Orellana pollyae Sanborn, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4289/0013-8797.113.3.377 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8366018 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B7612D-FF8D-FFC4-ACF0-FB0436E0FDE8 |
treatment provided by |
Tatiana |
scientific name |
Orellana pollyae Sanborn |
status |
sp. nov. |
Orellana pollyae Sanborn View in CoL , n. sp.
( Figs. 1–9 View Figs )
Type material.— Holotype male: ‘‘ P.N. Tijuca . RJ / 12/II/1988 / G. Mejdalani // CICADIDAE // Orellana bigibba / Schmidt, 1919 ’’ ( IBUS). Paratypes: one female ‘‘ Morro Azul – RJ / ♀ 31/XII/ 1990 / M.R Carvalho’ ’ ( IBUS), one female ‘‘ Matas da / Tijuca – R.J. / II-1970 / J. Rifredo // Orellana / bigibba / ( Schmidt, 1919)’’ ( IBUS), one male and one female ‘‘ Floresta da / Tijuca . D.F. / M.A. Vulcano. / (up right side of label) II 57 // Orellana bigibba / Schmidt, 1919 / O.P. Keller det. // (upright left side) MN / N 11370 View Materials ’’ ( AFSC).
Etymlogy.—The species is named in honor of my wife and colleague in cicada research, Polly Phillips.
Description.— Orellana pollyae n. sp. is a green and black species marked with tawny (yellowish brown) ( Fig. 1 View Figs ). The green may fade to tawny with time of conservation.
Head ( Fig. 2 View Figs ): Not as wide as mesonotum, green with testaceous (brownish yellow) mark on lateral vertex extending from medial margin of eye to half the distance to lateral ocelli. Green faded to tawny in some paratypes. Ocelli ringed with fuscous (blackish brown) on testaceous base. Fuscous marks on medial supra-antennal plate, lateral to lateral and medial ocelli, lateral to lateral marks of lateral ocelli toward eye, a small spot on posterior head at level of mark lateral to lateral ocelli, and larger spot on posterior head at the level of inner medial angle of eye. A light testaceous mark curving between medial ocellus and frontoclypeal suture. Scape tawny, pedicel and proximal flagellar segments testaceous, distal flagellar segments fuscous. Long silvery pile posterior to eye. Postclypeus testaceous dorsally with medial green spot, ventral surface green medially, tawny laterally with ten testaceous transverse ridges, a medial testaceous line on posterior third in one paratype. Anteclypeus greenish tawny, two small fuscous spots on either side of midline centrally, absent in some paratypes. Rostrum tawny with the tip piceous (very black), a fuscous mark along midline of labium, extending to the medial curvature of opercula in male or sternite II in female. Gena tawny with testaceous spot medial to eye and fuscous mark along suture with postclypeus. Lorum tawny, testaceous medially along postclypeus. White pubescence on gena, lorum, and lateral postclypeus.
Thorax ( Fig. 2 View Figs ): Pronotum with medial green mark expanding posteriorly from anterior margin then constricting at level of medial paramedian fissure before expanding and contracting again before terminating anterior to ambient fissure. Disc tawny between paramedian and lateral fissures with irregular fuscous marking, testaceous between lateral fissure and ambient fissure and between paramedian fissure and medial green marking. Hooked green marking anterior to pronotal collar lateral to medial green marking. Fuscous markings along anterior margin, ambient fissure lateral to lateral fissure termini, and small transverse mark on midline of ambient fissure. Pronotal collar green, fuscous marks on anterior lateral margin continuing and thickening along anterior half of lateral angle before expanding across lateral angle to ambient fissure. Marks along lateral margin extend onto ventral surface of lateral angle and lateral margin of pronotum. Fine silvery pile within sutures. Mesonotum green with fuscous marks along parapsidal suture, within scutal depression, and across distal anterior arm of cruciform elevation. Submedian sigilla with triangular testaceous mark bordered with green medially, green faded to tawny in some paratypes. Testaceous mark expanding from between submedian sigillae to enclose scutal depressions before constricting between anterior arms of cruciform elevation. Lateral sigilla tawny with two testaceous linear marks, medial mark longer than lateral mark. Medial testaceous mark lightens and extends anteriorly from scutal depression between medial testaceous mark and parapsidal suture. Cruciform elevation green, bulbous between anterior and posterior arms, posterior margin fuscous, expanding over tergite 1. Silvery pile along lateral mesonotum, along parapsidal suture, between anterior arms of cruciform elevation, and lateral and posterior cruciform elevation. Wing groove marked with fuscous. Metanotum fuscous with testaceous medial posterior margin. Sternites greenish tawny covered with white pubescence. Fuscous marks on medial basisternum 2, medial margin of anepisternum 2, medial basisternum 3, additional marks on medial trochantin 2 and medial epimeron 2 in some paratypes.
