Camptotylus Fieber, 1860

Konstantinov, Fedor V., 2008, Review of the genus Camptotylus Fieber, 1860 (Heteroptera: Miridae) with description of two new species, American Museum Novitates 3606 (1), pp. 1-24 : 2

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1206/0003-0082(2008)3606[1:ROTGCF]2.0.CO;2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BD58040C-FFEC-C854-C283-5D2EFD00FB14

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Camptotylus Fieber
status

 

Camptotylus Fieber View in CoL View at ENA

Camptotylus Fieber, 1860: 70 View in CoL . Type species by subsequent monotypy ( Fieber, 1861): Capsus yersini Mulsant and Rey, 1856 View in CoL .

Exaeretus Fieber, 1864: 81 (syn. by Reuter, 1891: 7). Type species by monotypy: Camptotylus meyeri View in CoL Frey- Gessner, 1863.

Megalobasis Reuter, 1879: 205 (syn. by Reuter, 1891: 7). Type species by monotypy: Megalobasis bipunctatus Reuter, 1879 .

DIAGNOSIS: The genus is unequivocally recognized by the following combination of characters: dorsum greenish to pale yellow, sometimes with scattered green, always with conspicuous small, dark, roundish spot in medioapical area of corium; claws slender and smoothly curved, pulvilli absent (figs. 35, 36, 49); vesica composed of two straps: one gutterlike smoothly curved, with secondary gonopore at apex that is tightly fastened to the second, which is twisted, bent, and strongly dentate apically, and which extends far beyond secondary gonopore ( Figs 4, 6 View Figs ); secondary gonopore located at middle of vesica; apex of theca with prominent spinelike to nearly rectangular sclerotized process (figs. 15–21); left paramere atypical, usually with welldeveloped central process in addition to apical process and sensory lobe (figs. 23–26), rarely boat-shaped (fig. 34); labium relatively short, barely reaching middle coxae, usually with somewhat swollen articulation of segments III and IV.

Some of the distinctive features mentioned above are occasionally found in other Phylini genera. Absence of pulvilli is typical of Tuponia spp. , while the sclerotized process of the theca and the central process of the left paramere are known in Yotvata spp. Camptotylus spp. are most similar in the color pattern to the Camptotylidea bipunctata group of species although all three species of that group differ from Camptotylus in the presence of brown dotting on forewings.

HOST PLANTS: All species of Camptotylus are specialized feeders on Tamaricaceae . Almost all are known to breed on Tamarix spp. , one species described here is found on Reaumuria soongorica and C. meyeri is report- ed from both Tamarix laxa and Reaumuria oxiana .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Miridae

Loc

Camptotylus Fieber

Konstantinov, Fedor V. 2008
2008
Loc

Megalobasis

Reuter, O. M. 1891: 7
Reuter, O. M. 1879: 205
1879
Loc

Exaeretus

Reuter, O. M. 1891: 7
Fieber, F. X. 1864: 81
1864
Loc

Camptotylus

Fieber, F. X. 1860: 70
1860
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