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May
1997 Expedition to Guatemala
by
Steve Gaimari
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The
Schlinger Expedition to Guatemala (including
Mike Irwin, Don Webb, Steve Gaimari, Mark
Metz, Kevin Holston, Shaun Winterton, and Longlong
Yang) began in Guatemala City on 17 May 1997, where we met up
with our main contact, Dr. Charles McVean , who made most
of the arrangements for us, including securing our guide, Ms
Maria Lucia Prinz. On the first full day in Guatemala City,
we all went to the insect collection at the Universidade del Valle
de Guatemala, sorted their unsorted Diptera to family, and curated
several families of flies. After our sort session, we all had some
very interesting combinations on pizza (e.g., refried beans and
onions).
On
19 May, we made our way to the beautiful town of Chichicastenango,
at an elevation of 2000 meters. Despite two days of hard collecting
using malaise traps and hand netting in a variety of habitats, including
the lowlands around Chichi, we left with no therevids in hand. We
did collect many interesting things though, including several specimens
of a species of Rachicerus and a species of Vermilio.
Fortunately, the shopping in town was great, and we bought all kinds
of hand-made and expertly knitted goods.
The
next leg of our trip, from 21-23 May, was spent at the beautiful
southwest Pacific coastal town of Monterrico.
To reach this area, we took our vehicles by small
barge for several kilometers through a dense mangrove forest.
Hot and humid are the best words to describe this area of coastal
dunes, which yielded many therevid specimens, including several
Megalinga bolbocera (Osten-Sacken), numerous specimens of
Brachylinga, a few Penniverpa, and a single female
of "Psilocephala" breviventris Kröber. Megalinga
was collected at the lights at night, and on the walls in the morning,
and occasionally in the vegetation around the place where we stayed,
Hotel Baule Beach. All of the other
genera were collected perching on leaves in the coastal vegetation,
or were swept from grasses slightly farther in from the coast. The
therevid collecting was great, but we had a few caualties, in the
form of serious Montezuma's revenge (and Montezuma can be vengeful!).
In addition to therevid collecting, we enjoyed spending some time
with Chuck McVean and family.
After
this, we headed towards the significantly cooler climes of cloud
forest in the Sierra de las Minas Biosphere Reserva. On the ride
through from Monterrico, Kevin, Shaun, Steve, and Don stopped in
a transition zone, where we collected several specimens of a very
interesting acrocerid (Phylopota) going to flowers of Psychotria
nervosa Swartz (Rubiaceae). We also saw the famous bullhorn
acacia and its ant associates. Then we continued north to Guatemala
City and Don flew back to Illinois.
Below
the biosphere reserve, we stayed at the home of Don Carlos, a local
land owner, and we were treated with the utmost hospitality, being
fed by Doña Vicki (Don Carlos' wife), a wonderful hostess
and cook. We put many malaise traps in areas from 1600 to 2400 meters
elevation, all with very different insects taken. Therevids were
abundant in a few of the traps, including many specimens of Ozodiceromyia
schroederi (Kröber) and Ozodiceromyia obliquefasciata
(Kröber). In the cloud forest itself, Mike collected a singleton
male of a new and very strange species of Phycus from low-lying
vegetation. Besides therevids, we collected some very interesting
specimens of Vermilio and Xylophagus, as well as numerous
interesting asilids and syrphids. Steve reared a very good series
of a species in an undescribed genus of Chamaemyiidae feeding on
citrus scales.
We
also put malaise traps at the very
base of the Sierra de las Minas, in the very dry thorn tree zone
at an elevation of about 250-400 meters elevation. These traps proved
to be very productive, collecting numerous specimens of Ataenogera
abdominalis Kröber and Chromolepida pruinosa (Coquillett),
as well as a species of Ozodiceromyia. Nearby to this, we
visited a local hot springs, Quebrada de Agua Caliente, where we
collected numerous larval therevids in the litter
and sand under large trees. Many of these larvae have pupated
and emerged, and belong in the genera Brachylinga and Penniverpa.
After
a successful and fun collecting trip, in which we preserved many
specimens for ongoing molecular work as well as for morphological
study, we spent a wild night in Guatemala City, and flew out to
Illinois on the morning of 30 May (i.e., a few hours after getting
back from our night on the town!). Shaun and Longlong joined the
lab for a few weeks, but that is another story.
The
expedition received financial assistance from the Schlinger Foundation
and the National Science Foundation's Partnership for Enhancing
Expertise in Taxonomy (PEET) program.
Other
Collecting Trips & Expeditions
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