The cicadas of Argentina with new records, a new genus and fifteen new species (Hemiptera: Cicadoidea: Cicadidae)
Author
Sanborn, Allen F.
Author
Heath, Maxine S.
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-11-11
3883
1
1
94
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3883.1.1
1175-5326
4951252
48A4C0DF-00B7-45C6-8D10-5BFE40A251EE
Parnisa viridis
Sanborn & Heath
,
sp. n.
(
Figure 10
)
Parnisa viridis
nom. nud.
Sanborn
et al.
2011a
, p. 4
, Table 2.
Type material
.—
ARGENTINA
.
HOLOTYPE
: male (
INHS
), “
Chaco
/
Rt.
11–12.5 km
No.
of / Rt 16.
28 Dec. 1986
/
M.S. & J.E. Heath Coll.
/
EX
:
Grass
”
.
PARATYPES
:
one male
(
MSHC
) same data as holotype
;
three male
(
MSHC
) “
Chaco
/
Rt.
11–12.5 km
No.
of /
Rt
16.
28 Dec. 1986
/ Al Sanborn Coll. /
EX
:
Grass
”
;
three male
and
one female
(
MSHC
) “
Chaco
/
Rt.
11–12.5 km
No.
of /
Rt
16.
28 Dec. 1986
/
F. Noriega Coll.
/
EX
:
Grass
”
;
one male
(
MSHC
) “
Chaco
/
Rt.
11–12.5 km
No.
of /
Rt
16.
29 Dec. 1986
/
M.S. Heath Coll.
/
EX
:
Grass
”
;
four male
“
Chaco
/ Dto. 1
o
de Mayo, Ruta 11 /
12.5 km
No. of Ruta
16 /
8 Jan. 1988
. Heath-/ Sanborn-Noriega Coll.” (
three male
MSHC
,
one male
AFSC
)
;
one male
(
MSHC
) “
Chaco
/
Dto.
1
o
de
Mayo
,
Ruta
11 /
12.5 km
No. of Ruta
/ 16.
8 Jan. 1988
. Heath-/
Sanborn-Noriega Coll.
”
;
three male
(
MSHC
) “
Chaco
/
Dto.
1
o
de
Mayo
/
Ruta
11—12.5 km
No.
/ of
Ruta
16.
8 Jan. 1988
/
Al Sanborn Coll.
”
;
one male
(
MSHC
) “
Chaco
/
Dto. Almirante Brown
/
4 km
W. of
Los Frentones
/
9 Jan. 1988
. Heath-/
Sanborn-Noriega Coll.
”
;
one male
(
MSHC
) “
Salta
/ circa
Antonio Quijarro
/
11 Jan. 1988
/ Heath-Sanborn-/
Noriega Coll.
”
;
one male
(
AFSC
) “
Prov.
Chaco
/
Rt.
11,
12.5 km
North
of /
Junction
with
Ruta
16 /
12 January 1992
/
A. Sanborn Coll.
”
.
Etymology
. The species is named for its green coloration.
Diagnosis.
—The new species is unique among its cogeners in its green coloration and the lack of any head, thoracic or abdominal markings. The most similar species is
P. haemorrhagica
Jacobi, 1904
which is green but has an orangish-reddish abdominal venter.
FIGURE 10.
Parnisa viridis
Sanborn & Heath
sp. n.
(
A) Holotype male and paratype female habitus. (B) Holotype male dorsum. (C) Paratype male timbal. (D) Paratype male operculum. (E) Paratype female operculum. (F) Paratype male lateral view of genitalia. (G) Paratype male posterior view of genitalia. (H) Paratype female lateral view of genitalia. (I) Paratype female ventral view of genitalia. Scale for A = 2 cm, B = 2 mm, and C–I = 1 mm.
Description
Coloration
.—Ground color green, fades to tawny in specimens placed in softening jar.
Head
.—Green, about 0.97X as wide as mesonotum. Ocelli rosaceous, eyes testaceous with tawny margin. Long white pile posterior to eye and on ventral head. Postclypeus rounded anteriorly, centrally sulcate with eight transverse grooves and white pile laterally. Anteclypeus green with white pile laterally. Rostrum tawny with fuscous lateral tip reaching to middle trochanter. Gena and lorum green. Scape green, remaining antennal segments fuscous except tawny proximal pedicel, distal pedicel, and proximal first flagellum.
Thorax
.—Pronotum green, lateral part of pronotal collar absent. Mesonotum green, light tawny within submedian sigillae in some
paratypes
. White pile laterally and between anterior arms of cruciform elevation. Metanotum green. Ventral thoracic plates green with sparse, short, white pile.
Forewing and hind wings
.—Hyaline. Forewing with eight apical cells, hind wings with five apical cells. Venation green. Basal cell hyaline. Basal membrane white marked with orange and green. Hind wing venation green. Vanal fold, anal cell 3, anal cell 2 along anal vein 3 greenish.
Legs
.—Green, tarsi and distal tips of tibiae tawny, all green except tawny distal pretarsus in some
paratypes
. Fore femur with primary spine largest and slightly oblique, secondary spine smaller and more oblique, tertiary spine slightly smaller than and parallel to secondary spine, and very small, oblique apical spine, spines green with fuscous tips. Tibial spurs and comb green with tawny tips. Pretarsal claw tawny with fuscous tips.
Operculum
.—Male operculum and meracanthus green not covering tympanal cavity or reaching anterior margin of sternite II. Lateral margin straight, posterior margin curving to rounded medial margin, anteromedial margin curving around meracanthus to base. Medial margin extends to level of middle width of posterior coxa. Meracanthus extends two thirds length of operculum. Operculum with white pile near base and radiating from margin. Female operculum and meracantus green, operculum with angled lateral margin, rounded posterolateral and median angles, straight posterior margin and curved anteromedial margin, extending to middle of sternite II. Meracanthus extending beyond posterior operculum.
Abdomen
.—Green with white pile, more dense dorsolaterally. Timbal with eight ribs.
Male genitalia
.—Pygofer green, upper pygofer lobe arching to pointed tip at level of dorsal beak. Uncus lobes absent, anal styles green with ochraceous base. Claspers green, parallel sided at base, swelling at terminus bend posteriorly when meeting medially. Aedeagus tawny striped with green, expanding laterally near apex, terminating in a small castaneous curved spine.
Female genitalia
.—Green. Sternite VII with deep medial notch. Abdominal segment 9 with sparse white pile, dorsal beak bent dorsally. Anal styles green, about as long as dorsal beak. Gonocoxite IX green. Gonapophysis VII tawny with green base. Gonapophysis X greenish tawny with long pile, extending to level of dorsal abdominal segment 9.
Measurements (mm).—
N =
18 males
or
1 female
, mean (range). Length of body: male 12.2 (10.5–13.1), female 13.9; length of forewing: male 12.9 (12.0–13.7), female 15.0; width of forewing: male 4.9 (4.4–5.3), female 5.1; length of head: male 1.5 (1.3–1.8), female 1.5; width of head including eyes: male 3.3 (3.1–3.5), female 3.6; width of pronotum including suprahumeral plates: male 3.9 (3.7–4.1), female 4.2; width of mesonotum: male 3.5 (3.2–3.7), female 3.8.
Notes.
—
Parnisa viridis
sp. n.
is from the
Chaco
floristic province (
Sanborn
et al.
2011a
).