<documentid="64FC6FE5509930687DF55BFCCAFBCAAE"ID="10.11646/zootaxa.4227.3.1SLASH10026"ID-CLB-Dataset="37230"ID-DOI="10.11646/zootaxa.4227.3.1"ID-GBIF-Dataset="d71680f0-0069-4290-a53e-9272043455fc"ID-ISSN="1175-5326"ID-Zenodo-Dep="268312"ID-ZooBank="62ABB516-62B1-46AF-A235-3AD772358A8A"IM.materialsCitations_approvedBy="felipe"IM.metadata_approvedBy="felipe"IM.tables_requiresApprovalFor="existingObjects,plazi"IM.taxonomicNames_approvedBy="admin"checkinTime="1486119542898"checkinUser="plazi"docAuthor="Yasunaga, Tomohide, Nakatani, Yukinobu & Chérot, Frédéric"docDate="2017"docId="038987D6FFAA6E3DFF2BFF35E1B1FAE2"docLanguage="en"docName="zootaxa.4227.3.1SLASH10026.pdf"docOrigin="Zootaxa 4227 (3)"docStyle="DocumentStyle:647186512141C8FC8976D5BCC54AEB7D.9:Zootaxa.2013-.journal_article"docStyleId="647186512141C8FC8976D5BCC54AEB7D"docStyleName="Zootaxa.2013-.journal_article"docStyleVersion="9"docTitle="Eurystylus Stal"docType="treatment"docVersion="10"lastPageNumber="306"masterDocId="FFB0FFAEFFAE6E38FFBCFFEBE06CFF9A"masterDocTitle="Review of the mirine plant bug genus Eurystylus Stål from Japan and Taiwan (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae: Mirinae), with descriptions of two new species, a new synonymy and a new combination"masterLastPageNumber="324"masterPageNumber="301"pageNumber="305"updateTime="1720394107190"updateUser="admin">
<mods:titleid="9027CB6A0076DE83626D76B1164B8AFE">Review of the mirine plant bug genus Eurystylus Stål from Japan and Taiwan (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae: Mirinae), with descriptions of two new species, a new synonymy and a new combination</mods:title>
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAA6E3CFCE3FECEE3A5FEA1"author="Stal"box="[863,969,293,315]"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"refString="Stal, C. (1871) Hemiptera insularum Philippinarum - Bidrag till Philippinska oarnes Hemipter-fauna. Ofversigt af Kongliga Vetenskapsakademiens Forhandlingar, 27, 607 - 776."type="journal article"year="1871">Stål, 1871</bibRefCitation>
: 671
</treatmentCitation>
</taxonomicName>
(
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFBB5FECEE42AFEA1"box="[1033,1094,293,315]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="9.[151,250,1788,1810]"captionTargetBox="[151,1435,193,1767]"captionTargetId="figure@9.[151,1435,193,1767]"captionTargetPageId="9"captionText="FIGURE 2. Habitus images of adult females and final-instar nymph (B – D) of Eurystylus species. A – B. E. coelestialium (image courtesy of M. Takai). C. E. sauteri Poppius. D. E. ryukyus n. sp. E. E. burmanicus from Chitwan, Nepal. F. E. costalis from Kathmandu Valley, Nepal."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268314/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Fig. 2</figureCitation>
F; habitus images of the holotype available on http://www2.nrm.se/en/het_nrm/c/
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAA6E3CFB96FEAFE4C7FEC0"author="Schuh"box="[1066,1195,324,346]"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"refString="Schuh, R. T. (1995) Plant bugs of the world (Insecta: Heteroptera: Miridae). Systematic catalog, distributions, host list and bibliography, The New York Entomological Society, xii + 1329 pp."type="book"year="1995">Schuh, 1995</bibRefCitation>
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAA6E3CFA98FEAFE13EFEE0"author="Kerzhner"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"refString="Kerzhner, I. M. & Josifov, M. (1999) Miridae Hahn, 1833. In: Aukema, B. & Rieger, C. (Eds.), Catalogue of the Heteroptera of the Palearctic Region, vol. 3, Cimicomorpha II. The Netherlands Entomological Society, Amsterdam, 576 pp."type="book"year="1999">Kerzhner & Josifov, 1999</bibRefCitation>
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAA6E3CFE03FE8EE208FEE0"author="Yasunaga"box="[447,612,356,378]"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"refString="Yasunaga, T. (2001) Family Miridae Hahn, plant bugs. In: Yasunaga T., Takai, M. & Kawasawa, T. (Eds.), A Field Guide to Japanese Bugs II, Zenkoku Noson Kyoiku Kyokai Publ. Co. Ltd, Tokyo, pp. 2 - 96, 111 - 351. [in Japanese]"type="book chapter"year="2001">Yasunaga, 2001</bibRefCitation>
