Jalysus spinosus (Say, 1824)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.282814 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6172255 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038687A5-FFA0-FFE7-FF08-8C360B4FD944 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Jalysus spinosus (Say, 1824) |
status |
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Jalysus spinosus (Say, 1824) View in CoL
Berytus spinosus Say, 1824: 28 View in CoL ; Neides spinosus View in CoL auct.
Distribution in Iran. Golestan ( Abd-Rabou & Ghahari 2006).
General distribution. Nearctic; introduced to some regions of the Palearctic.
Comment. This species was identified upon only a single specimen caught in semi-desertic conditions on Abutilon theophrasti (Malvaceae) ( Abd-Rabou & Ghahari 2006). J. spinosus has a more restricted area in USA and feeds mainly on panic grasses ( Panicum spp., Poaceae ) ( Wheeler & Henry 1981). Another species, J. wickhami Van Duzee 1906, is a polyphagous bug, widely distributed in America and Mexico and more probably in some regions of the Palearctic. Additionally, the metacanthine berytids, including Jalysus species, develop mainly on well-glanded, pubescent hosts, feeding preferentially on glandular hairs or on arthropods entrapped by plant secretions ( Wheeler & Schaefer 1982; Wheeler 1994). Many stilt bugs have greatly developed ostiolar processes that may extend upward and well above the hemelytra. The ostiolar process in the metacanthine genus Jalysus ends in a sharp spine, whereas these processes in Metacanthus and Pneustocerus extend outward, then curve posteriorly before ending in a rounded apex ( Schaefer 1972; Henry 1997a).
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