identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
C01826D397AA5D3CAB6457DA21783E8A.text	C01826D397AA5D3CAB6457DA21783E8A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Nuvol Navas 1916	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Genus  
Nuvol 
Navas
, 1916
</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Nuvol umbrosus Navás , 1916. </p>
            <p>Known geographic distribution.</p>
            <p> South America: Brazil (Amazonas,  Rondônia , Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro). </p>
            <p>Generic diagnosis.</p>
            <p>Based on a small number of specimens from two species:</p>
            <p> N. umbrosus - one specimen of unknown sex described by  Navás (1916) and one male described here. </p>
            <p> N. satur - two females described by Tauber and Sosa (2015, as  N. umbrosus ). </p>
            <p>Medium to large lacewings, forewing length 14.8-17.0 mm. Head, pronotum with longitudinal black stripes or diffuse reddish marks; setae long. Legs unmarked; claws basally dilated. Forewing marked with faint to dark yellowish-brown transverse streaks through center and margins of wing; costal area narrow throughout; costal setae short, inclined; stigma marked with one to two small dark spots; Sc and R well separated throughout; R extended apically, curving posteriorly around wing apex; terminal subcostal and radial veinlets at apex of wing largely unforked, darkly marked; im short, broadly ovate; Rs almost straight, parallel to R; radial cells short, height relatively uniform from base to below stigma; gradate veins arranged in two roughly parallel series; outer gradates closely aligned, flowing smoothly from PsM; inner gradates extending basally, not meeting PsM; four intracubital cells, with icu1, icu2, icu3 closed, icu4 (dcc) open. Hindwing venation, markings similar to forewing.</p>
            <p>Possible additional generic features, with supporting evidence from only one species and/or one specimen: Antennae very long (over twice length of forewing). Female: T9+ect separated dorsally by longitudinal groove. Spermatheca doughnut shaped, with elongate narrow spermathecal duct, substantial, sail-like velum opening directly to bursa copulatrix via dorsal slit. Bursa copulatrix with delicate membrane, elongate bursal glands. Subgenitale substantial, with bilobed knob protruding from broad triangular base. Male: T9+ect with prominent, heavily sclerotized, bifurcated dorsal apodeme: with dorsal spur extending upward behind and well above callus cerci, with ventral branch extending distally, protruding as lobe well beyond distal margin of ectoproct. T9+ect fused dorsally; callus cerci round to very slightly oval, dark against pale background. Sternites S8, S9 weakly fused, with conspicuous cleft or suture scars. Gonarcus well sclerotized, widely arcuate; bridge broad, curved, with pair of elongate ventral projections extending ventrally; gonocornua long, broad. Mediuncus bulbous basally, with slender terminus, membranous dorsal attachment to gonarcal bridge, lateral attachments to inner sides of ventral projections of gonarcus.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C01826D397AA5D3CAB6457DA21783E8A	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Sosa-Duque, Francisco Jose;Tauber, Catherine A.	Sosa-Duque, Francisco Jose, Tauber, Catherine A. (2023): Discovery and redescription of the true Nuvol umbrosus Navas and naming of a new Nuvol species (Neuroptera, Chrysopidae, Leucochrysini). ZooKeys 1158: 179-193, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1158.98572, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1158.98572
A74B76B3B3235C4B96878CC1493D560E.text	A74B76B3B3235C4B96878CC1493D560E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Nuvol satur Sosa & Tauber 2023	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Nuvol satur Sosa &amp; Tauber sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Type specimens.</p>
