10:6. The bluntly tipped caudal appendages are twice the mid-
1943 ODONATA OF CHILE NEEDHAM AND BULLOCK 367
dorsal length of the tenth segment, the superior one almost the length
of the inferiors, the laterals less than half as long.
This species occurred in the bed of the mill run more sparingly
than the preceding, perhaps in the proportion of one to ten. It is
so similar to N. molestus that there is no need to do more than
point out the differences by which it may be distinguished.
It is a little larger (length 28 mm.) lateral spines occur regularly
;
teeth, and the terminal tooth or end hook projects a little more
prominently inward beyond the general level of the other teeth.
out. Vein M2 is slightly undulated in the fore wing. There are but
five antenodal cross veins in the hind wing. In the anal area of the
hind wing there are three rows of cells paralleling the weakly devel-
oped vein A 2 which is the hind border of the anal loop, and the cells
,
in Somatochlora,and the cells within the anal loop are less enlarged
toward the ends of it.
It disagrees with Paracordulia Martin in type of male genitalia,
in lack of convergence of veins M
and Cu, at the wing margin, in
4
having but five antenodal cross veins in the hind wing, and in having
three cell rows in the anal area behind the anal loop; in these
characters Paracordulia is more like Somatochlora.
Martin has figured the caudal appendages of the male for Anti-
cordulia villosa (1906, p. 20, fig. 15). The subgenital plate of the
female has not been described or illustrated. It is elongate triangu-
lar, three-fifths as long as the ninth sternum, against which it lies
flat. It is divided for two-thirds of its length by an open parallel-
sided narrow slit, and the tips on either side of the slit are rounded.
The nymph (fig. 30, No. 8) is rather smooth, with broadly de-
pressed, oval, almost circular abdomen. Head widest across the
laterallyprominent eyes, with low hind angles and concave occiput.
Antennae with the length of the seven joints as 8:9:10:7:8:10:9.
Between the antennae is a low transverse prominence thickly beset
with microscopic prickles. The top of the head bears two prominent
nipple-shaped tubercles.
Disk of the prothorax much wider than long, bordered on its
convex rear margin with a rim that runs out laterally into an obtuse
prominence. Legs long, thin and bare except for a few scattering
hairs. Labium short and broad, its hinge just reaching the meta-
sternum. Lateral setae seven on each side; mentals ten or eleven,
the sixth longest. Lateral lobes broadly triangular, their
opposed margins armed with about seven deeply cut and serrately
369
370 FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY ZOOLOGY, VOL. 24
arranged teeth (fig. 30, No. 9), the teeth armed with spinules number-
ing from one on the foremost tooth to about seven on the hindmost.
The movable hook is slender, straight to near the tip, and then
slightly incurved.
Abdomen much depressed, broadest on segment 7, narrowing
rapidly forward and still more rapidly backward, concolorous except
for two longitudinal midlateral rows of round brown spots on a paler
ground. Lateral spines on segments 4 to 9 regularly increasing in
length and strength caudad, on 9 distinctly incurved. They are
arranged about the curving abdominal margin like the teeth of a
circular saw. All are sharply pointed and those of 9 are spaced more
than their own length apart from the apex of 10. Segment 10 is
annular and inserted into the apex of 9. Dorsal hooks on 4 to 9;
on 4 a minute rudiment; on 5, larger, blunt-tipped, and erect; and
on 6 to 9, higher and laterally flattened but with eroded tips, increas-
ingly declined caudad; on 7 and 8, largest. The mid-dorsal length
of the last four segments is as 10:9:8:3, with the appendages on the
same scale as 7. Appendages stout, subtriangular, sharp-pointed,
superior and inferior of about equal length, the laterals a little
shorter. On the under side of the apical margin of 9 there is a thin
fringe of long hairs.
Antiagrion sp.
the joint, with the lower margin of the lateral ones spinulose-serrate
out to the joint. Their tracheation is very twig-like.
Length of body 15 mm.; gills 8 additional; abdomen 10; hind
femur 4. Width of head 4; of abdomen 3.
This species was first described by Hagen (1861) from an incom-
plete male specimen from northern California; more fully by Selys
(1876) with females from Chile added; and still more fully by Calvert
(1909), with drawings of the male appendages added. It has not
been found again in California. Was Hagen's specimen a stray
carried by air currents, or was the locality on the label erroneous?
REFERENCES
CALVERT, P. P.
1909. Contributions to a Knowledge of the Odonata of the Neotropical Region,
Exclusive of Mexico and Central America. Ann. Carnegie Mus., 6, p. 183,
pi. 3, figs. 49, 50, male app. Oxyagrion rufulum.
HAGEN, HERMANN
1861. Synopsis of the Neuroptera of North America, with a List of the South
American Species. Smithson. Misc. Coll., 4, xx +
347 pp.
MARTIN, RENE
1906. Cordulines. Collections Zoologiques du Baron Edm. de Selys Long-
champs. Catalogue, syste'matique et descriptif, 17, 98 pp., 3 pis. (col.),
99 figs.
Ris, FR.
1904. Odonaten. Ergebnesse der Hamburger Magalhaensischen Sammelreise,
Hamburger-Naturhist. Mus., pt. 7, No. 3, 44 pp., pi. and text figs.
1913. Neuer Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Odonatenfauna von Argentina. Mem.
Soc. Ent. Belg., 22, p. 66, figs, of male app. of Acanthagrion interruptum.
Reports A. interruptum from Penco (Reed Coll.) and Concepcion (P. Herbst).
SELYS-LONGCHAMPS, E. DE
1876. Synopsis des Agrionines, 5me Legion. Bull. Acad. Roy. Sci. Belg., (2),
41, pp. 247-322, 496-539, 1233-1309.
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS-URBAN*