Revision and Phylogeny of the Eccritotarsine Plant Bug Genus Caulotops Bergroth, with Descriptions of Four New Genera and 14 New Species (Hemiptera Heteroptera: Miridae: Bryocorinae) Associated with Agave (Agavoideae Asparagaceae) and Related Plant Genera
Author
Henry, Thomas J.
Systematic Entomology Laboratory, ARS, USDA, c / o National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, P. O. Box 37012, Washington, DC 20013 - 7012 (e-mail: thomas. henry @ usda. gov)
Author
Menard, Katrina L.
Department of Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269 - 3044 (e-mail: katrina. menard @ uconn. edu)
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-05-08
4772
2
201
252
journal article
22303
10.11646/zootaxa.4772.2.1
be5e4bdb-a5e2-48f0-bc0c-3c27ddb7a1cf
1175-5326
3816462
442349A6-2D72-4FBE-9E03-1F94F45096CD
Agaveocoris
Henry and Menard
,
new genus
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
74C5431F-A068-401C-B840-4FA69D605549
Type
species:
Caulotops agavis
Reuter, 1909
. By present designation.
Caulatops
[
sic
]:
Reuter 1909: 1
(original description, in part).
Caulotops
:
Carvalho 1957: 94
(catalog, in part);
Knight 1968: 78
(key);
Henry 1985: 322
(note, key, in part);
Henry and Wheeler 1988: 265
(catalog, in part);
Schuh 1995: 540
(catalog, in part),
Schuh
2002
–2013 (online catalog, in part).
INCLUDED SPECIES.
A
.
agavis
(Reuter)
,
n. comb.
;
A. barberi
(Knight)
,
n. comb.
;
A. barrerai
,
n. sp.
;
A. bimaculatus
,
n. sp.
;
A. dimidiatus
,
n. sp.
;
A. distanti
(Reuter)
,
n. comb.
;
A. marginalis
, n. sp;
A. roseus
,
n. sp.
;
A. rostratus
,
n. sp.
;
A. schaffneri
,
n. sp.
; and
A. scutellatus
,
n. sp.
DIAGNOSIS.
This new genus is recognized by a combination of the weakly stylate eyes extending laterally outside anterior margin of pronotum by half or more the width of an eye (
Fig. 2
); the weakly punctate pronotum, the well-developed, strongly raised calli with a V-shaped depression between them in dorsal view (
Figs. 2, 4
,
13, 14
), the stout, apically rounded (rarely more spinelike, fig. 120) invaginated tubercle (
Figs. 119, 121, 122
) on the upper left margin of the genital capsule, the elongate right paramere transversing the anterior margin of the genital capsule with the apex hooking around the tubercle (
Figs. 6, 7
), and the two lateral spines in the female vestibulum (
Fig. 138
).
DESCRIPTION.
Male
: Macropterous, small to medium-sized, elongate oval. Total length of included species from apex of clypeus to cuneal fracture
2.08–4.15 mm
in males, 2.12–4.00 mm in females, length from apex of clypeus to apex of hemelytral membrane,
3.01–5.35 mm
in males,
3.14–5.40 mm
in females; widest point across hemelytra
1.15–2.46 mm
in males,
1.28–2.37 mm
in females; general coloration pale to dark bluish-black, often with a pale to red or reddish-orange thorax, head, and scutellum. COLORATION.
Head:
Pale yellowish brown to red, frons and vertex with dark brown to black dorsal transverse lines; clypeus and labrum dark brown; antennal segments pale yellowish brown to black.
Thorax
: Pale yellowish brown to red.
Pronotum
: Anterior area pale yellow to red, with small brown patches, posterior half grayish yellow to dark brown, often darker than anterior half, calli pale brown, reddish orange, to blackish brown; mesoscutum and scutellum yellow to reddish orange; pleural areas of thorax concolorous with posterior half. Coxae pale yellow to brown; femora and tibiae pale yellow, brown to black, or reddish orange; tarsomeres pale brown to dark brown; claws dark brown.
Hemelytron
: Yellowish brown, grayish brown, to dark bluish black, often with a bluish sheen, sometimes extensively red on corium; membrane pale translucent brown to darker smoky brown, veins brown to dark brown or black.
Abdomen
: Pale brown to dark brown, apex of lateral tubercle and genital opening sometimes tinged with red. SURFACE AND VESTITURE.
Head
: Smooth, with relatively dense, recumbent simple setae; antennal segments with dense, semierect, simple setae of uniform length.
