Contributions to the study of the genus Mongolojassus Zakhvatkin, 1953 (Homoptera: Cicadellidae: Deltocephalinae: Paralimnini) with description of a new species from Northern Caucasus
Author
Tishechkin, Dmitri Yu.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-04-22
5128
4
574
580
journal article
55835
10.11646/zootaxa.5128.4.6
865bba99-265d-42b8-a515-ec3bb467071a
1175-5326
6480088
35260FDC-F72E-4241-87C5-194B9D94893B
Mongolojassus bicuspidatus
(J. Sahlberg, 1871)
Figs. 16–21
Material examined.
Russia
,
Western Siberia
,
Altai
Mts.,
Chulyshman Plateau, A
. Zhelokhovtsev,
4. VIII. 1935
,
2 ♂
,
6 ♀
.
Description.
Similar in appearance to other species of
Mongolojassus
.
Aedeagal processes in posterior view at bases bent basad and diverging at angle slightly less than 90
o
, with small additional branches before midlength, and with tips bent outwards (
Fig. 16
). Length of processes does not exceeds one third of shaft length. Aedeagal shaft slightly S-curved in lateral view, with processes almost parallel to distal part of shaft (
Figs. 17–18
), not narrowed beyond gonopore (
Fig. 19
).
Very similar to
M. sibiricus
and differs from it only in diverging aedeagal processes (more or less parallel in
M. sibiricus
;
Figs. 22–23
).
Distribution.
Northern part of European
Russia
(
Ossiannilsson, 1983
), Northern and Southern Urals (
Galinichev & Anufriev, 2012b
),
Altai
Mts., Western Siberia (new record).
Remarks.
A comprehensive illustrated description of
M. bicuspidatus
was published by
Ossiannilsson (1983)
.
Mityaev (2002)
treats
M. sibiricus
as a junior synonym of
M. bicuspidatus
and points out that this taxon is widespread in the steppe zone of Northern, Central, and Eastern
Kazakhstan
. However, in his keys for identification of Auchenorrhyncha of
Kazakhstan
(
Mityaev, 1971
), he gives drawings of the aedeagus of a typical
M. sibiricus
(as on
Figs. 22–23
).
FIGURES 1–15.
Mongolojassus caucasicus
sp. n.
(1–14) and
M. servadeinus
(15). 1―male, dorsal habitus, 2―same, female, 3―pygofer, lateral view, 4―same, ventral view, 5― subgenital plates, valve, connective, styles, and aedeagus, dorsal view, 6–8, 15―aedeagus, back view, 9―same, apical part, 10–12―same, lateral view, 13–14―posterior and lateral view. 15―after
D’Urso & Remane, 1994
.
FIGURES 16–34.
Mongolojassus
spp.
16–21―
M. bicuspidatus
(16–19―males from Altai Mts., 20–21―male from Northern Europe, after
Ossiannilsson, 1983
), 22–23―
M. sibiricus
(after
Emelyanov, 1964a
), 24–31―
M. vinokurovi
(24–28―males from Irkutsk Oblast, 29–31―male from Yakutia, after
Emelyanov, 1976
), 32–34―
M. elpatjevskii
(32–33―female holotype, 34―male paratype). 16, 20, 22, 24–25, 29―aedeagus, posterior view, 19, 28, 31―same, apical part, 17–18, 21, 23, 26–27, 30―same, lateral view, 32, 34―habitus, 33―holotype labels.
M. bicuspidatus
and
M. sibiricus
are, apparently, fully sympatric, since
M. sibiricus
was recorded from
Estonia
(
Vilbaste, 1965
), steppes of the Southeastern European
Russia
(
Emelyanov, 1964b
), the Urals (
Galinichev, Anufriev, 2012a
),
Altai
Mts. (
Vilbaste, 1965
), and the steppe zone of
Kazakhstan
(
Mityaev, 1971
). Still, we have not seen males with traits intermediate between these two species. On the contrary, aedeagus shape in males from distant localities is remarkably similar (
Figs. 16–17 and 20–21
). Thus, investigation of genitalia variability based on numerous materials from different localities is necessary to clarify the status of these taxa.