Legs: Green and tawny, fuscous marks on distal coxa, medial trochanter, proximal femur, proximal and distal tibia, and distal fore femur. Three segmented tarsi and claws fuscous. Fore femora armed fuscous primary and secondary spines and small apical spine, proximal spine almost parallel to femur, secondary spine upright and more robust. Tibial spurs and tibial comb fuscous.
Forewings and hind wings ( Fig. 1 View Figs ): Forewings hyaline except distally infuscate. Forewings with eight apical cells, hind wings with six apical cells. Basal venation of forewing green, faded to testaceous in some paratypes, becoming testaceous distally. Basal cell rectangular, lightly clouded along anterior margin, coloration expanding toward base. Radius and subcostal vein green past node. Arculus dark testaceous. Cubitus posterior + anal vein 1 and anal vein 2 + 3 tawny, anal vein 2 + 3 fuscous on posterior margin, on arculus, on node expanding into proximal portion of ulnar cell 2, along nodal line in proximal ulnar cell 3, and a long irregular mark starting in the proximal third of radius anterior 2 continuing along radial crossvein, middle third of radius posterior, radiomedial crossvein, median vein 1, and medial crossvein, mark not reaching radius anterior 1 or connecting radial and radiomedial crossveins in some paratypes. Infuscation on mediocubital crossvein, cubitus anterior 2 and distal portion of veins between apical cells. Basal membrane grayish. Hind wings hyaline. Venation ochraceous (yellow with a tinge of brown) except tawny cubitus anterior 1 + 2, basal half of cubitus anterior 1, cubitus anterior 2 and anal vein 1. Plaga and margins of anal cells 1 and 2 along anal veins 2 and 3 gray, center of plaga fuscous.
Operculum ( Figs. 4, 5 View Figs ): Male operculum greenish tawny, rounded, reaching to middle of sternite II, medial border curved, not meeting medially. Operculum covered with white, waxy pubescence. Meracanthus tawny, tip marked with green, lateral margin fuscous. Female operculum tawny, lateral margin curved to sternite II, sinuate posterior margin reaching to medial meracanthus. Meracanthus tawny, a small, medial, transverse fuscous mark in one paratype.
Abdomen ( Figs. 1, 3 View Figs ): Dorsal abdomen testaceous lighter on posterior tergites. Fuscous marks on lateral and posterior tergite 1, anterior of tergite 2 medial to opening to timbal cavity, and lateral tergites 2–7, lightening and decreasing in tergites 4 and 5, marks on tergites 4 and 5 absent in male paratype, fuscous marks absent in some female paratypes. Timbal cover incomplete, exposing the timbal dorsally, timbal cover folding over itself posteriorly forming an L-shaped opening laterally with medial fuscous marking as it curves to anterior tergite 2. Timbal with three long ribs. White pubescence on medial tergite 1 and lateral tergite 7. Fine silvery pile dorsally, thickest on mediolateral tergite 1, on timbal cover and between timbal cavity and midline of tergite 2, greatest density in mediolateral tergite 3, lateral tergite 4 and lateral tergite 7. Golden pile on lateral tergites, most dense on lateral timbal cover. Sternites tawny, sternites III–VI semitransparent in male. Transverse fuscous mark on posterior midline of sternite II and anterior of sternite III. Green posterior margin on sternites III and IV. Epipleurites tawny, small fuscous mark on posterior of epipleurites III–VI. Ventral abdomen covered with white pruinose wax, more dense laterally.
