Lispe orientalis Wiedemann, 1824
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zoologia.37.e46879 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6995FEC3-00D4-48C4-97D9-93FB9435B912 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D787C8-990B-BF18-E41F-DB30FB73B637 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Lispe orientalis Wiedemann, 1824 |
status |
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Lispe orientalis Wiedemann, 1824 View in CoL
Syntypes. 2 males, 4 females of Lispa opaca Becker, 1914 , junior synonym of L. orientalis . Taiwan .
Diagnosis. Length of body. 6.5–7.0 mm (male, female). Head. Male dichoptic, frons broad, more than one-third of head-width. Frons dark brown. Fronto-orbital plate dark brown on upper third, golden-silver pollinose on lower two-thirds. Face, parafacial and gena golden-silvery pruinose, more golden in female. Ocellar triangle brown, reaching lunule. Male fronto-orbital plate setulose. Antenna dark brown, apex of pedicel yellow. Arista brown; bare on apical third. Palpus yellow, silver pruinose at tip; abruptly enlarged towards apex. Vibrissa long. Thorax. Scutum grey dusted, with 5 brown fine vittae, the two along the dorsocentral rows of setae reaching the subbasal pair of scutellar setae. Dorsocentrals 1+4, only the posterior pair long. Haltere yellow. Calypters white. Legs. Mostly brown, white grey pollinose; tip of femora yellow; tarsi brown on dorsal surface, yellow on posterior margin of each tarsomere and yellow on ventral surface. Fore tibia without posterior median seta. Mid femur with 1 posterior preapical seta; male mid and hind femora with fine setae on anteroventral and posteroventral surfaces ( Chew et al. 2012, fig. 1f). Mid tibia with 1 median posterodorsal seta; without anterodorsal and anteroventral. Hind tibia with 1 anterodorsal and 1 posterodorsal setae, both median; without anteroventral; 1 short dorsal preapical. Arolium and pulvillus a little enlarged. Wing. Costal spine indistinct. Vein M straight. Abdomen. Sternite 1 setulose.
Remarks. Easily identified with the key by Vikhrev (2011a) to the Palaearctic species of the tentaculata -group (see comments on this group under L. consanguinea ). Hennig (1960, text-figs 113, 128, 157, plate 19 fig. 372, plate 20 fig. 391) illustrated the male and female terminalia, and the male terminalia were also illustrated by Vikhrev (2011a, figs 3.3–4, 5.2). Recently recorded from Malaysia by Chew et al. (2012).
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