Beesoniella Lallemand, 1933 :2
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3946.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9EE92E94-8743-49E9-B96E-A057C77D9BC4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106166 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B4209064-5373-FFFC-FF5F-FC09FC636A58 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2016-04-19 02:22:33, last updated 2024-11-28 21:55:53) |
scientific name |
Beesoniella Lallemand, 1933 :2 |
status |
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Beesoniella Lallemand, 1933:2 View in CoL .
Type-species by monotypy: B. sylvestris Lallemand, 1933 .
Distribution. Mountainous regions of India to southeast Asia. Only the type-species of the genus is widespread. It was described from two specimens collected from “the foliage of sandal[wood],” Santalum album L. ( Lallemand 1933) in India. One male and three females of the same species have also been found in Laos and Vietnam (BPBM).
Diagnosis. Form slender but hump-backed ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 B); head narrower than pronotum, face receding, almost concealed beneath pronotum; tylus absent ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 3 – 6 C); eyes transverse; ocelli set further apart than distance to eyes; antennal ledges high, thin and nearly flat before antennal pits, with 3 preantennal bristles in a vertical row on rim on pit; antennal postpedicel a truncate cone with single coeloconic sensillum set in deep pit and placoid sensillum surrounded by narrow, septate groove (Fig. 21D). Lateral margins of pronotum much shorter than eyes; pronotum arched, fore border steeply declivous, densely punctate. Tegmina flat, densely punctate, venation obscure. Hind wings each with 6–8 hooks on costal margin, 3 mounted on triangular process; first cell as large as in Cercopidae . Fore and hind femora of similar length; hind tibiae each armed with 2 large spines on basal half; hind basitarsi as long as other tarsomeres together; pectens of hind tibiae with 8 black-tipped spines, those of basitarsomere with 5 such spines, those of second tarsomere with 7 such spines. Male with subgenital plates obscure, forming low sinuation on posterior edge of pygofer; 2 pairs of pygofer processes ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 12 – 18 A, E): a digittate median pair and a dorsoventrally flattened lateral pair with 1 or 2 acute angles posteriorly ( Fig. 12–14 View FIGURES 12 – 18 B). Theca very broad, flattened ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 12 – 18 C–D), apex broadly notched, endotheca absent, 2 gonopores for gonoducts separating at base of theca ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 12 – 18 D). Length: 5–7 mm.
Included taxa. Three species, two of which are described below.
Lallemand, V. (1933) Entomological investigations on the spike disease of sandal, 4. Cercopidae (Homopt.). Indian Forest Records, 18, 1 - 4.
FIGURE 1. Sepulliini (A – B) and Clastopterini (C – G). A – B, Beesoniella spittle masses and adults photographed at Madpur in Madikeri (Coorg) in Sept. 2009 (H. M. Yeshwanth); C, Clastoptera octonotata, photographed at Durham, North Carolina, USA on Feb. 5, 2014 (Dorothy E. Pugh, USA); D, C. laevigata, photographed at Great Falls Park, Montgomery County, Maryland, USA, on Aug. 20, 2009 (Ashley Bradford, USA); E, Spinola’s drawing of C. maculipennis (Spinola), comb. nov.; F spittle mass of C. obtusa photographed at Harvard, Massachusetts, USA, June 26, 2005 (Tom Murray, USA); G, nymph of C. xanthocephala photographed at Assumpink WMA, Monmouth County, New Jersey, USA, June 29, 2008 (Tam Stuart). Photographs used by permission.
FIGURES 3 – 6. Comparison of face (3 – 4 A), tegmen (3 – 5 B), hind wing (3 – 5 C), lateral aspect of head, pronotum and scutellum (6 A – M) and dorsal aspect (N – O) in genera of Clastopterini (3 – 4), Machaerotinae (5), Sepullini (6 A – L, O) and Aphrophorinae (6 M – N): 3 A, Clastoptera atrapicata; 3 B – C, Clastoptera globosa Fowler; 6 A, Clastoptera achatina; 4 B – C, Iba (s. s.) venosa; 5 B – C, Aphrosiphon bauhiniae, from China (1935), 6 B, Iba (Parahindoloides) lumuana, lectotype, 6 C, Beesoniella sylvestris; 6 D, Sepullia fuscolimbatus; 6 E, Tremapterus (Patriziana) somalicus; 6 F, Tremapterus (s. s.) nigropunctatus, lectotype; 6 G, Tremapterus (s. s.) palimpsestus sp. nov.; 6 H, Tremapterus (Abbalomba) schoutedeni, holotype; 6 J, Tremapterus (Abbalomba) facialis, lectotype; 6 K, Tremapterus (Abbalomba) typicus; 6 L, Grellaphia costalis; 6 O, Sepullia viridicollis var. curtula; 6 M – N, Witteella major (M – O from Jacobi 1910, with hind legs of Sepullia corrected to place spines on outer surface).
FIGURES 12 – 18. Male genitalia of Beesoniella (12 – 14), Grellaphia (15 – 16), Tremapterus (17) and Sepullia (18). 12, B. cyclops sp. nov.; 13, B. forceps sp. nov.; 14, B. sylvestris; 15, G. costalis; 16, G. ro b u s t a sp. nov.; 17, T. dregei holotype; 18, Sepullia murrayi. A, genital capsule, lateral aspect (smaller scale than other figures); B, right pygofer process, ventral aspect, tip upwards; C, lateral aspect of connective, phallobase, theca and (17 – 18) endotheca; D, caudal aspect of theca and endotheca (when present). Scale line: 0.1 mm.
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Cercopoidea |
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Beesoniella Lallemand, 1933 :2
Andrew Hamilton, K. G. 2015 |
Beesoniella
Lallemand 1933: 2 |
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