            <p> Holotype: Female, INPA; Brazil, Amazonia, Novo  Aripuanã , 05°15'53"S, 60°07'08"W. Armadilha Malaise em  igarapé ; Floresta  úmida , ix.2004, Henriques Silva &amp; Pena leg. Specimen pinned. Paratype: Female, EMUS; Brazil,  Rondônia , 62 km SE Ariquemes, 7-18 Nov. 1995, W. J. Hanson. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The genus name "  Nuvol " is a masculine noun meaning  “cloud” in Catalan; the species name " satur " is a Latin adjective (masculine form) meaning "deep or full", as applied to color (R. A. Pantaleoni, pers. comm.). The species name refers to the more intense coloration of the diffuse markings on the wings of the species, as compared with  N. umbrosus . </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The most notable features that distinguish  N. satur from  N. umbrosus are the head and pronotal markings, markings on the abdomen, wing size, and wing markings, as follows: (1) The head and prothoracic markings of  N. satur are red and diffuse, whereas those of  N. umbrosus are brown and longitudinally striped; (2) The wings of  N. satur are 14.8-15.8 mm long, slightly shorter than those of  N. umbrosus (17.0 mm); and (3) Although both  Nuvol species express some degree of suppressed forking in the terminal veinlets of the forewings and hindwings,  N. satur has a much greater degree of suppression than  N. umbrosus . Almost none of the terminal veinlets of the  N. satur wings are forked, whereas only a small proportion of the veinlets on the posterior margin of the  N. umbrosus wings are unforked. Finally, (4) the wing markings of  N. satur are considerably more pronounced and in a different pattern than those of  N. umbrosus (Fig. 7). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Provided by Tauber and Sosa 2015: 144-150 (as  Nuvol umbrosus ). Note: In the description, we neglected to mention the length of the antennae; they measured 28.6 and 31.5 mm, over twice as long as the wing length (13.8 mm). The antennal length for  N. umbrosus is unknown. </p>
            <p>Immatures and biology.</p>
            <p>Unknown.</p>
            <p>Known geographic distribution.</p>
            <p> Brazil: Amazonas,  Rondônia . </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A74B76B3B3235C4B96878CC1493D560E	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Sosa-Duque, Francisco Jose;Tauber, Catherine A.	Sosa-Duque, Francisco Jose, Tauber, Catherine A. (2023): Discovery and redescription of the true Nuvol umbrosus Navas and naming of a new Nuvol species (Neuroptera, Chrysopidae, Leucochrysini). ZooKeys 1158: 179-193, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1158.98572, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1158.98572
D9DD5D02C5E6527A8DD9B534E6AFD8D0.text	D9DD5D02C5E6527A8DD9B534E6AFD8D0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Nuvol umbrosus Navas 1916	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> 
Nuvol umbrosus 
Navas
, 1916
</p>
            <p> Nuvol umbrosus Brotéria (  Zoológica ) 14: 25; "Rio de Janeiro, Febrero de 1912" (only one specimen).  Navás 1929a: 860 (locality record, as Newol [sic] umbrosus);  Navás 1929b: 319 (locality record); Penny 1977: 28 (species list); Brooks and Barnard 1990: 251 (taxonomy, drawing of wings from  Adams’ notes on MZUSP specimen); Oswald 2013 (catalog listing); Tauber and Sosa 2015: 141-153 (taxonomic treatment based on incorrect species identification). </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p> One male specimen preserved in alcohol, examined by FS: "MG,  São Gonzalo Rio Abaixo, EA [  Estação Ambiental, 19°53'2.86"S, 43°22'26.14"W, 751m] Peti, 30.iv.2012, A. F. Kumagai" (deposited in the collection of the Instituto de  Ciências Biológicas , Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (ICB - UFMG), Belo Horizonte, Brazil). </p>
