Rhagovelia loriae, Polhemus, 2024

Polhemus, Dan A., 2024, Thirty-four new species of Rhagovelia (Heteroptera: Veliidae) from the East Papua Composite Terrane, far eastern New Guinea, Zootaxa 5400 (1), pp. 1-214 : 160

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5400.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7B6AC3A4-9187-4336-AAC7-82C3FD046D29

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A37987E3-2BD5-00AD-95EA-FE09FB676043

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rhagovelia loriae
status

 

Rhagovelia loriae subgroup

The R. loriae subgroup is a set of species occurring in the south-flowing drainages of the eastern Papuan Peninsula, on the adjacent islands bordering the China Strait, and in the D'Entrecasteaux island group ( Fig. 295 View FIG ). It contains four species, R. loriae , R. guiagoila , R. basima and R. elongata , which are united within the context of the regional biota by unique features of the morphology of the female abdomen, and by their rather large and elongate body shapes in comparison to other members of the R. papuensis group. In particular, the female connexival margins are thinned and sometimes glabrous adjacent to abdominal tergites III and IV, clearly lacking the setiferation present on preceding basal connexival segments, and are bowed inward and concave to varying degrees ( Figs. 216–219 View FIGS ). Female abdominal ventrites II and III are tumescent, and bear posteriorly-directed patches of golden setae posteromedially, with such setal patches also sometimes present on ventrite IV. Abdominal ventrite IV is either centrally depressed or transversely sulcate, with a similar central depression sometimes also present on abdominal ventrite V, with the golden setae on the posteromedial portions of the preceding segments projecting posteriorly over these depressions ( Figs. 203–206 View FIGS ). Males are more slender and elongate than other members of the R. papuensis group occurring in the EPCT, with body length-to-width ratios greater than 3.0, and also have the hind femur highly incrassate, the hind tibia strongly sinuate in fully developed specimens, and the male hind trochanter, femur and tibia heavily armed with pegs and teeth ( Figs. 270 View FIGS , 277 View FIGS , 286 View FIGS , 292 View FIGS ). The male ventral abdomen has a well-developed longitudinal medial carina of triangular cross-section on male abdominal ventrites II–VI, and ventrite VII bears a shallow, tongue-shaped depression centrally. All the included species possess small black denticles ventrally on the prosternum adjacent to the rostrum, and often more extensively on the mesosternum, metasternum, acetabula, and basal abdominal ventrites ( Figs. 212–215 View FIGS ).

The members of this subgroup are common on rocky streams at middle and lower elevations down to the heads of the estuaries ( Figs. 273 View FIG , 280 View FIG , 289 View FIG ), but are not generally found at higher elevations above 1000 m.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Veliidae

Genus

Rhagovelia

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Veliidae

Genus

Rhagovelia

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