New species and new records of Tingidae (Insecta: Heteroptera) of New Guinea
Author
Guilbert, Eric
text
Zootaxa
2006
1117
37
68
journal article
50786
10.5281/zenodo.171651
f7582322-2924-495a-801e-d85c7db1050b
11755326
171651
Celantia wandelmanniae
sp. n.
(
Figs. 1, 2
)
Material examined: 1M, New
Guinea
, NE, Wau, Edie Creek, 1200
220m
,
23.XI.1963
, J.L. Gressitt,
BPBM
. 3M + 4F, New
Guinea
, NE, Morobe Dist. Nr Bulolo gorge,
1100m
,
10.IX.1971
,
Wandelmannia paniculata
, W. Gagné,
BPBM
.
FIGURES 1–2.
Celantia wandelmanniae
sp. n.
, 1—habitus, 2—profile. Scale 1mm.
Description: Body rather stout, glabrous, shiny, uniformly yellowish brown; head, hind tarsi, and body beneath darker. Body length: M, 2.68; F, 2.78; width: M, 1.21; F, 1.38.
Head glabrous, armed with five long and slender spines directed forward; bucculae narrow, two to three areolae wide, open in front; third and fourth antennal segments missing in all specimens. Rostral sulcus straight and narrow, open behind; rostrum reaching the apex of metasternum.
Pronotum gibbose, tricarinate, carinae foliate, elevated, lateral carinae uniseriate, the areolae large, median carina uniseriate posteriorly and biseriate anteriorly, the basal areolae smaller; hood tectiform, large, six areolae long, slightly less higher than top of median carina; paranota raised, wide, mostly triseriate but biseriate at the anterior and posterior ends.
Hemelytra wider than pronotum, costal area widened at base, irregularly triseriate, the areolae round, boundary veins slightly raised; subcostal area narrower than costal area, biseriate, the areolae smaller; discoidal area large, as large as sutural area, seven to eight areolae wide at widest part in female and six to seven areolae wide in male; sutural area nine areolae wide at widest part, areolae as large as costal area.
Etymology: The name refers to the host plant where most of the specimens were found.
Comments: The female is larger than the male. This species differs from
C. nitidula
(Stål)
and
C. teres
Drake
by the shape of the hood and the larger hemelytra and paranota.
Celantia nitidula
has a biseriate costal area;
Celantia teres
has a triseriate subcostal area;
Celantia creta
Drake
has a much wider costal area (5–6 areolae wide); and
Celantia vagans
(Distant)
has a triseriate subcostal area, and a discoidal area five areolae wide. Also, some species of
Tingis
, such as
coomani
Drake and
tonkinana
Drake, are quite similar to
Celantia
species. They differ by the narrower carinae and paranota, the latter being closer to the pronotum. Prior to this study, only four extant species of
Celantia
were known, from Western
Australia
, the Indian peninsula, New
Britain
, and Bismarck. A fossil species (Oligocene),
Celantia seposita
Cockerell
, is known from Wight island (
Australia
).