Pseudoloxops pardellus, Yasunaga & Duwal, 2017

Yasunaga, Tomohide & Duwal, Ram Keshari, 2017, Plant bugs of the tribe Orthotylini (Heteroptera: Miridae: Orthotylinae) in Thailand, with descriptions of five new species, Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 65, pp. 280-298 : 293-297

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5356502

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B42B453D-AD9D-4C0E-8E45-1B197AA0BAE3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B887AD-FFE9-FF95-ACA0-AD8EFDBDEF4D

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Pseudoloxops pardellus
status

sp. nov.

Pseudoloxops pardellus , new species

( Figs. 8F–H View Fig , 9F–H View Fig , 11 View Fig , 12C, D View Fig )

Material examined. Holotype male, THAILAND: Nakhon Ratchasima, SERS, N14°30′27″ E101°55′39″, 410 m alt., light trap, 26 September 2013, T. Yasunaga ( DOAT) ( AMNH _ PBI 00380546 View Materials ) GoogleMaps . Paratypes: THAILAND: Chaiyaphum, Chulabhom Dam , light trap, 26 October 2002, Y. Nakatani, 2 males ( NIAES) . Nakhon Ratchasima: same data as for holotype, 1 male, 1 female ( TYCN) (00380547); same locality, 19–21 August 2008, T GoogleMaps . Yasunaga & B. Shishido, 4 males, 2 females ( AMNH, CNC, TYCN); same locality, 12–14 June 2009, T GoogleMaps . Yasunaga & K. Yamada, 3 males ( TYCN); same data as for holotype, except for date 21–22 March 2014, 2 males, 1 female ( TYCN) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Recognised by the rather elongate, flat, mediumsized body ( Fig. 8F–H View Fig ); distinctly bicolourous (deep red and creamy yellow) dorsum; uniformly scattered, small brown spots on dorsum; uniformly distributed, dark, simple setae and longer, pale, upright, stiff setae on head, antennal segment I, and laterally on pronotum and hemelytron; orange-red, rhombic mark on middle of scutellum; clear red M-shaped mark on hemelytron; deep red apical half of male metafemur( Fig. 9F, G View Fig ); flat, triangularly widened sensory lobe and slender hypophysis of left paramere ( Fig. 11C View Fig ); apical flagellate spine on right paramere ( Fig. 11D View Fig ); and two short, flat endosomal spiculi ( Fig. 11F View Fig ).

Description. Body rather elongate, flat, medium-sized; dorsal surface somewhat matte, largely creamy yellow medially, with uniformly distributed, brown, semierect setae and brown small spots, and pale, long, stiff, upright setae on head, antennal segment I, and lateral pronotum and hemelytron. Head creamy yellow, sanguineous below level of antennal tubercles, somewhat pointed in front; eyes small; vertex and frons spotted, with faint, longitudinal, mesal sulcus. Antennal segment I deep red, with white stripe inward; segments II–IV creamy yellow; segment II with rouge extreme base and three orange-red rings each at basal 1/4, middle and apex; middle and apex of segment III and middle of IV each with red ring. Labium shiny pale brown, slightly exceeding apex of mesocoxa; apical half of segment IV reddish brown. Pronotum creamy yellow, with uniformly scattered, brown, small spots and deep red margin; mesoscutum shiny, faintly tinged with orange-brown; scutellum creamy yellow, spotted, with orange-red, rhombic mark; pleura whitish brown (greenish yellow in live or fresh specimen, cf. Fig. 9F View Fig ); dorsal margin of propleuron rouge; scent efferent system creamy yellow. Hemelytron rather matte, largely whitish brown, with orange-red M-shaped mark (along lateral margins of corium) and uniformly scattered, brown, small spots; apical inner corner of corium with red, triangular, small spot; embolium and lateral margin of cuneus sanguineous; basal half of cuneus creamy yellow except for orange-red macula at middle; membrane pale grayish brown, with distally sanguineous veins and darkened margin. Coxae and legs pale brown yellow (all femora greenish yellow in live or fresh specimen); apical half of male metafemur sanguineous; protibia usually tinged with red; proportion of meta-tarsomeres I–III as 4: 5: 5. Abdomen almost uniformly whitish brown (largely pale green in live or fresh specimen). Male genitalia ( Fig. 11 View Fig ): Pygophore with spines at apex ( Fig. 11B View Fig ); left paramere with flat, triangularly widened sensory lobe and slender hypophysis ( Fig. 11C View Fig ); right paramere simple, tapered apically, with apical flagellate spine ( Fig. 11D View Fig ); endosoma widely membranous, weakly sclerotised, with two short, flat endosomal spiculi ( Fig. 11F View Fig ). Female genitalia ( Fig. 12C, D View Fig ): Sclerotised ring decrescent, thin-rimmed; apical part of valvula I sharpened ( Fig. 12D View Fig ); posterior wall with elongate, spinulate interramal lobe ( Fig. 12C View Fig ).

Measurements. Male/female: Total body length 2.45– 2.60/2.64–2.77; width of head across eyes 0.55–0.59/0.60– 0.62; width of vertex 0.28–0.30/0.37–0.38; lengths of antennal segments I–IV 0.19–0.23, 0.76–0.84, 0.65–0.72, 0.27–0.30/0.19–0.23, 0.76–0.89, 0.75–0.77, 0.33–0.36; total length of labium 0.58–0.60/0.67–0.71; basal width of pronotum 0.73–0.77/0.73–0.78; maximum width across hemelytra 0.88–0.92/0.97–1.08; and lengths of metafemur, tibia and tarsus 0.87–0.90, 1.14–1.17, 0.34–0.38/0.88–0.92, 1.18–1.26, 0.39–0.42.

Etymology. From Latin, pardus [= panther or leopard], combined with the diminutive suffix [–ellus], referring to the uniformly spotted dorsum of this new species.

Biology. Unknown; all available specimens were attracted to UV light. Collection records suggest that this new species have two or more generations per year.

Remarks. The present new species is most closely related to P. imperatorius ( Distant, 1909) known from Sri Lanka, southern China, Taiwan and southwestern Japan (from central Honshu to the Ryukyus) ( Zheng & Lin, 2013; Liu & Zheng, 2014; Yasunaga & Takai, 2017). This widespread taxon, despite having been thus far undiscovered in Indochina, has the similar appearance ( Fig. 9I View Fig ) and genitalic structures, but P. imperatorius is distinct in having an unspotted head, mesal part of pronotum, scutellum and clavus; sensory lobe of left paramere wider; endosomal spiculi longer ( Yasunaga & Takai, 2017); ovipositor longer; and interramal lobe bent at middle ( Fig. 12A, B View Fig ). Both P. imperatorius and P. pardellus exhibit a similar sexual dimorphism (female metafemur uniformly pale, without reddish apical part), which may support a close relationship between them.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History

NIAES

National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Miridae

Genus

Pseudoloxops

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