            <p>Body (Fig. 1): Slender, yellowish to greenish, with elongate, slender antennae (both broken), hyaline wings marked with conspicuous brown to golden bands. Head (Figs 1A, 2A-C): Vertex raised, yellowish green, with two wide, reddish-brown longitudinal stripes dorsally, two smaller stripes laterally near edge of eyes. Frons, clypeus greenish; genae red. Labial, maxillary palpi yellow, unmarked. Antennae with scapes elongate, relatively large, close to each other mesally, cream colored, with light reddish-brown stripe dorsally (Fig. 2A, B); pedicel apparently unmarked; flagellar segments (basal section of flagellum) elongate, each with four swirls of robust, acute black setae (Fig. 1B). Measurements: head width (dorsal) 1.7 mm, ratio of head width / eye width 1:2.2; scape length 0.46 mm, width 0.35 mm.</p>
            <p> Thorax (Fig. 2A, C, D): Prothorax slightly wider than long (length 0.9 mm, width 1.2 mm), notum with five thin, longitudinal, reddish-brown stripes, three dorsal [as illustrated by  Navás (1916)], two on lateral margin [absent from  Navás’ drawing]; surface with elongate, golden setae mesolaterally. Mesothorax, metathorax with dark red marks laterally. Legs pale, without markings, with numerous light-brown to amber setae; tarsal claws with broad, dilated base, deep narrow cleft (Fig. 1C). </p>
            <p> Note:  Navás’ figure illustrated only the dorsal marks on the pronotum, not the lateral stripes; however, he explicitly mentioned the lateral stripes in his description. Thus, the specimen we describe here matches  Navás’ type specimen in having five distinct dark red longitudinal stripes on the pronotum and two thin, somewhat diffuse, lateral stripes on the mesonotum and metanotum. </p>
            <p>Wings (Fig. 3): Forewing 17.0 mm long, 6.1 mm wide (at widest point), with ratio of length / maximum width = 2.8:1; width at midpoint 5.6 mm, width along distal margin of basal quadrant, 4.2 mm; at base of distal quadrant 5.7 mm. Costal area relatively narrow; tallest costal cell (#8) 0.9 mm tall, with height 1.5 times its width, 0.16 times width of wing (midwing). First intramedian cell (im1) triangular, height at base (along median arculus, ma) 0.46 mm, width 2.1 times height, 0.57 times width of third median cell (m3). First radial crossvein distal to origin of radial sector (Rs); radial area (between R and Rs) with single row of 14 short, closed cells; tallest radial cell (ra-rp1) 0.69 mm in height, 0.72 times shorter than its width; two b cells (cells beneath Rs, not including an inner gradate vein); eight b ' cells (cells beneath Psm, after im2). Nine discrete inner gradates in regularly ascending, almost linear pattern, basal one not reaching Psm. Nine to eleven outer gradates aligned in relatively straight line adjacent to margin of wing, from tip of Psm to tip of Rs. Height of fourth inner gradate cell 1.1 times width. Four intracubital cells (icu1-icu3 closed, icu4 open). Subcosta, radial sector forked apically; thirteen to fourteen posterior terminal veins forked, distal six simple, without forks. Longitudinal veins, crossveins simple, slender, largely without crassate sections. Alar membrane with three large, conspicuous, diffuse, light yellowish-brown marks; stigma brown marked (Fig. 3B). Most veins dark, those beneath diffused alar markings appearing hyaline.</p>
            <p>Hindwing 15.8 mm long, 5.1 mm wide. Nine discrete inner gradates, basal one not reaching Psm. Six outer gradates ascending in relatively straight to slightly zigzag trajectory adjacent to wing margin. Thirteen radial cells (counted from origin of radius, not false origin). Two large b cells (no small " t " cell); seven b ' cells beyond im2. Membrane with yellowish-brown diffused marks, similar to those on forewing; veins generally dark, but light in areas of diffused markings; stigma with single, weak brown spot basally, brown veins.</p>
