Revision of Limnocoris (Heteroptera: Nepomorpha: Naucoridae) of North America
Author
Rodrigues, Higor D. D.
Author
Sites, Robert W.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-07-09
4629
4
451
497
journal article
26265
10.11646/zootaxa.4629.4.1
4d76ea5b-ee7f-4361-8f18-595631a770e6
1175-5326
3274050
0DB18F90-AAFD-4FB7-B1ED-09A86A707C9F
Genus
Limnocoris
Stål
Limnocoris
Stål, 1860: 83
.
Borborocoris
Stål, 1861: 202
(synonymized by
Montandon 1897: 2–3
).
Usingerina
La Rivers, 1950: 368
(synonymized by
Sites & Willig 1994: 810
).
Sattleriella
De Carlo, 1966: 111–112
(synonymized by
Nieser & López-Ruf 2001: 265
).
Type
species:
Limnocoris insignis
Stål, 1860
, by monotypy.
Diagnosis.
The general body shape is rounded to oval, with well-developed meso- and metasternal carinae on the midline (
Figs. 2
A–D). The anterior margin of the pronotum is almost straight between the eyes (
Fig. 3A
). A male accessory genitalic process of tergum VI is usually present (but never as developed as in
Ambrysus
) and the male medial lobes of tergum VIII (pseudoparameres) are small, narrow, and asymmetrical (
Fig. 6B
).
Discussion.
Limnocoris
was established by
Stål (1860)
to include a single species collected at
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
, named by him as
L. insignis
. Subsequently,
Stål (1861)
described the genus
Borborocoris
to accommodate a single species,
B. pallescens
Stål, 1861
, collected in
Colombia
. In his study of the
Hemiptera
from
Mexico
,
Stål (1862)
transferred
Naucoris profunda
Say, 1831
to
Borborocoris
, in addition to correcting its specific epithet. In the following decade,
Stål (1876)
proposed the division Limnocoraria to include those two genera described by him (
Limnocoris
and
Borborocoris
) and transferred
B. profundus
to
Limnocoris
. In the next year,
Lethierry (1877)
described
Borborocoris volxemi
(incorrectly named
Borbocoris
) based on material from
Portugal
. Given that the distribution of
Limnocorinae
is otherwise exclusively New World, doubts remained about the identity of the
Portugal
species.
Kirkaldy & Torre-Bueno (1909: 184)
had already mentioned that the record for
Portugal
is wrong and that this species is from South America. This was recently resolved when
Nieser
et al.
(2013)
found the
type
series and recognized that specimens collected in
Brazil
had become mixed with samples from
Portugal
.
Montandon (1897)
elevated to subfamily status the division proposed by
Stål (1876)
, naming it
Limnocorinae
. In that contribution, he presented the first revision of the genus, proposing
Borborocoris
as a junior synonym of
Limnocoris
, in addition to the descriptions of nine species. The following year,
Montandon (1898)
published another study describing six more species. With the exception of isolated species descriptions (
Champion 1901
;
Montandon 1900
, 1910, 1911;
Poisson 1954
), the genus was studied systematically again 40 years later, beginning with the studies published by
De Carlo (1941
,
1951
,
1966
,
1967
) and
La Rivers (1950
,
1957
,
1962
,
1970
,
1971
,
1973
,
1974
). These two researchers were the predominant specialists of the fauna of
Naucoridae
of the Americas in the period from
1941–1974
. Specifically for
Limnocorinae
, they described 39 species (including those that are now considered junior synonyms). In these studies, two other monotypic genera were described within
Limnocorinae
,
Usingerina
La Rivers, 1950
and
Sattleriella
De Carlo, 1966
, from the the
United States
and southern
Brazil
, respectively. After this period, the primary studies were those of
Roback & Nieser (1974)
,
Nieser (1975)
,
Nieser
et al.
(1993)
, and
Manzano
et al
. (1995)
, in which eight more species were described.
Until the 1990s, most of the species descriptions of
Limnocoris
were published in isolated works, without standardization of terminology or characters used in the diagnosis, which generated difficulties in identifying the species.
