A Checklist of North American Odonata

A Checklist of North American Odonata

A Checklist of North American Odonata Including English Name, Etymology, Type Locality, and Distribution Dennis R. Paulson and Sidney W. Dunkle 2018 Edition A Checklist of North American Odonata Including English Name, Etymology, Type Locality, and Distribution 2018 Edition Dennis R. Paulson1 and Sidney W. Dunkle2 Originally published as Occasional Paper No. 56, Slater Museum of Natural History, University of Puget Sound, June 1999; completely revised March 2009; updated February 2011, February 2012, October 2016, and November 2018. Copyright © 2018 Dennis R. Paulson and Sidney W. Dunkle 2009, 2011, 2012, 2016, and 2018 editions published by Jim Johnson Cover photo: Male Hesperagrion heterodoxum, Painted Damsel, from Bear Canyon, Cochise County, Arizona, 30 August 2018. Photo by Dennis Paulson. 1 1724 NE 98th Street, Seattle, WA 98115 2 8030 Lakeside Parkway, Apt. 8208, Tucson, AZ 85730 ABSTRACT The checklist includes all 468 species of North American Odonata (Canada and the continental United States) considered valid at this time. For each species the original citation, English name, type locality, etymology of both scientific and English names, and approximate distribution are given. Literature citations for original descriptions of all species are given in the appended list of references. INTRODUCTION We publish this as the most comprehensive checklist Table 1. The families of North American Odonata, of all of the North American Odonata. Muttkowski with number of species. (1910) and Needham and Heywood (1929) are long out of date. The Anisoptera and Zygoptera were cov- Family Genera Species ered by Needham, Westfall, and May (2014) and West- fall and May (2006), respectively. Davies and Tobin Lestidae 2 19 (1984, 1985) listed the world odonate fauna but did Platystictidae 1 1 not include type localities or details of distribution. Calopterygidae 2 8 This paper includes that information and, in addition, Coenagrionidae 16 109 English names and etymologies for scientific names. ZYGOPTERA 21 137 Our genus and species names and their citations are es- sentially but not completely identical to those of Gar- Petaluridae 2 2 rison (1991) and Bridges (1993). Aeshnidae 13 44 Gomphidae 14 102 The 468 species of Odonata that are known to occur Cordulegastridae 1 10 in North America north of Mexico through 2018 are Macromiidae 2 9 listed below. The list includesCrocothemis servilia, ac- Corduliidae 7 50 cidentally introduced to Florida from Asia; it is surpris- Libellulidae 29 114 ing that so few species of Odonata have extended their ANISOPTERA 68 331 ranges by human introductions. Total 90 468 A taxonomic breakdown of the North American odo- nate fauna is given in Table l. Note that the family Protoneuridae is gone; it has been lumped into the Historically, odonates have been recognized by their Coenagrionidae. The order of damselfly families has scientific (Latin or Greek) names, entirely adequate for also changed a bit, the result of a new zygopteran phy- professional odonatologists. However, three decades logeny by Dijkstra et al. (2014). Twenty-nine percent ago we felt the time was at hand for standardized Eng- of the species are damselflies (Zygoptera). The three lish names, primarily to encourage a greater interest in dominant families—Coenagrionidae, Gomphidae, the group by lay persons when dragonfly field guides and Libellulidae—each comprise 22–25% of the fau- were published. English names have also long been re- na, but the Libellulidae has twice the number of genera quired for the designation of species of special conser- compared with either of the others. vation concern. Thus we coined English names for all the species of North American Odonata in 1987 (un- The rate of description of new species had steadily de- published). Subsequent revisions led to a list that was creased through the present century through the 1970s then submitted to the membership of the Dragonfly (Fig. 1); however, there was a resurgence in alpha tax- Society of the Americas (DSA) in 1996. For some spe- onomy of North American dragonflies late in the 20th cies members submitted alternate names, which were Century, with 23 species described since 1981. A ma- then put to a vote. jority of recently described species are in the Gomphi- dae, with its many species of restricted range and flight The list given herein is a result of that final action and season, but other families are represented as well (Table was published by the society as a supplement to Argia 2). The new techniques of molecular systematics, in- 8(2), 1996. Some of these names have been changed by creasingly applied to Odonata, are ushering in a greater committee action in the ensuing years. We also furnish understanding of