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24 June 2014 Redescription of Heterometrus latimanus and Confirmation of the Genus Heterometrus (Scorpiones: Scorpionidae) in Pakistan
H. Muhammad Tahir, Lorenzo Prendini
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Abstract

Scorpions of the genus Heterometrus Ehrenberg, 1828, are distributed from India and Sri Lanka throughout the Southeast Asian mainland and archipelagos as far as Wallaces Line. Despite this widespread distribution, Heterometrus was not recorded from Pakistan until a single specimen from Azad Kashmir was reported from the collection of the Pakistan Museum of Natural History, Islamabad. Perhaps because the specimen was misidentified as Heterometrus wroughtoni (Pocock, 1899), a species that occurs much farther to the southeast in India, the presence of Heterometrus in Pakistan remained uncertain until fresh material of a distinctive species of Heterometrus was recently collected at several locations in Khyber Pakhtoon Khawa. After comparison of the material with the holotype and only known specimen of a little-known species, Heterometrus latimanus (Pocock, 1894), with an indefinite type locality in “India,” the Pakistani material was determined to be conspecific. In the present contribution, H. latimanus is redescribed based on adult males and females from several localities, and the specimen from Azad Kashmir tentatively assigned to it, confirming the presence of Heterometrus in Pakistan. The new locality records extend the distribution of the genus considerably to the northwest, and west of the Indus River for the first time. The known records of H. latimanus appear to be isolated from other Heterometrus occurring on the Indian subcontinent by the Great Indian (Thar) Desert, an arid, sandy basin extending from eastern Pakistan to northwestern India.

© American Museum of Natural History 2014
H. Muhammad Tahir and Lorenzo Prendini "Redescription of Heterometrus latimanus and Confirmation of the Genus Heterometrus (Scorpiones: Scorpionidae) in Pakistan," American Museum Novitates 2014(3805), 1-23, (24 June 2014). https://doi.org/10.1206/3805.1
Published: 24 June 2014
KEYWORDS
biodiversity
Palearctic
systematics
taxonomy
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