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAA6E3CFD50FE8FE3DDFEE0"author="Zheng"box="[748,945,354,379]"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"refString="Zheng, L. Y., Lu, N., Liu, G. & Xu, B. (2004) Hemiptera, Miridae, Mirinae. Fauna Sinica, Insecta, Science Press, Beijing, 33, xix + 797 pp., 8 pls. [in Chinese, with English keys and descriptions of new taxa]"type="book"year="2004">
by the following characters (whereas some of these characters are shared with the assumed related taxa,
<taxonomicNameid="4C204D43FFAA6E3CFC0FFE01E53FFD99"authority="Miyamoto & Yasunaga"authorityName="Miyamoto & Yasunaga"box="[947,1363,490,515]"class="Insecta"family="Miridae"genus="Eocalocoris"higherTaxonomySource="GBIF,CoL"kingdom="Animalia"order="Hemiptera"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"phylum="Arthropoda"rank="genus">
<taxonomicNameid="4C204D43FFAA6E3CFE67FDE5E349FDBD"authority="Zheng & Liu"authorityName="Zheng & Liu"box="[475,805,526,551]"class="Insecta"family="Miridae"genus="Heteropantilius"higherTaxonomySource="GBIF,CoL"kingdom="Animalia"order="Hemiptera"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"phylum="Arthropoda"rank="genus">
]; lateral margin of frons, bordering to antennal tubercle and inner margin of eye, with a fuscous, velvety mark that is usually visible even in species with darkened head (
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFD28FD75E28CFD2D"box="[660,736,670,695]"captionStart="FIGURE 1"captionStartId="8.[151,250,1821,1843]"captionTargetBox="[151,1436,193,1799]"captionTargetId="figure@8.[151,1436,193,1799]"captionTargetPageId="8"captionText="FIGURE 1. Habitus images of Eurystylus species. A. Male adult from Chitwan, Nepal, identical to E. jingfui n. sp. B – C. E. ryukyus n. sp., female on Fraxinus griffithii. D. E. sauteri, female on Solidago canadensis, with Taylorilygus apicalis (Fieber) (upper) and Nysius plebeius Distant (middle). E – G. Ditto, male (E, G) and female (F) on Ligustorum japonicum. H, Ditto, head (velvety spots arrowed)."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268313/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Figs. 1</figureCitation>
H, 2E, F); antenna, shorter than body, with segment I tumid, obviously flattened, segment II clavate (its apical part more than twice as thick as base), and segments III and IV short and filiform [
]; pronotum often with a pair of dark spots on disk, sometimes forming eyeshape, so-called ‘head bugs’ (as in
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFD90FCE1E217FCB9"box="[556,635,778,803]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="9.[151,250,1788,1810]"captionTargetBox="[151,1435,193,1767]"captionTargetId="figure@9.[151,1435,193,1767]"captionTargetPageId="9"captionText="FIGURE 2. Habitus images of adult females and final-instar nymph (B – D) of Eurystylus species. A – B. E. coelestialium (image courtesy of M. Takai). C. E. sauteri Poppius. D. E. ryukyus n. sp. E. E. burmanicus from Chitwan, Nepal. F. E. costalis from Kathmandu Valley, Nepal."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268314/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Figs. 2</figureCitation>
A, E; 3E); collar thickened, broader than base of antennal segment II; scutellum tumid, long, with its lateral margin length greater than basal width; each femur more or less flattened [
]; metatibia not much longer than metafemur; male genital segment (pygophore) noticeably shortened; abdominal sterna VIII and IX in female narrow; left paramere usually strongly constricted at base of widened and flattened (often flap-like) hypophysis (
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFDF1FC71E2FFFC29"box="[589,659,922,947]"captionStart="FIGURE 4"captionStartId="12.[151,250,1981,2003]"captionTargetBox="[176,1406,489,1960]"captionTargetId="figure@12.[163,1423,481,1965]"captionTargetPageId="12"captionText="FIGURE 4. Pygophore (A), left paramere (B, D, F, H, J) and right paramere (C, E, G, I, K) of Eurystylus species. A – C. E. ryukyus n. sp. D – I. E. sauteri. J – K. E. jingfui n. sp."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268316/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Fig. 4</figureCitation>
