Metrocoris Mayr (Insecta: Hemiptera: Gerridae) of India with descriptions of five new species
Author
Basu, Srimoyee
Author
Polhemus, D. A.
Author
Subramanian, K. A.
Author
Saha, G. K.
Author
Venkatesan, T.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4178
2
257
277
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4178.2.5
1ba33b49-3e8b-41e2-b183-f9cf2541ab2a
1175-5326
258736
7D46870F-7D9E-441E-8D78-2E55E058F589
Metrocoris deceptor
Basu, Polhemus and Subramanian
,
NEW SPECIES
Figs. 45–55
Metrocoris quynhi
Tran & Zettel 2005
:
Basu, Subramanian, Valarmathi & Saha, 2015
: 98
.
Material
examined.
Holotype
:
Apterous
male:
INDIA
,
West Bengal
,
Darjeeling District
,
Rishi River
,
Rishikhola
,
27.17357°N
,
88.631104°E
,
23.III.2013
, coll.
S. Basu
, deposited at the NZC,
Zoological Survey
of
India, H.Q.
,
Kolkata
(
NZSI
)
Reg. No.
4643/H15.
Paratypes
:
INDIA
,
West Bengal
: 23 apterous males, 16 apterous females, same data as holotype (
NZSI
)
;
1 female
, 7 nymphs,
Darjeeling District
, stagnant pool beside
Rishi River
,
Rishikhola
,
27.169677°N
,
88.635109°E
,
23.III.2013
, coll.
Srimoyee Basu
(
NZSI
)
;
5 males
,
4 females
, 1 nymph,
Darjeeling District
,
Teesta River
,
Chitre Bridge
,
22.III.2013
, coll.
S. Basu
(
NZSI
)
;
3 males
,
4 females
, 3 nymphs,
Darjeeling District
,
Manjukhola
,
Phuguri
tea estate,
26.85575°N
,
88.2091°E
,
21.III.2013
, coll.
S. Basu
(
NZSI
)
;
2 males
,
4 females
, 11 nymphs,
Darjeeling District
,
Falls
near
Bunkulung
,
26.86776°N
,
88.22882°E
,
20.III.2013
, coll.
S. Basu
(
NZSI
)
;
3 males
,
5 females
,
Darjeeling District
,
Srikhola
,
27.132452°N
,
88.076729°E
,
4.V.2013
, coll.
S. Basu
(
NZSI
)
.
Sikkim
: 3 apterous males, 4 apterous females, West
Sikkim
,
Martham village
,
Hee Bermiok
,
3.X. 2013
, coll.
S. Basu
(
NZSI
)
;
INDIA
,
Himachal Pradesh
:
1 male
,
3 females
, 5 nymphs,
Kangra district
,
Panthend village
near
Saibaba Mandir
,
Baijnath
,
32.0227°N
,
076.38743°E
,
3117 ft
,
13.09.2014
, coll.
Dr. K.
Valarmathi
;
9 males
,
9 females
, 6 nymphs,
Kangra district
,
Shahpur
,
Teh
,
Rajol Road
,
Rajol River
,
32.10350°N
,
076.14915°E
,
14.09.2014
, coll.
Dr. K.
Valarmathi (
NZSI
)
Reg. No.
4644/H15 to 4651/H15.
Discussion
:
Basu
et al.
(2015)
recorded
Metrocoris quynhi
Tran & Zettel
from
India
based on specimens taken in
Himachal Pradesh
and
West Bengal
, providing a detailed re-description and photographs of the taxon. However, a more critical examination of the specimens involved has revealed that they represent a new species in the
Metrocoris anderseni
species group. Therefore, the description and figures provided by
Basu
et al.
(2015)
depict this new species, which we have named
Metrocoris deceptor
.
Description.
See detailed description in
Basu
et al.
(2015)
(as
Metrocoris quynhi
). Only diagnostic characters are repeated here.
FIGURES 45–55.
Metrocoris deceptor
sp. nov.
45. Dorsal view of apterous male; 46. Dorsal view of apterous female; 47. Ventral view of apterous male; 48. Ventral view of fore femur and fore tibia; 49. Male sternum including genital segments; 50. Female sternum; 51. Dissected pygophore with paramere of male; 52. Proctiger (dorsal view) of male; 53. Male paramere; 54. Dorsal endosomal sclerite; 55. Male endosoma showing sclerites.
