Review of Chinese species of the leafhopper genus Amrasca Ghauri (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae, Typhlocybinae), with description of a new species, species checklist and notes on the identity of the Indian cotton leafhopper
Author
Xu, Ye
Author
Wang, Yuru
Author
Dietrich, Christopher H.
Author
Fletcher, Murray J.
Author
Qin, Daozheng
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-11-23
4353
2
journal volume
31344
10.11646/zootaxa.4353.2.7
aae4bad3-b9cc-4c24-b8c1-f2f94b427ff7
1175-5326
1065262
63881055-723D-44A6-A137-006F361512CE
Amrasca
Ghauri, 1967
Amrasca
Ghauri, 1967
: 159
. Type species:
Amrasca splendens
Ghauri, 1967
by original designation.
Sundapteryx
Dworakowska, 1970
: 708
. Type species:
Chlorita biguttula
Ishida, 1913
by original designation. Synonymized by
Dworakowska & Viraktamath, 1975
: 530
.
Laokayana
Dworakowska, 1972
: 27
. Type species:
Empoasca bombaxia
Ghauri, 1965
by original designation. Synonymized by
Dworakowska & Viraktamath, 1975
: 530
.
Description.
Body delicate. Head including eyes slightly wider than pronotum in dorsal view (
Figs 1, 3
,
6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16
,
18, 19
,
37, 39
). Crown produced medially, anterior and posterior margins not parallel, coronal suture not reaching anterior margin (
Figs 1, 3
,
6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16
,
18, 19
,
37, 39
). Profile of transition of vertex to face somewhat rounded (
Figs 2
,
7, 11, 15
,
21
,
38
). Ocelli distinct, located on margin between vertex and frons near eyes (
Figs 3, 4
,
8, 9, 12, 13, 16, 17
,
19, 20
,
39, 40
). Lateral frontal sutures extended to ocelli but not continuing to midline (
Figs 4
,
9, 13, 17
,
20
,
40
). Face broad, anteclypeus weakly convex, not swollen (
Figs 4
,
9, 13, 17
,
20
,
40
). Pronotum moderate to large (
Figs 3
,
8, 12, 16
,
19
,
39
). Forewing narrow, rounded apically, apical cells occupying nearly one-third of total length; vein RP arising from
r cell
, MP’ and MP’’+CuA’ dissociated at their bases, both arising from m cell; c and
r cells
nearly equal in width, both narrower than m and cua cells; 2nd apical cell narrowed at base, broadened apically (
Fig. 22
). Hind wing with CuA unbranched (
Fig. 23
). Front femur row AV with 1 basal seta distinctly enlarged. Front femur AM1 distinctly enlarged. Middle femur with 1 dorsoapical macroseta. Hind tibia row AV with 4 or 5 preapical macrosetae.
Male basal abdominal apodemes developed, parallel-sided or widely divergent (
Figs 5
,
24
). Male pygofer with small rigid microsetae scattered over distal portion or restricted to apex of lobe (
Figs 25–29
); dorsal bridge short (
Figs 25
,
29
). Ventral appendage present (
Figs 26–28, 30
). Subgenital plate extended well beyond pygofer side, A and B group setae present or unrecognizable, C group setae sharply pointed near base, reaching or not reaching to apex of the plate, D group setae long and fine (
Figs 26
,
27, 34
). Paramere broad at base, sharply pointed apically, apophysis bearing prominent dentifer and a few slender setae in apical half (
Fig. 35
). Connective broad anteriorly, strongly narrowed near midlength and tapered to posterior apex, anterior margin straight or weakly concave, without median lobe or with distinct median lobe (
Fig. 33
). Aedeagal shaft tubular, process absent, preatrium developed, dorsoatrium absent (
Figs 31, 32
). Anal tube appendage well developed (
Figs 27, 36
).
Remarks.
Among genera in the
Empoasca
-complex
Eastern
Hemisphere,
Amrasca
is most similar to
Jacobiasca
Dworakowska
and
Jacobiella
Dworakowska
in having vein RP arising from
r cell
, MP’ and MP’’+CuA’ arising from cell m and hind wing vein CuA unbranched, in having the connective not fused with base of aedeagus and in having a well developed ventral pygofer appendage.
Amrasca
differs from
Jacobiasca
in having the paramere not strongly curved apically and in lacking a pair of enlarged setae on the pregenital male abdominal sternite, and from
Jacobiella
in having the subgenital plate not broadened dorsomedially and the anal tube not elongated.
Amrasca
also differs from both genera in having the male basal abdominal apodemes well developed. Based on its current species composition,
Amrasca
is somewhat heterogeneous in the form and chaetotaxy of the subgenital plate. Two subgenera have previously been recognized largely based on differences in chaetotaxy: the nominotypical subgenus and
A.
(
Quartasca
) Dworakowska, which differs from
Amrasca
(
Amrasca
)
in having the long fine setae of the subgenital plate restricted to the basal half.
Here we recognize a third valid subgenus,
A.
(
Sundapteryx
) Dworakowska. The latter was originally described as a separate genus by
Dworakowska (1970)
based on type species
Chlorita biguttula
Ishida
but was subsequently treated as a junior synonym of
Amrasca
by
Dworakowska & Viraktamath (1975)
. This subgenus is characterized by the presence of macrosetae only in the basal half of the subgenital plate and by the presence of apodemes and other modifications to the male pregenital tergites (
Fig. 5
). Species of the other two currently recognized subgenera have macrosetae extended from the base to or near the apex of the subgenital plate and lack apodemes and other modifications to pregenital abdominal tergites VI-VIII. It may be desirable to subdivide
Amrasca
further once the genus becomes better known.
Distribution.
Oriental and Australian Regions.