); endosoma with well-developed membranous lobes [
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFE7EFC55E26AFC4D"box="[450,518,958,983]"captionStart="FIGURE 5"captionStartId="13.[151,250,1796,1818]"captionTargetBox="[161,1444,227,1759]"captionTargetId="figure@13.[159,1444,227,1769]"captionTargetPageId="13"captionText="FIGURE 5. Endosoma and adjacent structures of Eurystylus species. A – C. E. ryukyus n. sp. D – G. E. sauteri Poppius. H. E. jingfui n. sp. I – J. E. coelestialium. Scale bars 0.2 mm."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268317/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Fig. 5</figureCitation>
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFB02FC55E56CFC4D"box="[1214,1280,958,983]"captionStart="FIGURE 5"captionStartId="13.[151,250,1796,1818]"captionTargetBox="[161,1444,227,1759]"captionTargetId="figure@13.[159,1444,227,1769]"captionTargetPageId="13"captionText="FIGURE 5. Endosoma and adjacent structures of Eurystylus species. A – C. E. ryukyus n. sp. D – G. E. sauteri Poppius. H. E. jingfui n. sp. I – J. E. coelestialium. Scale bars 0.2 mm."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268317/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Fig. 5</figureCitation>
C); secondary gonopore thick-rimmed, with triangular or heart-shaped aperture [
]. The final-instar nymph is unique in having the generally pale, ovoid, thick body with several pairs of eye-like, or ocellate spots on dorsum (
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFCD0FBC1E3C2FBD9"box="[876,942,1066,1091]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="9.[151,250,1788,1810]"captionTargetBox="[151,1435,193,1767]"captionTargetId="figure@9.[151,1435,193,1767]"captionTargetPageId="9"captionText="FIGURE 2. Habitus images of adult females and final-instar nymph (B – D) of Eurystylus species. A – B. E. coelestialium (image courtesy of M. Takai). C. E. sauteri Poppius. D. E. ryukyus n. sp. E. E. burmanicus from Chitwan, Nepal. F. E. costalis from Kathmandu Valley, Nepal."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268314/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Fig. 2</figureCitation>
Known from the Old World, mainly subtropical and tropical zones; most species occurring in the Ethiopian and Oriental regions; only a few members known from the Australian Region and Pacific Islands.
species that are collected on inflorescences, floral nectar and pollen are considered to be their major diets (
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAA6E3CFDDEFB50E372FB49"author="Yasunaga"box="[610,798,1211,1235]"pageId="4"pageNumber="305"refString="Yasunaga, T. (2001) Family Miridae Hahn, plant bugs. In: Yasunaga T., Takai, M. & Kawasawa, T. (Eds.), A Field Guide to Japanese Bugs II, Zenkoku Noson Kyoiku Kyokai Publ. Co. Ltd, Tokyo, pp. 2 - 96, 111 - 351. [in Japanese]"type="book chapter"year="2001">Yasunaga, 2001</bibRefCitation>
). Most congeners are presumed to be herbivorous and polyphagous. The immature forms of more than seven species (including some undetermined or undescribed ones from tropical Asia) were confirmed to inhabit inflorescences of various dicots (see
<tableCitationid="C6A2037BFFAA6E3CFBD8FAE9E4D5FA81"box="[1124,1209,1282,1307]"captionStart="TABLE 1"captionStartId="2.[151,239,257,280]"captionText="TABLE 1. List of confirmed plant association of Eurystylus species."pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Table 1</tableCitation>
). The adults of the species shown in
<tableCitationid="C6A2037BFFAA6E3CFEE3FACDE1DFFAA5"box="[351,435,1318,1343]"captionStart="TABLE 1"captionStartId="2.[151,239,257,280]"captionText="TABLE 1. List of confirmed plant association of Eurystylus species."pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Table 1</tableCitation>
) were observed to suck on flower buds, petals and/or pedicels (cf.
