Dilobopterus segmentalis ( Signoret, 1853 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4281.1.13 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C04CCD37-B5C7-4C7A-A831-D585FFFB651E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6016054 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2E6B3A05-9C3E-562F-CDA0-F9BCFB2BFC90 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Dilobopterus segmentalis ( Signoret, 1853 ) |
status |
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Dilobopterus segmentalis ( Signoret, 1853) View in CoL
( Figures 17–25 View FIGURES 17 – 25 , 28 View FIGURES 26 – 29 )
Tettigonia segmentalis Signoret, 1853: 345 View in CoL , pl. 10, fig. 1. Female lectotype from “San Paolo” designated by Young & Beier (1963: 573), deposited at NHMW (photograph of the body in dorsal view provided by Wilson et al. 2009). Tettigonia approximata Stål, 1862: 39 View in CoL . Female lectotype from “Brasil” [“Rio Janeiro”] designated by Young (1963: 224), deposited at NHRS (junior synonym proposed by Young 1977: 109).
Total length 8.6–9.0 mm (males, n = 2), 9.2 mm (female, n = 1).
Male. Head ( Figs. 17 View FIGURES 17 – 25 , 28 View FIGURES 26 – 29 ) well produced anteriorly; antennal ledges, in lateral view, with anterior margin oblique and convex; frons with distinct muscle impressions and median portion with granular texture. Hind legs with meron not exposed. Other features of head and thorax much as described above for D. nelsoni sp. nov.
Color ( Figs. 17 View FIGURES 17 – 25 , 28 View FIGURES 26 – 29 ). Ground color of anterior dorsum greenish-yellow with complex, symmetrical pattern of dark brown to black spots and lines as shown in Figs. 17 View FIGURES 17 – 25 and 28 View FIGURES 26 – 29 ; pronotum broadly dark brown laterally and on posterior margin, with large greenish-yellow or green area centrally and irregular dark brown to black marks distributed transversally near anterior margin; mesonotum with dark brown to black mark on anterior margin, anteromedian line and scutoscutellar suture dark brown to black. Forewings brown to dark brown, translucent, with large greenish-yellow area at base of clavus, large subrectangular vitreous area on basal half extending from costal margin to apical portion of clavus, allowing observation of large transverse yellow areas of abdominal tergum, apical third near apex of anteapical cells with or without large, transverse greenish-yellow mark extending from costal margin to inner margin of first apical cell. Ground color of face dark brown to black; laterosuperior area of frons and most of gena yellow. Thorax laterally mostly yellow, ventrally mostly dark brown to black. Legs yellowish-brown to dark brown. Abdomen, in ventral view, dark brown to black, laterotergites mostly yellow.
Male genitalia. Pygofer ( Figs. 18–19 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ), in lateral view, strongly produced posteriorly; posterior margin convex; with small dentiform process on median portion of ventral margin (arrow in Fig. 19 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ); ventral margin with microsetae along basal half up to location of dentiform process; disc with numerous dispersed macrosetae absent only on basal fourth. Subgenital plates ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ), in ventral view, subtriangular, elongate but not extending as far posteriorly as pygofer apex; separated from each other throughout their length; with multiseriate macrosetae, microsetae also present. Connective ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ), in dorsal view, T-shaped but with stalk directed dorsoanteriorly; stalk without median keel. Style ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ), in dorsal view, extending posteriorly distinctly farther than apex of connective; with preapical lobe; apex finger-shaped, directed outwards. Aedeagus ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ) symmetrical; shaft, in lateral view, with pronounced dorsal lobe; without processes; gonoduct distinct; gonopore located apically. Paraphyses ( Figs. 23–24 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ) rami with numerous conspicuous setae on apical portion.
Female with posterior margin of sternite VII ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ), in ventral view, broadly concave; this sternite with lateral portions yellow and central portion dark brown to black.
Known distribution. Atlantic Forest , Southeastern Brazil, states of Espírito Santo (specimens herein examined), Rio de Janeiro ( Mejdalani et al. 2009), and São Paulo ( Signoret 1853, Young & Beier 1963).
Material examined. Two males: “BR/ES [Espírito Santo State], Santa Teresa , \ RESBIO Santa Lucia [Lúcia]\ 04/VIII/2007 \ R. A. CARVALHO Col.” and “BR/ES, Santa Teresa \ 24-28/VI/2009 \ R. CARVALHO, A. CARPI, L. \ NOGUEIRA & M. LOPES COL .” (MNRJ). One female: “BR/ES, Santa Teresa \ Estação Biológica Santa \ Lúcia 21- 22/II/2008 \ S. BUYS Col .” (MNRJ).
Taxonomic notes. Our interpretation of D. segmentalis is based on a photograph of the female lectotype ( Wilson et al. 2009) and an illustration of its sternite VII provided by Young (1977: 110, fig. 68i). The latter author studied only two females of this species. Males described herein of D. segmentalis key to D. trinotatus in Young’s (1977) key to the species of Dilobopterus . However, they can be easily distinguished because D. trinotatus has brown forewings with three large, transverse yellow marks ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 26 – 29 ), one at the base, one at the median third, and the last at the apical third (see also Wilson et al. 2009). Also, D. trinotatus has no subrectangular vitreous area on the forewings as observed in D. segmentalis and D. sakakibara ( Figs. 10 View FIGURES 9 – 16 , 27–28 View FIGURES 26 – 29 ). This vitreous area, as well as the peculiar form of the connective ( Figs. 13 View FIGURES 9 – 16 , 21 View FIGURES 17 – 25 ), suggests that the latter two species are closely related within the trinotatus group.
Additional material examined. Dilobopterus trinotatus ( Signoret, 1853) . One male: “ BRASIL – RJ [Rio de Janeiro State] \ Parque Nac. do Itatiaia\ 06/XI/2009 \ M.A & M.L. Monné col.” ( MNRJ) . One female: “BR/RJ/ R. Janeiro / \ Floresta da Tijuca \ 12/XI/2005 \ M. Wilson; G. Mejdalani \ & A. Leal Col. ” ( MNRJ) .
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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Cicadellini |
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Dilobopterus segmentalis ( Signoret, 1853 )
Quintas, Victor, Felix, Márcio, Lima, Douglas Felipe Dos Santos & Mejdalani, Gabriel 2017 |
Tettigonia segmentalis
Young 1977: 109 |
Young 1963: 573 |
Signoret 1853: 345 |