Review of the leafhopper genus Anaceratagallia Zachvatkin, 1946 (Homoptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Cicadellidae: Megophthalminae: Agalliini) from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Central Asia
Author
Tishechkin, Dmitri Yu.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-07-31
4821
2
250
276
journal article
8976
10.11646/zootaxa.4821.2.2
4d5564e3-80c1-41e0-8219-d7a462e05bc2
1175-5326
4398488
BC1CFF1D-5DB5-4E19-B4D0-0C106C169440
7.
Anaceratagallia
(
Anaceratagallia
)
harrarensis
(
Melichar, 1911
)
Figs. 4, 163–176, 189–190
Agallia halophila
Lindberg, 1954: 197–198
.
Agallia halophila brevispina
Linnavuori, 1956: 162–163
.
Anaceratagallia halophila iranicola
Dlabola, 1960: 8
.
Anaceratagallia
(
Anaceratagallia
)
mangyschlaki
Mityaev, 1969a: 365–366
.
Syn. n.
Anaceratagallia
(
Anaceratagallia
)
caesia
Mityaev, 1969a: 366
.
Syn. n.
Description.
Unlike other species, which are similar to each other in coloration,
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
is distinctly lighter, with less developed dark pattern (Fig. 4). Penis similar to that of
A.
(
A
.)
camphorosmatis
, but stem slightly narrower and directed obliquely upwards (
Figs. 163, 165, 167, 169, 171
). Male anal collar appendage smooth, gradually extends distally and sharply tapers in last one-fourth, its apical part asymmetrical, with pointed tip on dorsal side (
Figs. 164, 168, 172
) or in dorsal half (
Figs. 166, 170
).
Biology.
In the Canary Islands
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
was collected on halophytic
Chenopodiaceae (
Lindberg, 1954
)
. In
Turkmenistan
was collected at light in salty clay desert. In general, all records of this species are confined to the desert zone.
Calling signal.
Signals
of one male from
Southern
Turkmenistan
(
Dushak Village
ca.
170 km
South-east of Ashgabad
, collected at light,
24. V. 1990
, recording at 28
oC
) were investigated
.
General structure of the calling signal is the same as in
A.
(
A
.)
venosa
,
A.
(
A
.)
chalchica
,
A.
(
A
.)
laevis
, and
A.
(
A
.)
camphorosmatis
(
Fig. 189
), but its second part consists of simple pulses, following each other at a rate of about 35/s in our recordings (
Fig. 190
).
Distribution.
Desert zone of Western Palaearctic: Canary Islands, northern Africa, deserts of western and southwestern
Kazakhstan
,
Uzbekistan
,
Turkmenistan
, and
Iran
, possibly, also
India
; in the South it is distributed outside the Palaearctic in
Ethiopia
. The record from
Ukraine
by
Logvinenko (1984)
in fact belongs to
A.
(
A
.)
camphorosmatis
(see above).
FIGURES 163–188.
Male genitalia. 163–176―
Anaceratagallia
(
Anaceratagallia
)
harrarensis
, 177–180―
A.
(
A
.)
pararobusta
, 181–182―
A.
(
A
.)
robusta
sensu
Khatri
et al.
, 2010
, 183–188―
A.
(
A
.)
frisia
. 163, 165, 167, 169, 171, 173, 175, 177, 179, 181, 183, 185, 187―penis, lateral view, 164, 166, 168, 170, 172, 174, 176, 178, 180, 182, 184, 186, 188―male anal col-lar appendage. 173–176―after
Mityaev (1969a)
, 179–180―after
Viraktamath (2011)
, 181–182―after
Khatri
et al.
(2010)
, 187–188―after
Wagner (1939)
.
FIGURES 189–203.
Anaceratagallia
(
Anaceratagallia
)
spp., calling signal oscillograms. 189–190―
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
, 191193―
A.
(
A
.)
ribauti
, 194–198―
A.
(
A
.)
fragariae
, 199–203―
A.
(
A
.)
aciculata
. Faster oscillograms of the parts of signals indicated as “190”, “192–193”, “197–198”, “200”, and “202–203” are given under the same numbers. 194–195, 197―male from Moscow Oblast, locality No. 1 in the list in calling signal description, 196, 198―male from Kazakhstan, ibid., locality No. 2, 199–200, 202―male from Astrakhan Oblast, ibid., locality No. 1, 201, 203―male from Saratov Oblast, ibid., locality No. 2.
Remarks.
This species was described from Harrar,
Ethiopia
(
Melichar, 1911
). Later it was described by
Lindberg (1954)
from the
Canary Islands
under the name
Agallia halophila
Lindberg, 1954
; also, two subspecies,
A.
(
A
.)
halophila
brevispina
Linnavuori, 1956
from
Melilla
, Spanish
Morocco
(based on one male) and
A.
(
A
.)
halophila
iranicola
Dlabola, 1960
from
Iran
were described.
A. halophila
was placed in synonymy under
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
by
Heller and Linnavuori (1968)
.
Mityaev (1969a)
described two species,
A.
(
A
.)
mangyschlaki
Mityaev, 1969
and
A.
(
A
.)
caesia
Mityaev, 1969
, from the deserts of
Kazakhstan
; both original descriptions are based on single males. From the illustrations (reproduced as
Figs. 173–176
) it is clear, that both specimens fall into the variability range of
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
from
Turkmenistan
and
Iran
.
Also, two more taxa similar to
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
were described as follows:
Agallia leda
Linnavuori, 1971
– from
Tunisia
, based on one male, which differs from typical
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
by the somewhat wider penis in side view and another shape of male anal collar appendage.
A.
(
A
.)
pararobusta
(Pruthi, 1936) – from
India
which is almost identical to
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
in genitalia structure (
Viraktamath, 2011
and our data;
Figs. 177–180
). Apparently, the same species is illustrated by
Khatri
et al.
(2010)
under the name
Agallia robusta
Pruthi, 1930
(
Figs. 181–182
).
Since some species of
Anaceratagallia
are difficult to distinguish by morphology, although they differ well in signal temporal pattern, the establishment of synonymy of the two above listed taxa with
A.
(
A
.)
harrarensis
without acoustic or molecular studies would seem to be premature.