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAA6E3CFF2BFAA1E0B9FAF9"box="[151,213,1354,1379]"captionStart="FIGURE 1"captionStartId="8.[151,250,1821,1843]"captionTargetBox="[151,1436,193,1799]"captionTargetId="figure@8.[151,1436,193,1799]"captionTargetPageId="8"captionText="FIGURE 1. Habitus images of Eurystylus species. A. Male adult from Chitwan, Nepal, identical to E. jingfui n. sp. B – C. E. ryukyus n. sp., female on Fraxinus griffithii. D. E. sauteri, female on Solidago canadensis, with Taylorilygus apicalis (Fieber) (upper) and Nysius plebeius Distant (middle). E – G. Ditto, male (E, G) and female (F) on Ligustorum japonicum. H, Ditto, head (velvety spots arrowed)."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268313/files/figure.png"pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Fig. 1</figureCitation>
member has ever been reported as an agricultural pest, even though some species actually inhabit inflorescences of economic fruit trees, and ornamental or medicinal plants (e.g., chestnuts, oranges, mangos, aralias, lilacs;
<tableCitationid="C6A2037BFFAA6E3CFB35F9C9E4B6F9A1"box="[1161,1242,1570,1595]"captionStart="TABLE 1"captionStartId="2.[151,239,257,280]"captionText="TABLE 1. List of confirmed plant association of Eurystylus species."pageId="4"pageNumber="305">Table 1</tableCitation>
). The population densities of Asian species are usually not significant, and any harmful gregarious feeding is currently not recognized.
species inhabiting temperate and colder climate zones, whereas those in tropics, subtropics or warm temperate zone appear to have a bivoltine or multivoltine life cycle.
is easily separable from related genera by the flattened antennal segment I, a pair of fuscous, velvety spots at lateral corner on the frons, thicker collar, elongate scutellum, and shortened genital segments (male pygophore and female segments VIII and IX). These characters will distinguish
. However, these genera equally have more smooth dorsum, cylindrical antennal segment I, nearly equilateral scutellum, and conventional mirine paramere shape, in addition to their own unique characters or autapomorphy (for further information, see
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFEE9FF73E267FF2A"author="Yasunaga"box="[341,523,152,176]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Yasunaga, T. (1990) A new mirid (Heteroptera, Miridae) from Amami-Oshima Island, Japan. Proceedings of the Japanese Society of Systematic Zoology, 42, 32 - 36."type="journal article"year="1990">Yasunaga, 1990</bibRefCitation>
,
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFDAAFF7CE23DFF2A"author="Yasunaga"box="[534,593,151,176]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Yasunaga, T. (1995) Discovery of the genus Heteropantilius Zheng et Liu from Taiwan, with description of a new species (Insecta: Heteroptera: Miridae). Journal of the Hokkaido University of Education (sec. IIB), 46, 1 - 5."type="journal article"year="1995">1995</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFDE2FF73E31AFF2A"author="Yasunaga"box="[606,886,151,176]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Yasunaga, T. & Takai, M. (1994) Review of the genus Eocalocoris Miyamoto and Yasunaga (Heteroptera, Miridae) of Japan, with description of a new species from the mountains of Shikoku and southwestern Honshu. Proceedings of the Japanese Society of Systematic Zoology, 52, 75 - 80."type="journal article"year="1994">Yasunaga & Takai, 1994</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFC3FFF7CE43BFF2A"author="Zheng"box="[899,1111,151,176]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Zheng, L. Y., Lu, N., Liu, G. & Xu, B. (2004) Hemiptera, Miridae, Mirinae. Fauna Sinica, Insecta, Science Press, Beijing, 33, xix + 797 pp., 8 pls. [in Chinese, with English keys and descriptions of new taxa]"type="book"year="2004">
, because these two genera share seven diagnostic characters, as well as the largely matte dorsal surface, and similar coloration, vestiture pattern (
