Hormetica strumosa Saussure & Zehntner, 1895

Vidlička, Ľubomír, 2019, New genus and species of cockroaches from the tribe Brachycolini (Blattaria Blaberidae: Blaberinae) and redescription of the Hormetica strumosa, Zootaxa 4651 (1), pp. 155-172 : 166-171

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4651.1.10

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9C0A1095-8E0E-4FFB-ABD4-D93239CB8C88

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03902041-FFA6-3167-BAD4-66936DC5E01E

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scientific name

Hormetica strumosa Saussure & Zehntner, 1895
status

 

Hormetica strumosa Saussure & Zehntner, 1895 View in CoL —redescription

Figs. 9 View FIGURE 9 A–E, 10 A–G, 11 A–H

Material examined: 9 A: ♂, Ecuador , Avila Viejo , Orellana (before 1998 Napo) Province, 16.IX. 1998, 750 m, leg. E. Kohn (deposited in PUCE, Quito, Ecuador) .

9 B: ♂, Ecuador , Cuyabeno , Sucumbios (before 1998 Napo) Province, 18.X. 1985, 230 m, leg. E. Corrillo (?) (deposited in IZ SAS, Bratislava, Slovakia) .

9 C: ♂, Ecuador , Misahuallí, Napo (remaining part after allocation in 1998) Province, VII.1984, leg. C. Borja (deposited in PUCE, Quito, Ecuador) .

9 D: ♂, Ecuador , Archidona—Santo Domingo, Napo (remaining part after allocation in 1998), VIII.1985, leg. C. Rosero (deposited in PUCE, Quito, Ecuador) .

9 E: ♀, Ecuador , Rio Holcin , Napo (remaining part after allocation in 1998) Province, 6.XII.1991, 1200 m, leg. Paola Ramón (deposited in PUCE, Quito, Ecuador) .

Additional material: Syntype, ♂, Ecuador, Hormetica strumosa S. & Z .

Specimen is deposited in Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle de la Ville de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland. Available photos were from dorsal and ventral sides.

Photographers: John Hollier & Peter Schwendinger, MHN, Geneva

Description. Measurement [mm] as in Table 3 View TABLE 3 .

Male: Figs. 9 View FIGURE 9 A–D, 10 A–G, 11 A–H. Head very broad, dark brown to black, vertex with yellow spots or incom- plete transversal band (specimen 9B without yellow parts in vertex), anteclypeus pale brown, antennal socket and area between eyes and antennal socket always yellow ( Figs. 9 View FIGURE 9 A’, B’, D’). Ocelli are not visible, interocular space very wide. Antennae short, reached by the middle of body. Scapus, pedicel and meriston are evidently longer than wide, following 7–8 segments are near square—this all segments are dark brown and glossy. Next 22 (24) segments are wide and short, pale brown, dull, then next 5–6 sphere segments are dull-yellow and next more than 10 segments are small, dull-brown.

Pronotum yellow to pale brown, bordered with elevated narrow black strip, markedly enlarged on postero-lateral parts. Disk of pronotum with two big black spots antero-lateraly and one central black spot ( Fig. 9 A, B, C, D View FIGURE 9 ). (Specimen “9 B” with two small black spots in posterior part of pronotum.) Shape of spots is variable. Legs dark brown, coxae and trochanters sometimes lighter, tibiae armed with strong spines; tarsomeres with large pulvilli (Fig); tarsal claws symmetrical, pale brown, arolium present. Antero-ventral margin of front femur represents type C1. Forewings (tegmina) coriaceous, very broad, reaching nearly behind the tip of abdomen, yellow to pale brown, with obvious black transversal band on the base (not on costal field), along subcosta with black stripe, usually reaching to the mid of tegmen ( Figs. 9 A, C View FIGURE 9 ), sometimes longer and expanded ( Fig. 9 D View FIGURE 9 ), sometimes very short ( Fig. 9 B View FIGURE 9 ). Left tegmen overlapped half of the right tegmen. Right tegmen on overlapped part with bigger brown macula. Venation very dense with very rich transversal veins. Anal field very broad, anal furrow well visible, mainly in transversal part near posterior border of tegmen. Hindwings pale-brown, preaxillary area large and darker (without base and anterior margin) as anal area; anal fan is well developed, anal veins relatively closed, equally distributed, between them are darkened folds. Veins generally brown. Transversal veins present in both part of hindwings ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 C’).

Abdomen broad, shiny dark brown to black. Tergite T2–T7 with obvious yellowish spots near lateral margins ( Figs. 10 A, B View FIGURE 10 ). Supra-anal plate in basal part dark brown, middle and posterior part yellow to pale brown ( Figs. 10 C, D View FIGURE 10 ); posterior margin in the centre with shallow incision. Cerci short, not surpassing the top of supra-anal plate ( Figs. 10 View FIGURE 10 A–D). Subgenital plate slightly asymmetrical, dark brown ( Fig. 10 E View FIGURE 10 ); pale area around right stylus is bigger than left one ( Figs. 10 E, F, G View FIGURE 10 ); styli approximately equal ( Figs. 10 F, G View FIGURE 10 ).

Genitalia ( Figs. 11 View FIGURE 11 A–H).

Median sclerite (L2vm) with preputial spines is palmate with 12 short spines ordered on border. Membranous part of hook (R2) on inner margin with seven folds.

Female: Figs. 9 View FIGURE 9 E-E’. Measurements are in Tab. 3 View TABLE 3 . Coloration is very similar to male. Lateral and central black spots on pronotal disc are bigger and connected; on posterior part of pronotum are four smaller black spots ( Fig. 9 E View FIGURE 9 ). Posterior margin of pronotum without black border. Inside of yellowish spots on head are small black spots ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 E’). Forewing reaching nearly behind the tip of abdomen, yellow to pale brown, without black transversal band on the base, black stripe along subcosta very narrow ( Fig. 9 E View FIGURE 9 ).

Distribution. Ecuador-Oriente (=Región Amazónica) (Provinces Sucumbios, Orellana, Napo) ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ). Oc- currence in Azuay Province (Andes) is ambiguous and improbable (see Remarks).

Remarks. The species Hormetica strumosa was originally described from Ecuador by Saussure & Zehntner (1895) without designation of more-accurately locality (J. Hollier, personal communication 2012; Vidlička 2013). The syntype deposited in Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle de la Ville de Genève (J. Hollier, personal communication 2019) is exactly matched with published description ( Saussure & Zehntner 1895) and with here described specimens.

Hebard (1924) and subsequently Campos (1926) referred this species from the locality Cuenca (Azuay prov- ince, Ecuador) based on the juvenile female that was captured by Francisco Campos. Cuenca lies in Andy Mts. about 2500 m a.s.l. and is very atypical for the occurrence of the species from the genus Hormetica . With the exception of H. apolinari from locality Fusagasugá (1665 m a.s.l.; Hebard 1919), all other species were caught under 900 m a.s.l.

IZ

Instituto de Zoologia

SAS

Sammlung Arnhardt des Museums Schloss Wilhelmsburg Schmalkalden

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Blattodea

Family

Blaberidae

Genus

Hormetica

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