            <p>Abdomen, male (Figs 4 - 6): Yellowish with dark brown to black spots on tergites, sternites as follows: posterior sections of T1-T3, T6-T7, lateral margins of T1-T7, along dorsal apodeme below T8, tip of T9+ect, dorsal margin of S9 (Fig. 4A-C). Tergites, sternites quadrate, with all margins relatively straight, with long, robust setae, scattered short setae, dense microsetae, except S9 without microsetae (Fig. 5E); pleuron with sparse short setae except P7, P8 with setae large, dense. Microtrichiae covering the pleuron throughout. Spiracles small, round externally, atria not enlarged; rim sclerotized weakly. Callus cerci brown to black, round to slightly oval, located medially on T9+ect, with ~32 densely spaced trichobothria (Figs 4C, 5D). T9+ect fused dorsally, elongate, extending basally beneath T8 to distal margin of T7, with dorsal apodeme extending along full length of ventral margin, articulating basally with proximal end of ventral apodeme on dorsal margin of S8+9. Dorsal apodeme (Fig. 5A) strongly sclerotized throughout, bifurcated mesally, proximal to callus cerci, with dorsal spur almost reaching the dorsal margin of T9+ect, with lower section extending distally into setose lobe, well beyond distal margin of T9+ect (Fig. 5A-C). Basal section of S8+9 connected to T9+ect via membrane with scattered, long setae (Figs 4B, C, 5A). Dorsal margin of S8+9 (lateral view) with deep mesal cleft (Figs 4C, 5A); ventral surface of S8+9 with small suture-like separation, S8 with microsetae, S9 without microsetae (Fig. 5A). Dorsal margin of S8 with distinct apodeme (ventral apodeme) descending abruptly to base of cleft, covered by dense field of robust setae (Fig. 5A). Dorsal margin of S9 heavily convex, with sclerotized apodeme along upper edge, with round, sclerotized tips extending beyond end of segment (Fig. 5A-C, E). Sternites with ratio of maximum height / maximum length (lateral view): S2 = 0.5:1; S3 = 0.6:1; S4 = 0.8:1; S5 = 1:1; S6 = 1:1; S7 = 1.1:1; S8 = 1.5:1; S9 = 0.6:1; surfaces without microtholi.</p>
            <p>Gonarcus well sclerotized, widely arcuate (maximum span 0.31 mm; minimum span between posterior apices of the lateral apodemes 0.28 mm); gonarcal bridge broad, curved, bearing two long, flat, quadrate gonocornua dorsally (~0.28 mm long, 0.14 mm wide), pair of broad oval-shaped gonarcal apodemes basally (0.46 mm tall, 0.22 wide); gonarcal bridge strongly fused with base of gonocornua (Fig. 6A), pair of ventral projections (~0.24 mm long) extending from the ventral surface of the gonarcal bridge (Fig. 6B-D, F), with distal area swollen, terminating in beak-like apex (Fig. 6B, C). Mediuncus attached to gonarcal bridge and ventral processes via membranes extending from lower surface of gonarcal bridge, from inner margins of ventral processes; dorsal surface of mediuncus apparently smooth (Fig. 6B-D), terminating distally in curved beak, flanked laterally by prominent lateral lobe (Fig. 6B). Gonosaccus with dorsal surface striate (Fig. 6E), with two mesal fields of three large, heavily sclerotized chalazae, each bearing one or two long, thin setae subapically (Fig. 6F, G); area on gonosaccus above heavy chalazae with additional smaller chalazate gonosetae (Fig. 6G). Hypandrium internum not seen.</p>
            <p>Note: The hypandrium internum can often be difficult to find. One was not found in this specimen. Either the specimen did not have one, it was not well developed, or it was lost.</p>
            <p>Abdomen, female: Undescribed.</p>
            <p>Immatures and biology.</p>
            <p>Unknown.</p>
            <p>Known geographic distribution.</p>
            <p>Brazil: Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais (new record).</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D9DD5D02C5E6527A8DD9B534E6AFD8D0	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Sosa-Duque, Francisco Jose;Tauber, Catherine A.	Sosa-Duque, Francisco Jose, Tauber, Catherine A. (2023): Discovery and redescription of the true Nuvol umbrosus Navas and naming of a new Nuvol species (Neuroptera, Chrysopidae, Leucochrysini). ZooKeys 1158: 179-193, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1158.98572, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1158.98572