Thorax
: Pronotum weakly rugulose, with dense, recumbent, simple setae, more dense near furrows of calli; scutellum with simple setae.
Hemelytron
: Setae recumbent, simple, sometimes with a bluish sheen, veins with simple setae present along dorsal surface.
Abdomen
: Clothed with simple setae. STRUCTURE.
Head
: Wider than high, clypeus not visible in dorsal view, greater than one half height of head below ventral surface of eyes, vertex and frons convex, vertex declining posteriorly toward anterior pronotal margin, eyes substylate, posterior margin removed from anterior margin of pronotum; interocular width greater than twice the width of one eye, nearly equal to length of antennal segment I; antennal segment I length longer than one half to subequal the length of antennal segment II, antennal segment II narrower than I, length of antennal segment II subequal to interocular distance, segments III and IV half the width of segment I, individual lengths nearly subequal to length of segment I; labium stout, extending from middle coxae to well onto abdomen.
Thorax
: Anterior and posterior lobes of pronotum clearly demarcated, trapeziform with weakly concave lateral margins, a weak carina present along lateral margins, anterior margin with a narrow flat collarlike area (
Figs. 2, 3
); pronounced calli separated by dorsal, lateral, and medial furrows, posterior lobe sometimes medially invaginated anteriorly, posterior margin straight to weakly concave; mesoscutum exposed; scutellum equilateral, with raised lateral, margins forming V-shaped ridge.
Metathoracic scent gland auricle and evaporative area
: Elongate, narrow, horizontal along ventral margin of metathorax (
Fig. 5
).
Legs
: Typical length relative to other mirids of similar size, pretarsus typical of eccritotarsines.
Hemelytron
: Lateral margins moderately convex; cuneus well developed; membrane with one closed cell, length greater than half the total length of membrane.
Abdomen
: Broadly rounded, with a blunt, oval aperture, upper left margin of genital capsule with a stout apically blunt to tapered tubercle, serving as a hook to hold right paramere
in situ
(
Fig. 6, 7
); tubercle not visible in dorsal view.
Male genitalia
: Endosoma (e.g.,
Figs. 70, 77
,
80, 83
) simple with an elongate sclerotized ductus seminis enclosed in membrane; phallotheca thin and simple. Left paramere (e.g.,
Figs. 71, 73, 75
) small and C-shaped. Right paramere (e.g., 72, 74, 76) large, elongate, shallowly C-shaped, with an upturned hook at apex.
Female:
(n = 5): Length from apex of head to cuneal fracture 2.12–4.00 mm; length from apex of head to apex of membrane
3.14–5.40 mm
; widest point across hemelytra
1.28–2.37 mm
.
Similar to male in size, shape, and coloration.
Female
g
enitali
a: Vestibulum (
Fig. 138
) with two enlarged plates protruding anteriorly into abdomen, invaginated inward, lateral plate on left side of vestibulum with two pronounced spines, right plate with some serrations and protruding sclerotizations, right lateral side of vestibulum connected to a medium-sized lateral arm (
Fig. 138
) that extends adjacent to base of ovipositor, with basal point articulating with dorsal surface of sclerites on vestibulum; dorsal surface of second gonopophysis (
Fig. 142
, bottom) with coarse serrations along margin, more minute serrations on first gonopophysis (
Fig. 142
, top); dorsal labiate plate with barely visible, weakly sclerotized ring structures; posterior wall membranous, with base of ovipositor rounded, not touching it dorsally.
ETYMOLOGY.
The generic name of this new genus is derived from the plant name
Agave
, the known host genus of most included species, and the suffix “coris,” meaning bug. The gender is masculine.
DISCUSSION.
The taxa included in
Agaveocoris
are clearly distinguished from
Caulotops
based the presence of a large tubercle on the genital capsule and the greatly elongate and curving right paramere. Further, biogeographically
Agaveocoris
and the other genera in this study are separated not only by a great distance between continents, but also host plant usage. Agaves and their relatives, which are the major host plants of this new genus, are not native to South America where the monotypic
Caulotops
occurs.
Agavecoris
can be separated from the other genera in this study based on the apically hooked right paramere, the two spines on the left plate of the vestibulum (
Fig. 138
) in the females, and the blunt shape of the abdominal tubercle (e.g.,
Figs. 119, 121, 122
), except for
A. barberi
, which has a more elongate, apically pointed tubercle.