Anthophilolygus bakeri ( Poppius, 1915 ) Yasunaga & Schwartz & Chérot, 2018

Yasunaga, Tomohide, Schwartz, Michael D. & Chérot, Frédéric, 2018, Review of the plant bug genus Prolygus and related mirine taxa from eastern Asia (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae), Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae (Acta. Ent. Mus. Natl. Pragae) 58 (2), pp. 357-388 : 372-374

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.2478/aemnp-2018-0030

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D9893299-697F-4AA1-99D5-9575B313DB0D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5061980

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039D4113-FF94-6911-B9D4-F9E9FD617DC8

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Anthophilolygus bakeri ( Poppius, 1915 )
status

comb. nov.

Anthophilolygus bakeri ( Poppius, 1915) comb. nov.

( Figs 56–57 View Figs 54–65 , 66–67 View Figs 66–72 , 78–80 View Figs 73–82 , 99–105 View Figs 94–105 , 126–130 View Figs 118–135 )

Lygus bakeri Poppius, 1915: 30 (original description).

Lygus bakeri: POPPIUS (1914) : 342 (key); SCHUH (1995): 808 (catalog).

Prolygus bakeri: SCHWARTZ & KERZHNER (1997) View in CoL : 253 (new combination); KERZHNER & JOSIFOV (1999): 172 (catalog); SCHUH (1995): 941 (catalog); YASUNAGA (2001): 260 (diagnosis); ZHENG et al. (2004): 561 (diagnosis, key).

Lygus tainanensis Poppius, 1915: 35 (original description). New synonym.

Lygus tainanensis: POPPIUS (1914) : 340 (key); SCHUH (1995): 827 (catalog).

Prolygus tainanensis: SCHWARTZ & KERZHNER (1997) View in CoL : 255 (new combination); KERZHNER & JOSIFOV (1999): 173 (catalog); ZHENG et al. (2004): 565 (diagnosis, key).

Type material examined. Lygus bakeri : LECTOTYPE (designated by SCHWARTZ & KERZHNER 1997): ♁, TAIWAN: KAGI: Taihorinsho [= currently Dalin, 23.60, 120.47], 7 Nov, H. Sauter ( MZHF) . PARALECTOTYPES:

TAIWAN: KAOHSIUNG: Kosempo [= currently Kahsian (Jiaxian), 23.07, 120.60], April 1912, H. Sauter, 1 ♁ ( DEIC, without USIs, image examined, Fig. 66 View Figs 66–72 ). KAGI: Taihorinsho, 7 Nov 1909, H. Sauter, 1 ♀ ( DEIC, without USIs, image examined, Fig. 66 View Figs 66–72 ).

Lygus tainanensis : LECTOTYPE (designated by CARVALHO 1980): ♀, TAIWAN: TAINAN [City]: Feb 1909, H. Sauter ( Fig. 67 View Figs 66–72 , without USIs, image examined; genitalia dissected by the second author, HNHM).

Additional material examined. More than 300 specimens ( AMNH, BMNH, CNC, NIAES, NSMT, SNUK, TYCN) from the following localities. JAPAN: KYUSHU: Nagasaki City, Nomo, Kabashima; Kagoshima Pref., Yakushima & Tanegashima Islands – 1 ♁ from Nagasaki City, Nomo, Kabashima (32.5541, 129.7750; current northernmost locality) with USIs ( AMNH _PBI 00380495). TOKARA ISLANDS: Takara-jima Is. AMAMI- OSHIMA ISLAND: Amami City, Kasari City, Tatsugo Town. OKINAWA ISLAND: Ginowan City, Kunigami Village, Motobu City, Nago City, Naha City, Chinen Peninsula. ISHIGAKI ISLAND: Ban’na Park, Hirakubo, Hirano, Itona, Kabira, Kuura, Miwa, Nosoko, Omoto, Sakie, Takeda. – 1 ♁ from Ishigaki Island Miwa (24.39, 124.21), with USIs ( AMNH _PBI 00380496). IRIOMOTE ISLAND: Funaura, Haemida, Komi, Mombanare, Ohara, Otomi, Shirahama, Uehara. HATERUMA ISLAND: Buribichi Park. YONAKUNI ISLAND: Urabe-dake. CAMBODIA: Siem Reap. LAOS: Vientiane. PHILIPPINES: LUZON: Los Banõs; Negros, Camp Lookout, Dumaguete; Visayas, Panay Island, Iloilo City. TAIWAN: PINTUNG: Hengchhun (22.00, 120.45), 1 ♁ with USIs ( AMNH _PBI 00380497); Manchu (22.02211, 120.8443). TAINAN: Tainan Agriculture Research Station. THAILAND: CHIANG MAI: Doi Pui area. NAKHON RATCHASIMA: Wang Nam Khiao. NAKHON NAYOK: Sarika. ‒ 1 ♁ from Nakhon Ratchasima with USIs ( AMNH _PBI 00380498).

Measurements (in mm). ♁/ ♀: Total length of body 3.20– 3.65 / 3.50–4.10; head width including eyes 0.96 / 1.02; vertex width 0.28–0.29 / 0.37–0.38; lengths of antennal segments I–IV 0.48, 1.77, 0.90, 0.48 / 0.47, 1.55, 0.90, 0.54; labial length 1.38 / 1.50; mesal length of pronotum including collar 0.77 / 0.90; basal width of pronotum 1.35 / 1.62; maximum width across hemelytron 1.50 / 1.80; and lengths of metafemur, tibia and tarsus 1.58, 2.28, 0.57 / 1.73, 2.40, 0.53.

