Australodindymus nigroruber gen. et sp. nov. from Western Australia (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Pyrrhocoridae)
Author
Stehlík, Jaroslav L.
Author
Jindra, Zdenĕk
text
Zootaxa
2012
3316
57
62
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.281111
19e23780-6b44-4704-83ca-02cfee9acaef
1175-5326
281111
Australodindymus
gen. nov.
Type
species.
Australodindymus nigroruber
sp. nov.
, here designated.
Description.
Body dorsally matt, elongate, with costal margin of hemelytra slightly rounded (Fig. 1).
Head prognathous, slightly wider than long. Eyes slightly convex, temples regularly rounded, eye sockets not developed, eyes adjacent the anterior margin of pronotum. Vertex wide, reaching base of eye temple. Frons slightly gibbous, elevated above eye level in lateral view. Clypeus in lateral view distinctly elevated above paraclypei; ventral side of head regularly rounded. Bucculae rounded. Labium of male reaching anterior margin of ventrite IV, in female somewhat shorter.
Anterior margin of pronotal collar concave. Callar lobe slightly gibbous, as well as the pronotal lobe towards the base of pronotum. Base of scutellum convex, disc of scutellum slightly convex, apex elongated and pointed.
Membrane slightly surpassing apex of abdomen; veins arising from closed cells formed by cubitus, media and radius sector, little branching and nearly reaching posterior margin of membrane.
Ventral side of profemora rounded, apically concave and bearing three to four teeth. Apical halves of tibiae ventrally with obliquely erect spines; shorter stout setae also present on ventral side of tarsomere 1. Protarsus more than twice as long as meso- and metatarsus.
Intersegmental sutures between abdominal ventrites slightly S-shaped laterally. In males ventrite VII medially wide and ventrite VI medially narrowed; in females ventrites VI and VII simple.
Pygophore (
Figs. 3–7
). Ventral two thirds of ventral wall rounded in lateral view, the dorsal third strongly produced posteriorly. Upper margin of ventral portion of the ventral wall laterally with short furrow. Ventral rim with rectangular incision. Ventral rim infolding straight, not rounded, sloping upright into genital chamber. Lateral rim sharp, regularly rounded, smoothly merging with the dorsal rim. Lateral rim infolding regularly rounded, strongly sloping into genital chamber. Pygophore dorsally with pale pilosity.
Paramere (Fig. 8) slender in basal half, but strongly enlarged in distal half, apex rounded, and ventral surface of paramere strongly concave. Both parameres
in situ
distant, their apices facing each other.
Female genitalia (Fig. 9). Both sides of valvifer I considerably separated from each other, small, upper edge arcuate. Anal tube rather short, transversely positioned. Laterotergites IX plate-like, situated just beneath the anal tube; basally very close, diverging from the base up, their distal margins arcuately embracing large, black, stackshaped projections of valvifer II. Valvifer II entirely exposed; another two black, stack-shaped projections present on dorsal part of valvifer II, closer to one another than those in ventral part.
Differential diagnosis.
The species-rich genus
Dindymus
is currently divided into five subgenera (
Dindymus
s. str.
,
Anthridindymus
Stehlík, 2006
,
Cornidindymus
Stehlík, 2005
,
Limadindymus
Stehlík, 2005
,
Pseudodindymus
Stehlík, 2009
), differing especially by various modifications of parameres. The basic character of
Dindymus
is parameres crossing each other. The parameres could be attenuated distally with pointed apex, or very slender, rodshaped, distally slightly widened with rounded apex, or slightly curved anteapically. In such cases the paramere is simple, not differentiated into body and processus hamatus. By comparison, in
Pseudodindymus
the parameres are strongly reduced, their body is short, with an acicular processus hamatus, oriented towards the centre of the pygophore but not reaching it and therefore not crossing each other (see
Stehlík 2009
:
Figs. 7
–11).
As
an exception, in
D
. (
Pseudodindymus
)
limbaticollis
Breddin, 1901
only the body of paramere is developed (
Stehlík 2009
).
Australodindymus
gen. nov.
differs from all
Dindymus
species by the paramere being slender in basal half, but strongly enlarged in distal half, having rounded apex, and ventral surface of the paramere being strongly concave (Fig. 8). Both parameres
in situ
are distant from each other, their apices facing each other.
In females of all subgenera of
Dindymus
laterotergite IX is large, medially longitudinally concave but never very thin, plate-like, with both sides approaching each other, as in
Australodindymus
gen. nov.
Etymology.
The generic name is composed from the prefix
Australo
-, meaning southern or Australian, and the generic name
Dindymus
, and refers to both the similarity of habitus of the new genus with
Dindymus
and its distribution in
Australia
. Gender is masculine.