Molineri C. & al. 2023

De Odonates du Monde
Version datée du 5 juin 2023 à 03:25 par Deliry Cyrille (discussion | contributions) (Page créée avec « {{CK}} ---- {{MolineriAl2023}} ---- '''Abstract'''<br> Ten species of ''Progomphus'' Selys, 1854 are known to occur in Argentina. The larval stages of only four of them are described. We here add the larval descriptions of two species: ''Progomphus aberrans'' Belle, 1973 and ''Progomphus kimminsi'' Belle, 1973, and diagnose and illustrate important characters for the remaining species known at the larval stage in Argentina : ''Progomph... »)
(diff) ← Version précédente | Voir la version actuelle (diff) | Version suivante → (diff)
Demoiselles et Libellules du Monde entier
[Espèces : A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z]
••• 1235-1762 (~ 1880 partim) + 2023-2024 •••
11 589 articles
Deliry C. 2025 – Molineri C. & al. 2023. - In : Odonates du Monde (Histoires Naturelles) [2004-2025] – Version 11026 du 05.06.2023. – odonates.net

[A contrôler !]


Molineri C. & al. 2023 - Diagnoses and key for the larvae of Progomphus Selys, 1854 from Argentina (Anisoptera: Gomphidae), with first larval descriptions for P. aberrans Belle, 1973 and P. kimminsi Belle, 1973- Zootaxa, 1er juin 2023.


Abstract
Ten species of Progomphus Selys, 1854 are known to occur in Argentina. The larval stages of only four of them are described. We here add the larval descriptions of two species: Progomphus aberrans Belle, 1973 and Progomphus kimminsi Belle, 1973, and diagnose and illustrate important characters for the remaining species known at the larval stage in Argentina : Progomphus complicatus Selys, 1854, Progomphus joergenseni Ris, 1908, Progomphus lepidus Ris, 1911 and Progomphus phyllochromus Ris, 1918. New geographical records for these species are presented, including new records for Progomphus kimminsi in Bolivia, and new provincial records in Argentina : Progomphus aberrans and Progomphus joergenseni in San Luis, and Progomphus kimminsi in Santiago del Estero. A key to distinguish the larval stage of Argentinean species is proposed.