Platyngomiris, KIRKALDY, 1902

Namyatova, Anna A. & Cassis, Gerasimos, 2016, Systematic revision and phylogeny of the plant bug tribe Monaloniini (Insecta: Heteroptera: Miridae: Bryocorinae) of the world, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 176 (1), pp. 36-136 : 115

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/zoj.12311

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10543573

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/142A4050-DE00-FFB7-9332-E588FB04F8AB

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Platyngomiris
status

 

PLATYNGOMIRIS KIRKALDY View in CoL

Figures 8 View Figure 8 , 21E, F View Figure 21 , 23 View Figure 23

Platyngomiris Kirkaldy, 1902: 258 View in CoL (gen. nov.; type species: Platyngomiris coreoides Kirkaldy, 1902 View in CoL by monotypy); Kirkaldy, 1906: 134 (list); Reuter, 1910: 153 (cat.): Carvalho, 1952: 60 (cat.); Carvalho, 1955: 42 (key to gen.); Carvalho, 1957: 148 (cat.); Miller & China, 1957: 430 (key to gen.); Schuh, 1995: 530 (cat.); Schuh, 2002 –2013 (cat.).

Platyngomiriodes Ghauri, 1963 View in CoL (gen. nov.; type species Platyngomiriodes apiformis Ghauri, 1963 View in CoL by monotypy); Lavabre, 1977a: 51, 54 (key to gen., descr.); Lavabre, 1977b: 108 (disc.); Schuh, 1995: 530 (cat.); Schuh, 2002 – 2013 (cat.), syn. nov., this work.

Diagnosis: Platyngomiris belongs to the Odoniella - complex (see discussion for the tribe) and is recognized by the following characters: ASIII distinctly incrassate apically, ASIV clavate (as in fig. 8E in Namyatova et al., in press); frons with paired tubercles; scutellum distinctly swollen (as in Fig. 11H View Figure 11 ), exceeding height of pronotum, subtriangular, not subdivided into lower and upper parts (as in Fig. 12A View Figure 12 ), hemelytron clothed simple setae only, hind tibiae with tumescences and clothed with long and extremely dense setae.

Redescription: Female: Body length 9.5 mm. COLORA- TION ( Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ). Coloration mainly brown, hemelytron mostly pale, almost yellow, but cuneus brown. TEXTURE. Tubercles on vertex and flattened areas indistinct; wrinkles on head absent; ASII without tubercles; pronotum and scutellum punctate; tubercles on collar very shallow; shallow tumescences on pronotum and scutellum present; row of punctures on clavus and on R + M and punctures on depression delimiting calli posteriorly absent; striations on lateral margins of scutellum indistinct or present only anteriorly; hind tibia with tumescences; semicircular depression between scutellum and mesoscutum absent; hemelytron smooth, without tubercles. VESTITURE. Body clothed with pale or dark simple adpressed setae, those setae pale on dorsum and dark on appendages; setae on hind tibia extremely long and dense; flattened setae on hemelytron absent. STRUCTURE. Head. Distance between eye and pronotum shorter than eye diameter (as in Fig. 10F View Figure 10 ); occipital region not delimited with depression; longitudinal depression on vertex indistinct or very short; eyes stylate, directed outwards (as in Fig. 10H View Figure 10 ), c. 0.25× as long as head width; distance between antennal fossa c. 3× as long as antennal fossa diameter; frons distinctly swollen, with paired tubercles, without longitudinal depression or ridges; anterior view of head c. 1.5× as wide as high; eye height c. 0.8× as distance from eye to apex of clypeus; antennal fossa oval, c. 0.3× as long as eye height, not raised (as in fig. 3B in Namyatova et al., in press), its inferior margin placed near inferior margin of eye and base of clypeus; base of clypeus distinctly delimited basally; in lateral view head flat; gula shorter than buccula length, straight. Labium. Reaching posterior margin of metasternum; LSI c. 2–3× as long as wide; LSII c. 4× as long as wide, slightly longer than LSI; LSIII c. 4× subequal to LSII; LSIV c. 6× as long as wide, c. 1.5× as long as LSIII. Antenna. Reaching base of cuneus; ASI c. 1.5–2× as long as wide, subequal to quarter of head width, swollen basally (as in fig. 8E in Namyatova et al., in press); ASII c. 5× as long as ASII, c. 0.8× as long as head and pronotum combined, slightly incrassate apically, without tumescences; Thorax. Collar not delimited, flat; calli separated, flat; depression delimiting calli posteriorly absent (as in fig. 4C in Namyatova et al., in press); humeral angles of pronotum dilated; posterior margin of pronotum distinctly concave, forming right angles, scutellum distinctly swollen, triangular (as in Fig. 11H View Figure 11 ), not covering base of pronotum, not divided into parts (as in Fig. 12A View Figure 12 ), obtuse apically, without longitudinal depression, ridge or outgrowth; metepimeron c. 1.5× as high as long, angulate (as in Fig. 13E View Figure 13 ); metasternum with medial projection to abdominal segment II (as in fig. 17A in Namyatova et al., in press). Hemelytron. Tapering posteriorly; costal margin straight (as in fig. 12E in Namyatova et al., in press); claval commissure c. 0.2× as long as scutellum, straight; R + M almost reaching posterior margin of corium; medial fracture strongly inclined towards midline (as in fig. 12E in Namyatova et al., in press); corium without swelling posteriorly; cuneus c. 1.7× as long as wide, c. 0.6× as long as pronotum, medial margin slightly concave; membrane cell distinctly surpassing apex of cuneus, forming acute angle, c. 0.9× as long as pronotum; auxiliary vein absent; distance from cell to apex of membrane c. 0.79× as long as cell. Legs. Forecoxae contiguous (as in fig. 17A in Namyatova et al., in press); femora almost not swollen apically, straight, hind tibia often slightly curved; foretibia shorter than head and pronotum combined. Genitalia ( Fig. 21E, F View Figure 21 ). DLP with a single sclerotized ring anteriorly, c. 1.5× as long as wide; with paired areas of striations, placed at base of lateral oviducts; lateral oviducts in posterior half of DLP; spermathecal gland placed medially at posterior margin; posterior wall with small tubercles, without outgrowths with paired sclerotization posteriorly; base of second valvula concave; ventral wall membranous.

Distribution: Known from Borneo only ( Fig. 23 View Figure 23 ).

Host plants: The genus is known as a pest of cocoa ( Ghauri, 1963; Leston, 1970; Azhar, 1989; Keane & Putter, 1992; Schaefer & Panizzi, 2000).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Miridae

Loc

Platyngomiris

Namyatova, Anna A. & Cassis, Gerasimos 2016
2016
Loc

Platyngomiris

Carvalho JCM 1957: 148
Miller NCE & China WE 1957: 430
Carvalho JCM 1955: 42
Carvalho JCM 1952: 60
Reuter OM 1910: 153
Kirkaldy GW 1906: 134
Kirkaldy GW 1902: 258
1902
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