Size
: Male body length
6.10–6.90 mm
, maximum body width 2.64–3.0 mm. Female body length
5.30–6.72 mm
, maximum body width
3.27–3.40 mm
. Measurements of male and female leg segments given in Table 7 and 8.
Male foreleg
: Fore femur (
Fig. 48
) strongly incrassate, ratio length/width: 3.22 (2.68/0.83), constricted on apical third, lacking ventral indentation, bearing bifid sub-apical tooth. Fore tibia with inner margin bearing subbasal prominence.
Male genitalia
: Pygophore (
Fig. 51
) elongate, narrowed centrally with lateral margins concave, expanded distally, bearing prominently produced anterolateral angles, apex truncate. Proctiger (
Fig. 52
) elongate, distal portion slender, apex broadly rounded. Paramere (
Fig. 53
) elongate, projecting laterally far beyond genital segment, strongly bent, basal lobe with prominent angular projection in inner margin, distal arm slender, apex blunt.
Etymology.
The name “
deceptor
” refers to the fact that this species at first appeared to be a known taxon, but was actually undescribed.
Comparative notes.
Metrocoris deceptor
sp. nov.
seems to be most closely related to
M. atlas
Zettel (2011b)
, described from two male specimens taken at Alaungdaw Katthapa National Park in Myamnar. Our new species has an elongate male paramere similar to
M. atlas
, but this structure is more sharply bent forming a nearly right angle (versus an approximate 45° angle as shown in Zettel’s illustration for
M. atlas
) and lacks the small folding at the apex. As noted by
Zettel (2011b)
, the male pygophore of
M. atlas
lacks the constriction characteristic of species in the
M. anderseni
species group, whereas such a constriction is present in
M. deceptor
, with the apex of the pygophore consequently more enlarged and bearing angular lateral expansions, which are lacking in
M. atlas
. In regard to the internal male genitalia, the lateral sclerites of the endosoma are larger, longer, and of slightly different shape in
M. deceptor
in comparison to the figures provided for
M. atlas
in
Zettel (2011b)
, although the latter are somewhat diagrammatic line drawings in contrast to the photographs provided for these structures in
M. deceptor
by
Basu
et al.
(2015)
; thus, such comparisons may not be accurate. The structure of the male fore femur is similar in both species, but both sub-apical teeth are subequal in size in
M. deceptor
, rather than the distal tooth being obviously larger as in
M. atlas
. Finally, in regard to coloration, the black markings on the mesonotum are much thicker and more well-developed in
M. deceptor
, and antennal segment I is dark brown to black except at the extreme base, versus entirely pale except at the extreme apex in
M. atlas
.
Metrocoris deceptor
also exhibits many similarities to
M. anderseni
, described by
Chen & Nieser (1993a)
from
Uttar Pradesh
,
India
. The male paramere in
M. anderseni
is strongly bent as in
M. deceptor
, but the ventral margin is far more strongly arcuate, the distal arm is shorter, and the apex expanded to form a small head (see Figs. 72, 73 in
Chen & Nieser 1993a
). The shape of the ventral sclerite of the endosoma in
M. andersoni
as depicted by
Chen & Nieser (1993a)
is also of very different shape from that in
M. deceptor
. The posterolateral angles of the male pygophore are also more pronounced and angular in
M. deceptor
than in
M. anderseni
.
Although previously confused with
M. quynhi
by
Basu et al. 2015
, the paramere shapes of the two species are very different, with that of
M. quynhi
being curved upward commencing on the distal one-fourth, while the curvature in
M. deceptor
commences near the midpoint, such that the upward-directed portion of the distal arm beyond the point of curvature is over twice as long in
M. deceptor
as in
M. quynhi
. Other characters separating
M. quynhi
from
M. deceptor
include female mediosternite VII, which projects posteriorly beyond the flanking lateral lobes of sternum VI in
M. deceptor
, rather than being even with them as in
M. quynhi
; the coloration of the mesonotum in
M. deceptor
, which has the black markings broader and more pronounced than in
M. quynhi
; and the coloration of male abdominal tergum VIII, which has a prominent longitudinal pale mark centrally on the posterior half in
M. deceptor
that is lacking in
M. quynhi
. Among the remaining species in the
M. anderseni
species group,
M. deceptor
is easily separated from
M. falcatus
Chen & Nieser
and
M. genitalis
Chen & Nieser
, by the shape of the male paramere, which is sharply bent centrally rather than distally, and has the distal arm beyond the bend far more elongate than in than in either of these two species.