Male genitalia ( Figs. 6, 7 View Figs ): Pygofer testaceous, medial posterior except dorsal beak fuscous. Dorsal beak slightly shorter than anal styles. Anal styles fuscous on tip. Uncus fuscous posteriorly, truncate when viewed from above, lateral uncus lobe narrowing toward terminus before curving into a hook shape, terminus rounded. Aedeagus fuscous, terminus castaneous with spines.
Female genitalia ( Figs. 8, 9 View Figs ): Abdominal segment 9 testaceous, lighter laterally. Sternite VII testaceous with faint fuscous spots on either side of midline. Single notch posteriorly, hind margin expanding posteriorly laterally, extension marked with fuscous in one paratype. Ovipositor castaneous with fuscous tip. Ovipositor sheath extends to level of anal styles. Long golden pile on gonapophysis IX and X and ventral abdominal segment 9, silvery pile on dorsal and lateral abdominal segment 9.
Measurements (mm).—N = 5 (2 males, 3 females), mean (range). Length of body: male 35.7 (35.0–36.4), female 31.9 (31.2– 32.8); length of forewings: male 48.0 (47.9–48.1), female 50.5 (49.2–53.0); width of forewings: male 16.7 (16.5– 16.9), female 16.8 (16.0–18.0); length of head: male 5.25 (5.2–5.3), female 5.13 (4.9–5.3); width of head including eyes: male 10.65 (10.5–10.8), female 10.5 (10.0–11.2); width of pronotum including suprahumeral plates: male 18.8 (18.6–19.0), female 19.17 (18.2–21.0); width of mesonotum: male 12.7 (12.5– 12.9), female 12.87 (12.0–13.6).
Diagnosis.— Orellana pollyae n. sp. can be differentiated from O. castaneamaculata by the infuscation on the forewing of O. pollyae n. sp. The almost completely opaque forewing of O. brunneipennis and O. pulla quickly differentiate these species from O. pollyae n. sp. The holotype of O. columbia was studied in the Natural History Museum (London) and can be differentiated by the ochraceous hue of the forewing, the lateral depression of the cruciform elevation and the abdomen being widest in the middle of O. columbia whereas the forewing are hyaline, the cruciform elevation is humped laterally and the middle and base of the abdomen being about equal in O. pollyae n. sp. Orellana bigibba is the most similar species to O. pollyae n. sp. due to the expansion of the cruciform elevation. The type series was misidentified as O. bigibba by more than one individual. For this reason, O. bigibba is illustrated in Figs. 10–15 View Figs to make comparisons and differentiation of specimens easier. The lateral expansion of the cruciform elevation is not as large in O. pollyae n. sp. and is not hemispherical and does not expend posteriorly over the abdomen of males as it does in O. bigibba . The lateral expansion of the pronotum is larger in O. bigibba , making the pronotum 1.88– 1.97 times as the width of the head whereas the pronotum is 1.76–1.82 times as wide as the head in O. pollyae n. sp. The infuscations on the forewing of O. bigibba are less expansive in comparison and can appear as four individual spots rather than the series of connected spots along the crossveins of apical cells 1–5 with two single spots as seen in O. pollyae n. sp. (although it should be noted that infuscation patterns can vary within species of the Zammarini ). The dorsal border to the timbal cavity of O. pollyae is L-shaped at the junction of the lateral and posterior margins whereas the dorsal border is smoothly curved in O. bigibba . Finally, the lateral uncus of O. pollyae curves at the terminus whereas that of O. bigibba terminates along the side of the median uncus.
IBUS |
Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Seropedica (Itaguai), Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro |
AFSC |
AFSC |
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