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAB6E3DFCA8FECCE334FEDA"box="[788,856,295,320]"captionStart="FIGURE 9"captionStartId="21.[151,250,1713,1735]"captionTargetBox="[167,1419,179,1682]"captionTargetId="figure@21.[167,1419,179,1699]"captionTargetPageId="21"captionText="FIGURE 9. Habitus images of Eurystylopsis species (Nepal) & type specimens of E. harmandi (E) & Pseudeurystylus clavicornis (F). A. E. clavicornis in Kirtipur, Nepal (same individual of Fig. 8 G). B. E. clavicornis, female (= Fig. 8 H). C – D. Live individual probably corresponding to E. harmandi from Langtang Himal. E. E. harmandi, syntype female from India (Dardjiling) (MNHN). F. Pseudeurystylus clavicornis, holotype male from Australia (Sydney) (MZHF). Scale bars for (E & F) 1 mm."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268321/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="306">Fig. 9</figureCitation>
A–B), and shape of the metathoracic scent efferent system (
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAB6E3DFF4BFEA7E157FEFE"box="[247,315,332,357]"captionStart="FIGURE 8"captionStartId="20.[151,250,1852,1874]"captionTargetBox="[151,1436,301,1815]"captionTargetId="figure@20.[151,1436,301,1830]"captionTargetPageId="20"captionText="FIGURE 8. Habitus images of dry-preserved specimens. A. Eurystylus coelestialium, lectotype male (upper) and paralectotype female mounted together (in 1998, MZHF). B. Male det. as E. luteus by Josifov from Pyongyang, North Korea (MZHF). C. E. sauteri, holotype female. D. Eurystylomorpha crassicornis, holotype male (Taiwan). E – F. Ditto, females in dorsal (E) and ventral (F) view. G. Ditto, scent efferent system. H. Eurystylopsis clavicornis, female from Kirtipur, Nepal (ventral view). I. Ditto, male. Scale bars 2 mm. Images (C & D) courtesy of J. F. Tsai and NMNS."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268320/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="306">Fig. 8</figureCitation>
to other mirine genera will need to be further elucidated. However the shared characters of above-mentioned genera imply that at least the four genera may be originated from a same lineage;
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFC38FE14E449FD82"author="Poppius"box="[900,1061,511,536]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Poppius, B. (1915) H. Sauter's Formosa-Ausbeute: Nabidae, Anthocoridae, Termatophylidae, Miridae, Isometopidae und Ceratocombidae (Hemiptera). Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, 80 A b (8), 1 - 80 (1914) (March 1915)."type="journal article"year="1915">Poppius, 1915</bibRefCitation>
</taxonomicName>
(
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAB6E3DFB89FE14E414FD82"box="[1077,1144,511,536]"captionStart="FIGURE 9"captionStartId="21.[151,250,1713,1735]"captionTargetBox="[167,1419,179,1682]"captionTargetId="figure@21.[167,1419,179,1699]"captionTargetPageId="21"captionText="FIGURE 9. Habitus images of Eurystylopsis species (Nepal) & type specimens of E. harmandi (E) & Pseudeurystylus clavicornis (F). A. E. clavicornis in Kirtipur, Nepal (same individual of Fig. 8 G). B. E. clavicornis, female (= Fig. 8 H). C – D. Live individual probably corresponding to E. harmandi from Langtang Himal. E. E. harmandi, syntype female from India (Dardjiling) (MNHN). F. Pseudeurystylus clavicornis, holotype male from Australia (Sydney) (MZHF). Scale bars for (E & F) 1 mm."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268321/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="306">Fig. 9</figureCitation>
F), the sole representative of the monotypic genus
can be distinguished easily from all above mentioned taxa by the four ivory-white, callose stripes on the pronotal lateral margin and propleuron, the pronotal collar thicker than the base of antennal segment II at middle but not laterally (the collar has the almost similar thickness throughout in
