Ornithocoris Pinto, 1927
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.200077 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6206541 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/711487F6-E805-7C63-FF38-09FAFE08ED1C |
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Ornithocoris Pinto, 1927 |
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Ornithocoris Pinto, 1927 View in CoL
Type-species: Ornithocoris toledoi Pinto, 1927 [by monotipy]
Ornithocoris toledoi Pinto, 1927 View in CoL : Ringuelet 1948: 35 [map], 39 [distr.; host]; Jurberg & Milward de Azevedo 1982: 25 – 262 [re-descr.; morphol.; distr.]
The genus and the species were described from Brazil: São Paulo (Limeira: Sorocaba) by Pinto (1927). Moraes (1939) made a re-description and illustrates the specimens found in Minas Gerais: Ponte Nóva by Carvalho (1939). Usinger (1966) states that the type of toledoi View in CoL is in the IOC. Twenty-five specimens of O. toledoi View in CoL , all of them with data according to the original description (probable syntypes), are apparently located in the IOC (see below Acanthocrios).
According to Wygodzinsky (1951), the genus Ornithocoris View in CoL can be recognized by the “very long” macroquetae in the posterolateral angles of the pronotum, the presence of two distinct bristles in the middle and hind tibiae, and the dorsal position of the spermalege (= organ of Ribaga). O. toledoi View in CoL have long bristles on the posterolateral angles not longer than 1/3 of the pronotal length [Lb <PL /3] ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9 – 12 ) ( Wygodzinsky 1951). In Usinger’s key (1966), Ornithocoris View in CoL can be recognized by the bristles at the sides of the pronotum being short and dense ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9 – 12 ), its larger size, and the pronotum being 1 mm or more wide. In the generic description, nothing is said about the bristles at the sides of the pronotum, and Ornithocoris View in CoL is differentiated by the pronotum being 2.5 to 3 times as wide as long [PW = 2.5 PL to PW = 3.0 PL ⊣ PL = PW / 2.5 to PL = PW / 3.0].
The genus Ornithocoris View in CoL can be recognized by the smaller and uniformly-spaced pilosity on the dorsum of the head and the pronotum ( Figs. 9, 11 View FIGURES 9 – 12 ); the pronotum trapezoid shape, with its greater width at the base ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9 – 12 ), wider and longer than in Acanthocrios [but PW / PL is similar to the smaller specimens of A. furnarii (Table 1)]; the two long bristles located at the posterolateral angles of the pronotum: Lb2, with its base near the margin ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9 – 12 ); and a second long bristle (Lb3), represented by the first posterior lateral bristle respect to Lb2 (Lb1 absent, and Lb2 longer than Lb3) ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9 – 12 ). In males in Ornithocoris View in CoL , the front and middle tibiae have a well-developed apical tuft of hair ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 21 – 27 ); the females have a tuft only in the front tibiae.
Ornithocoris pallidus Usinger, 1959 View in CoL was described by Usinger (1959), and redescribed in 1966. The pronotum is nearly twice as wide as the head (PW / HW ≥ 1.8) in O. toledoi View in CoL (female: HW 0 0.80 mm, PW = 1.45 mm), and about 1 2/3 as wide as the head (PW / HW = 1.6–1.7) in Ornithocoris pallidus View in CoL (female: HW = 0.71, PW = 1.25) ( Usinger 1966). With the respective measurements given by Moraes (1939) and the specimens examined of O. toledoi View in CoL (Table 1), PW/HW ranges between 2.10 and 2.45. The other characteristics to separate both species of Ornithocoris View in CoL seem to be the color, paler in O. pallidus View in CoL and darker in O. toledoi View in CoL ; and the size, smaller in O. pallidus ( Usinger 1966) View in CoL . O. pallidus View in CoL was described from Viçoza, Minas Gerais, distant only 37.8 km from Ponte Nóva, where dark brown specimens of O. toledoi View in CoL were found ( Moraes 1939). Specimens of O. toledoi View in CoL were also collected from Ponte Nóva in 1957 by Usinger ( Sakamoto et al. 2006).
The insects given by Otto et al. (2008) [= “ Ornithocoris View in CoL sp.”] in figure 1 do not belong to Cimicidae View in CoL . They are nymphs with pterothecae in the meso- and metathorax, and the rostrum reaches the posterior margin of the middle coxae. The identification was done by the shape of fecal spots in furniture using [only] the work of Schofield et al. (1986)!
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Ornithocoris Pinto, 1927
Iorio, Osvaldo Di, Turienzo, Paola, Masello, Juan & Carpintero, Diego L. 2010 |
Ornithocoris toledoi
Azevedo 1982: 25 |
Ringuelet 1948: 35 |