The genus Tuponia Reuter, 1875 of China (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae: Exaeretini) with descriptions of three new species
Author
Li, Xiao-Ming
Author
Liu, Guo-Qing
text
Zootaxa
2016
4114
2
101
122
journal article
39025
10.11646/zootaxa.4114.2.1
37970996-440c-48a3-a5c5-2e604a9cfcdc
1175-5326
271588
69011B46-1B29-4D8A-90D9-678356EA5FCB
Megalodactylus
Tuponia
Reuter, 1875
: 98
.
Tuponia
:Wagner, 1995a: 262
;
Wagner, 1975
: 416
;
Linnavuori, 1993
: 276
; Menard
et al
., 2013:16; Schuh and Menard, 2013: 21.
Type
species:
Tuponia tamarisci
(Perris, 1857)
Diagnosis.
Recognized by the small to medium sized for
Phylinae
, total length 1.8−4.0; body elongate to ovoid; coloration completely white to heavily greenish; dorsum with dark or sericeous setae; labium relatively long and reaching or extending past meta-coxa; antennal segment II uniform diameter; all femora without spots or with few contrasting dark spots apically; pulvillus absent.
Redescription.
Coloration: Dorsum usually without dark spots, general coloration varying from completely white to dark greenish, mesoscutum often orange laterally.
Surface and structure: Dorsum smooth, often with dark or sericeous setae; head transverse and barely projecting beyond anterior margin of eye; frons weakly bulgy, clypeus generally invisible in dorsal view; eyes relatively small, width smaller than interocular distance; antennal segment I short, constricting at base, segment II slender, diameter of segments III and IV about equal to half of segment II; labium extending from meta-coxa to abdominal sternum; pronotum flat or weakly sloping anteriorly; all femora without spots or with few contrasting dark spots apically; tibial spines usually black, rarely pale, with or without black bases; tarsal segment I short, segment II often longer than or equal to segment III; claws long and thin, bent close to apex, parempodia always setiform, pulvillus absent; abdomen broad basally, weakly tapering toward pygophore.
Male genitalia: Pygophore small relative to total size of abdomen, apex pointed or somewhat truncate, often conical, sometimes with distinctive ornamentation, except for
T. cristifera
, two fingerlike projections at base of pygophore; endosoma L- or S-shaped, with one or two apical sclerotized spines at apex, weakly or strongly twisted medially, often bifurcating at point even with distal end of secondary gonopore, apical spine sometimes with membranous margin, secondary gonopore often situated near apex or middle of endosoma; left paramere always boat-shaped and with an elongate posterior lobe and a sclerotized, triangular anterior lobe; right paramere simple, lanceolate, apically often with a short fingerlike lobe; phallotheca often with one or two keels.
Discussion.
According to the latest suprageneric classification system, the genus
Tuponia
belongs to the tribe Exaeretini (Menard
et al
., 2013; Schuh and Menard, 2013). The analyses of RAxML and POY found a relationship between
Moissoni
a Reuter and
Tuponia
(Menard
et al
., 2013)
. Morphological characters supports this node, including the labium reaching or exceeding meta-coxa, the twisted, more or less S-shaped endosoma and the dorsum with dark or sericeous setae. However, the left paramere of
Moissonia
has an elevated posterior lobe, and the hemelytron is often transparent in
Moissonia
.
Megalodactylus
Fieber
was allied with
Tuponia
by
Wagner (1975)
based on the elongate claws without pulvilli.
Megalodactylus
is a small genus, only 2 species have been described.
Megalodactylu
s has a similar external appearance to some
Tuponia
spp. with a median fuscous stripe on clavus. Distinguished from
Tuponia
by ventral surface of meta-femur with a row of brownish spots along anterior margin, pro- and meso-tibia darkened apically, and a series of rectangular teeth on the endosoma.