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFF2BFD17E130FC8F"author="Stonedahl"box="[151,348,764,789]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Stonedahl, G. M. (1995) Taxonomy of African Eurystylus (Heteroptera: Miridae), with a review of their status as pests of sorghum. Bulletin of Entomological Research, 85 (1), pp. 135 - 156."type="journal article"year="1995">Stonedahl (1995)</bibRefCitation>
Linnavuori, 1975), mainly based on dorsal pilosity, thick and relatively short antennal segments III and IV and the presence of “a small, plate-like process on the base of maxillary plates, ventral to antennal fossae” (
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFF22FC8CE137FC1A"author="Stonedahl"box="[158,347,871,896]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Stonedahl, G. M. (1995) Taxonomy of African Eurystylus (Heteroptera: Miridae), with a review of their status as pests of sorghum. Bulletin of Entomological Research, 85 (1), pp. 135 - 156."type="journal article"year="1995">Stonedahl, 1995</bibRefCitation>
). However, as pointed out by Stonedahl for the vestiture (op. cit.), these character states are not considered unique, being observed in other mirine genera; the genital structures of
, have been reported. However, our attempts to identify the specimens from these areas revealed that the Japanese and Taiwanese populations which have been assigned to
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAB6E3DFD99FB47E21DFB5E"box="[549,625,1196,1221]"captionStart="FIGURE 3"captionStartId="10.[151,250,1821,1843]"captionTargetBox="[178,1400,194,1798]"captionTargetId="figure@10.[151,1436,193,1799]"captionTargetPageId="10"captionText="FIGURE 3. Habitus images of dry-preserved specimens for E. sauteri (A – D), E. ryukyus n. sp. (E – G) and E. jingfui n. sp. (H – K)."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268315/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="306">Figs. 3</figureCitation>
A–G, 4B–I) and distribution patterns (
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAB6E3DFB9AFB47E400FB5E"box="[1062,1132,1196,1221]"captionStart="FIGURE 7"captionStartId="18.[151,250,1466,1488]"captionTargetBox="[150,1376,628,1445]"captionTargetId="figure@18.[150,1437,628,1445]"captionTargetPageId="18"captionText="FIGURE 7. Map showing the distributions of three closely related Eurystylus species; records (provincial levels) in continental China based upon Zheng et al. (2004)."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268319/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="306">Fig. 7</figureCitation>
is unfortunately female, but the male endosomal illustrations based on Chinese materials (
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFEB2FAFCE269FAAA"author="Zheng"box="[270,517,1303,1328]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Zheng, L. Y. & Chen, C. (1991) On Chinese species of Eurystylus Stal and Eurystylopsis Poppius (Hemiptera: Miridae). Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica, 16, 197 - 203."type="journal article"year="1991">Zheng & Chen, 1991</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitationid="EFB14B31FFAB6E3DFDAFFAFCE28BFAAA"author="Zheng"box="[531,743,1303,1328]"pageId="5"pageNumber="306"refString="Zheng, L. Y., Lu, N., Liu, G. & Xu, B. (2004) Hemiptera, Miridae, Mirinae. Fauna Sinica, Insecta, Science Press, Beijing, 33, xix + 797 pp., 8 pls. [in Chinese, with English keys and descriptions of new taxa]"type="book"year="2004">
<figureCitationid="131B2A45FFAB6E3DFF23FAD7E08BFACE"box="[159,231,1340,1365]"captionStart="FIGURE 4"captionStartId="12.[151,250,1981,2003]"captionTargetBox="[176,1406,489,1960]"captionTargetId="figure@12.[163,1423,481,1965]"captionTargetPageId="12"captionText="FIGURE 4. Pygophore (A), left paramere (B, D, F, H, J) and right paramere (C, E, G, I, K) of Eurystylus species. A – C. E. ryukyus n. sp. D – I. E. sauteri. J – K. E. jingfui n. sp."httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/268316/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="306">Fig. 4</figureCitation>