both alpha taxonomy and higher sys- English names for genera, which were not included in tematics and phylogeny. the published list. All such matters of taxonomy, inclu- A Checklist of North American Odonata, 2018 1 Each species entry in the checklist is a paragraph in- Table 2. North American Odonata described from cluding the following lines: 1981–2018. Family No. Species 1) Scientific name, author of the original description, date of publication, the page on which the descrip- tion begins, and English name. The author, year, and Lestidae 0 page serve as an abbreviated literature reference. As the Calopterygidae 0 rules of zoological nomenclature state that the species Coenagrionidae 5 name must agree in gender with the genus name, sev- Petaluridae 0 eral species names have been changed since the original Aeshnidae 1 description. Thus, for example, Cordulegaster erroneus Gomphidae 13 becomes C. erronea. Cordulegastridae 3 Corduliidae 1 2) The name used in the original description, exactly as Libellulidae 1 it was proposed, is given in the line below the species name. If the species was originally described in a differ- sion in the North American fauna, and common name ent genus, the author’s name in the first line is enclosed choices are now the purview of the Checklist Commit- in parentheses. Additional information added by us is tee of the DSA. given in brackets. We have included the derivation of these names to 3) (TL). The type locality is given with the country, make them perhaps easier to learn. For the same rea- state or province, county, and nearest town or aquatic son, we have included the etymology for the scientific habitat, in that sequence. Where a holotype was des- names, although the significance of the choice of the ignated or only one locality was given, we have added name by the original author remains obscure in many information in brackets as necessary to more precisely cases. define the type locality. Where a series of specimens were described without designation of a holotype, we The original list has been modified by not only addi- have listed the localities for those specimens in alpha- tions to the fauna but also taxonomic changes and a betical order but have not usually added further data. few changes in existing English names. These changes were made by the Common Names Committee and 4) (Sci Name). The derivation of the scientific name then the Checklist Committee in the following num- is given, with the simple translation of the name and bers of the news journal of the DSA, Argia: 8(3): 23; its allusion if not clear from the translation. No deri- 8(4): 19; 10(1): 7,8; 10(3): 24; 10(4): 32; 11(2): 12; vations were given by the authors for the majority of 12(1): 12; 12(3): 41; 14(4): 3,22; 15(3): 17; 16(2): 11; North American species, and for these species we have 16(3): 16,18,29; 17(3): 26,38; 18(3): 7,23; 18(4): 6; furnished translations and allusions that seem most 19(2): 24; 19(3): 8,29; 20(2): 17,19; 20(3): 21,26; reasonable to us. However, some defy understanding. 20(4): 22; 21(3)17,20. In particular, Hermann Hagen applied unusual names to many of his species, and to our knowledge his allu- 100 95 s 80 60 44 42 39 40 35 26 23 20 18 19 12 15 13 Number of Specie 11 9 9 3 4 6 3 4 4 0 1 1 1 1751 1761 1771 1781 1791 1801 1811 1821 1831 1841 1851 1861 1871 1881 1891 1901 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001 2011 Beginning Year of Decade Figure 1. North American Odonata described by decade. 2 A Checklist of North American Odonata, 2018 sions were never revealed; some of them seem to indi- East (Paulson 2009, 2011), but with the great amount cate a rather peculiar mindset. of amateur odonate enthusiasts at present, those ranges are going out of date as the distribution of species is 5) (Eng Name). The derivation of our English names getting better known over time. The extent of the range is given. We have also included scientific- and English- outside the boundaries of the checklist is also given, by name derivations under the generic entries, as well as state in Mexico and by country elsewhere; some of this generotype of each genus. information has not been published. Range limits do not include isolated records well outside the primary 6) (Range). A broad characterization of the geographic range, but these are mentioned in most cases. range of each species is given, typically from the north- ern extent of the range, from west to east, to the south- Following each entry in the annotated references is a ern extent, from west to east. We have used states and list of the genera and species described in that paper, provinces to denote ranges rather than physiographic or in alphabetical order. Because of these lists, we have biogeographic regions.

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