Niesthrea agnes Chopra, 1973

Melo, María Cecilia & Henry, Thomas J., 2019, Revision of the New World Scentless Plant Bug Genus Niesthrea (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Rhopalidae), with Descriptions of Six New Species and a Key to the Species, Insect Systematics and Diversity 3 (5), No. 9, pp. 1-36 : 7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/isd/ixz014

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B5885B-227B-FFBA-5E8B-F8A03EF6A3EC

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Niesthrea agnes Chopra, 1973
status

 

Niesthrea agnes Chopra, 1973 View in CoL

(urn:lsid: Coreoidea .speciesfile.org:TaxonName:452503) ( Figs. 3A View Fig and 6A–B View Fig )

Niesthrea agnes Chopra, 1973: 455 View in CoL (original description); Göllner-Scheiding, 1983: 53 (catalog); Froeschner, 1989: 611 (list, distribution); Pall and Coscarón, 2012: 1458 View Cited Treatment (catalog); Melo and Montemayor, 2014: 454; Melo and Montemayor, 2015: 5–6 View Cited Treatment (distribution); Fowles et al., 2015: 620 (list, distribution); CoreoideaSF Team, 2018 (online catalog).

Diagnosis

Niesthrea agnes is distinguished by the relatively slender, vertical parameres ( Fig. 6A View Fig ) that lack distinct inner denticles, the broadly rounded median lobe with the apex weakly concave or indented and only the base constricted, the subequal height of the parameres and the median lobe, and the broad, apically rounded lateral lobe ( Fig. 6A and B View Fig ). The labium extends to the base of abdominal segment III. The male genitalia of this species are most similar to those of N. fenestrata , known only from Chile. The parameres ( Fig. 8E View Fig ) of N. fenestrata are similar but slightly broader, the median lobe is broader and more quadrate with the apex straight and without any indentation, and the lateral lobe ( Fig. 8F View Fig ) is distinctly more slender and more tapered apically. In addition, N. agnes is smaller (5.23– 5.70 mm), pale brown to brown with distinct small red spots dorsally, and the labium extends only to the apices of the hind coxae, whereas N. fenestrata is considerably larger (6.98–8.16 mm), usually strongly dark red with dark red dorsal spots showing through on palest specimens, and the labium extends well beyond the hind coxae to the base of abdominal segment III.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Rhopalidae

Genus

Niesthrea

Loc

Niesthrea agnes Chopra, 1973

Melo, María Cecilia & Henry, Thomas J. 2019
2019
Loc

Niesthrea agnes

Melo, M. C. & S. I. Montemayor 2015: 5
Fowles, T. M. & M. C. Coscaron & A. R. Panizzi & S. P. Carroll 2015: 620
Melo, M. C. & S. I. Montemayor 2014: 454
Pall, J. L. & M. C. Coscaron 2012: 1458
Froeschner, R. C. 1989: 611
Gollner-Scheiding, U. 1983: 53
Chopra, N. P. 1973: 455
1973
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