Guide To The Aquatic Heteroptera Of Singapore And Peninsular Malaysia. X. Infraorder Nepomorpha-Famlies Belostomatidae And Nepidae
Author
Polhemus, Dan A.
Author
Polhemus, John T.
text
Raffles Bulletin of Zoology
2013
2013-02-28
61
1
25
45
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5351508
2345-7600
5351508
Laccotrephes archipelagi
(
Ferrari, 1888
)
(
Figs. 32
,
37
)
Nepa archipelagi
Ferrari, 1888: 183
Laccotrephes archipelagi
:
Chen et al., 2005: 411
Material examined
.
—
MALAYSIA
,
Johor
:
1 male
, Mawai
Sedili
,
21 Aug.1960
, coll.
G. M.
(
ZRC
)
;
2 males
,
1 female
,
Mawai
,
Gunung Panti
foothills,
2 Dec.1998
, coll.
H. K. Lua
, LHK420 (
ZRC
)
;
1 female
,
Mawai Stream
,
7 Jun.1989
,
P. Ng
(
ZRC
)
;
1 male
,
1 female
,
6 mi.
Sedili Road
, new pond,
2 Mar.1960
, coll. unk. (
ZRC
)
.
Extralimital material examined
.
—
MALAYSIA,
Sarawak
:
1 female
,
Borneo
,
Serian
,
Sungai Kubas
,
10 Jun.1999
, THH9938, coll.
H. H. Tan
, (
ZRC
)
;
1 female
,
Borneo
,
Long Nawang, O
.
Borneo
, coll.
Mjoberg
(
JTPC
)
;
1 female
,
Semangoh Forest Reserve
,
15 mi.
S. of
Kuching
,
20 Sep.1966
,
J. F. G. & T. M. Clarke
coll. (
USNM
)
.
INDONESIA,
Sumatera Utara Prov.
:
1 male
,
Sumatra
,
Tanjung Morawa
,
19 Oct.1951
, coll. unk. (
JTPC
)
.
Province
uncertain
:
1 male
,
Java
, 9167, coll. unk. (
JTPC
)
.
(Fabricius) and
L
.
tristis
Stål
, but not to
L
.
archipelagi
. The
holotype
of
Nepa archipelagi
came from Java, and based on comparison of specimens from Java, Sumatra, Borneo and Peninsular
Malaysia
(listed below), we conclude that all of our material at hand in this body size class from the Greater Sunda Islands and Peninsular
Malaysia
is referable to
L
.
archipelagi
. In addition, we strongly suspect that Lundblad’s
L
.
occultus
will prove to be a junior synonym of Ferrari’s
L
.
archipelagi
, but defer final decision on this matter until we can examine the
holotype
of Lundblad’s species.
This is the only Peninuslar Malaysian
Laccotrephes
species
with a medium sized body length range of
32–35 mm
, a parallel-sided body form, and flattened eyes (see pl. 14, fig.
1 in
Lundblad [1933]
of
L
.
occultus
from
Sumatra
, which shares these same character states).
Laccotrephes archipelagi
falls in the same general body size class as
L
.
grossus
, a species which occurs further to the north in subtropical regions of
Diagnosis
.
— Male body length
30–32 mm
, maximum body width (across hemelytra)
8–9 mm
, length of respiratory siphon
26–29 mm
. Female body length
35 mm
, maximum body width (across hemelytra)
10 mm
, length of respiratory siphon
32 mm
. Colouration medium brown on head and prothorax, reddish brown on hemelytra with membrane dark brown, legs light brown to yellowish brown with faintly indicated, irregular transverse annulation centrally on fore femur. Antennal segment III about 0.8× the length of segment II, outer margin bearing ~20 long setae, the lengths of these setae 2.0–1.5× the width of the segment, becoming shorter distally; inner margin bearing numerous shorter setae, lengths of these setae about 0.80× as long as the width of the segment. Prosternal keel forming a broadly rounded tumescence when viewed laterally, posterior section level (
Fig. 32
). Length of respiratory siphon distinctly less than that of the body. Male paramere with apex forming a stout hook with a blunt apex (
Fig. 37
).
Distribution
.
— Originally described from Java (
Ferrari, 1888
), with additional specimens noted from Sumatra, Borneo, and “East
India
” (the latter possibly not conspecific), and subsequently recorded from Peninsular
Malaysia
(Fernando & Cheng, 1974, as
L. grossus
).
Discussion
.
— This species seems to have been consistently overlooked since its original description by
Ferrari (1888)
, with no reference to it in the works of Montandon or Distant.
Lundblad (1933)
, in the chapter on
Nepidae
in his treatment of the aquatic Heteroptera of Sumatra, Java and Bali provides a list of all the nepid species occurring in the Malay Archipelago region, but this list does not include
L
.
archipelagi
, which he apparently missed. In this same work Lundblad described
Laccotrephes occultus
from Sumatra, a species of similar form and dimensions to
L
.
archipelagi
, and provided a table comparing various morphological characters of his new species to those exhibited by
L
.
grossus
Asia. As a result, we consider the previous records of
L
.
grossus
from Sumatra and Peninsular
Malaysia
(Fernando & Cheng, 1974) to in fact represent
L
.
archipelagi
.