Differential diagnosis. Recognized by moderate size (3.2–4.1 mm); pale green general colouration, usually with reddish fasciae on hemelytron ( Figs 78–79 View Figs 73–82 , but hemelytron sometimes widely pale as in Figs 63 View Figs 54–65 , 66 View Figs 66–72 ); reddish brown metafemur ( Fig. 56 View Figs 54–65 ); developed pygophoral spine ( Fig. 126 View Figs 118–135 ); elongate, not bifurcate hypophysis of left paramere; and long hair-like spinules on endosoma ( Fig. 128 View Figs 118–135 ). Distinguished readily from the preceding A. alaneylesi sp. nov. by significantly larger size and reddish metafemur.

Biology. This polyphagous mirid is associated with inflorescences of various dicots, such as Amaranthaceae , Anacardiaceae , Araliaceae , Asteraceae , Euphorbiaceae , Fabaceae , Fagaceae , Oleaceae , Rutaceae and Sabiaceae ( YASUNAGA 2001) ; the immature forms were also confirmed on Rhus javanica L. ( Simaroubaceae ), Mallotus spp. ( Euphorbiaceae ), Meliosma arnottiana (Wight) Walp. (Sabiaceae) , Zanthoxylum ailanthoides Siebold & Zucc. (Rutaceae) . Some individuals were found to feed on crops, cucumber, eggplant, mango or papaya.A multivoltine cycle is assumed for Anthophilolygus bakeri ; in subtropics and tropics, the adults are collected almost throughout a year. The adults are frequently attracted to UV lights, and occasionally hundreds of individuals were observed to visit light trap screens at night. Both adults and immature forms of Anthophilolygus bakeri comb. nov. are found dominantly on inflorescences of various dicots, evergreen broadleaf trees in particular; this taxon does not appear to be host plant specific, presumably utilizing pollen and/or honey dew as a major diet component. Distribution. Japan (Kyushu, Bonin Islands, Ryukyus) ( YASUNAGA & TAKAI 2014), Taiwan (almost whole country except for central highlands) ( POPPIUS 1915 and present records), Philippines (Luzon, Negros, Visayas) ( POPPIUS 1915; new record for Visayas), Cambodia (Siem Reap) (new record), Laos (Vientiane) (new record), Thailand (Chaiyaphum, Chiang Mai, Nakhon Nayok, Nakhon Ratchasima) (new records).

This widespread mirid has presumably been introduced to some Japanese subtropical islands ( YASUNAGA 2001), and is recently expanding its distribution northward in Japan, probably due to the global warming ( YASUNAGA & TAKAI 2014).

Comments. Colouration is variable (reddish pattern on dorsum in particular). There are a few more unidentified congeners (with darker and larger dorsal maculae) in the Oriental Region (cf. Fig. 81 View Figs 73–82 ); A. bakeri is generally paler than those mirids, with smaller dorsal maculae or fasciae.

POPPIUS (1915) described Lygus tainanensis [later transferred to Prolygus by SCHWARTZ & KERZHNER (1997)] from Taiwan, comparing it only with L. matsumurae Poppius, 1915 [placed in Neolygus by LU & ZHENG (1998b)]. POPPIUS (1915) did not mention its similarity to Lygus bakeri , although pale female specimens of L. bakeri ( Figs 58 View Figs 54–65 , 66 View Figs 66–72 right) are nearly impossible to be distinguished from L. tainanensis ( Fig. 67 View Figs 66–72 ). Based on the great similarity in habitus and female genitalia (cf. SCHWARTZ & KERZHNER 1997: Figs 33–34 View Figs 33–42 ), both species are regarded to be conspecific, and what was described as L. tainanensis is apparently a pale variant of L. bakeri , one of the most common mirids in Taiwan.Accordingly, a new synonymy is proposed: Anthophilolygus bakeri ( Poppius, 1915) = Prolygus tainanensis ( Poppius, 1915) , syn. nov.

Both specific names were published simultaneously by POPPIUS (1915) and have been impartially treated by subsequent authors in 20th century ( CARVALHO 1959, 1980; SCHUH 1995; SCHWARTZ & KERZHNER 1997; KERZHNER & JOSIFOV 1999). We presently select L. bakeri as valid name.

HNHM

Hungarian Natural History Museum (Termeszettudomanyi Muzeum)

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

NSMT

National Science Museum (Natural History)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Miridae

Genus

Anthophilolygus

Loc

Anthophilolygus bakeri ( Poppius, 1915 )

Yasunaga, Tomohide, Schwartz, Michael D. & Chérot, Frédéric 2018
2018
Loc

Prolygus bakeri:

ZHENG L. Y. & LU N. & LIU G. & XU B. 2004: 561
YASUNAGA T. 2001: 260
KERZHNER I. M. & JOSIFOV M. 1999: 172
SCHWARTZ M. D. & KERZHNER I. M. 1997: 253
SCHUH R. T. 1995: 941
1997
Loc

Prolygus tainanensis:

ZHENG L. Y. & LU N. & LIU G. & XU B. 2004: 565
KERZHNER I. M. & JOSIFOV M. 1999: 173
SCHWARTZ M. D. & KERZHNER I. M. 1997: 255
1997
Loc

Lygus bakeri

POPPIUS B. 1915: 30
1915
Loc

Lygus tainanensis

POPPIUS B. 1915: 35
1915
Loc

Lygus bakeri: POPPIUS (1914)

SCHUH R. T. 1995: 808
POPPIUS B. 1914: 342
1914
Loc

Lygus tainanensis: POPPIUS (1914)

SCHUH R. T. 1995: 827
POPPIUS B. 1914: 340
1914
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