Sabethes lutzii | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia
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Phylum: | Arthropoda
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Class: | Insecta
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Order: | Diptera
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Family: | Culicidae
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Subfamily: | Culicinae
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Tribe: | Sabethini
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Genus: | Sabethes
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Subgenus: | Nomina Dubia 13[1]
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Species: | Sa. lutzii
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Binomial name | |
Sabethes lutzii (Theobald, 1903, nomen dubium)
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Sabethes lutzii is a species name designated a "nomen dubium" i.e., a "dubious (or doubtful) name," for a mosquito specimen that remains insufficiently evidenced to be accepted as a proved species.[2]
Sabethes lutzii was first characterized in 1903 from a damaged specimen collected in Manaós, Brazil, in a letter written by the first scientist to view it, physician Dr. Adolfo Lutz, to entomologist Dr. Frederick V. Theobald who then described it in published literature.[2][3] The specimen was described as large in relative size, of a very dark blue uniform metallic color, and differing from other species by the lack of white scales marking the femurs.[4]
Theobald indicated that the holotype specimen was in the British Museum (Natural History) collection, but it was not located there by a later researcher.[2] More recent researchers have speculated that the holotype specimen may be represented by a slide of a mosquito wing marked "da Coll. do Dr. Lutz/XI-930/C.L." in the Instituto Oswaldo Cruz collection.[5] However, due to the lack of certainty, the name is currently considered a nomen dubium.[1]