Sites & Willig (1994)
, in agreement with the arguments offered by
De Carlo (1966)
, pointed out that
Usingerina moapensis
La Rivers
was only a species of
Limnocoris
with specific modifications for existence in a thermally-influenced stream, and formalized the synonymy of
Usingerina
with
Limnocoris
.
At the beginning of the 21st century,
Nieser & López-Ruf (2001)
published a major reference on the study of
Limnocoris
, in which they reviewed 28 species occurring in southern South America east of the Andes, in addition to including a catalog of all species with institutional depositories for the primary
types
. In that study, they provided electron micrographs of the mesosternal carina of most of the studied species, solving some taxonomic questions generated by previous authors.Among the nomenclatural acts proposed in that study was the synonymy of the genus
Sattleriella
with
Limnocoris
; the authors used the same argument by
Sites & Willig (1994)
, claiming
S. siolii
was simply a species of
Limnocoris
with specific modifications.
Nieser & López-Ruf (2001)
also proposed for the first time the division of the genus into two groups of species:
insignis
and
maculiceps
. This division was based on hemelytral shape: species of the
insignis
group exhibited the lateral margin of the wing posterior to the embolium strongly curved, exposing a wide part of the abdominal terga; whereas in the
maculiceps
group the species did not present the lateral margin strongly curved, leaving exposed only a narrow part of the abdominal terga. In those two species groups, the authors included the species occuring in southern South America east of the Andes, but did not specify to which group the other species of
Limnocoris
belonged. Because the divisions are based on only one character, which is variable in some species, we do not follow the division distinction in the present study.
Natural history.
The naucorids, also known as saucer bugs or creeping water bugs, live in a variety of aquatic environments from standing waters, such as ponds and lakes, to torrential waters.
Limnocoris
usually occurs in shallow streams where the substrate is mainly composed of gravel and/or sand and specimens are frequently associated with leaf packs or roots of riparian vegetation. It is common to collect more than one species of the genus in the same locality; in these cases, it is easy to determine how the species partition the habitat after a modicum of sampling. They rarely fly and are not attracted to lights; thus, collection at a light trap or flight interception trap is ineffective for the collection of these insects. The most effective method to collect
Limnocoris
is actively searching using an aquatic insect net, or other insect net adapted for use in water.
Wing polymorphism.
Pterypolymorphism is common in many families of Heteroptera, and in
Naucoridae
Limnocoris
is no exception. The forewing usually does not differ in size; variation in this wing is associated with the presence or absence of the claval suture, the posterior suture of the embolium, and the reduction or non-reduction of the membrane. Two species occurring in southeastern
Brazil
,
L. acutalis
La Rivers, 1974
and
L. siolii
, have the forewing distinctly reduced in some specimens, leaving the posterior abdominal terga exposed. The hindwing usually has more variation of size and can be distinctly reduced, not exceeding abdominal tergum II, although the most common condition is that the wing does not exceed tergum IV. Although
Schuh & Slater (1995)
described five
types
of wing conditions in Nepomorpha, researchers of aquatic Heteroptera (e.g.,
Nieser & López-Ruf 2001
) generally characterize specimens as brachypterous or macropterous based on the development of the hindwing. Brachypterous specimens have the hindwing reduced (with different degrees of reduction), whereas macropterous specimens have the hindwing fully developed. In brachypterous forms, the claval suture is absent or underdeveloped (e.g.,
Figs. 3A
,
17A
), but in some specimens it may be evident (e.g.,
Fig. 9A
). Thus, in some taxa, in order to know if the specimen is brachypterous or macropterous, it is necessary to raise the forewing to observe the size of the hindwing. In macropterous specimens, the claval suture is always well-developed. In some species, the forms of the posterolateral corner of the pronotum and the lateral margin of the embolium (
Figs. 3A, 3C
,
9A, 9C
,
17A, 17C
), in addition to body size, are directly associated with the development of the hindwings. Some researchers have described conspecific brachypterous and macropterous specimens as distinct species. Therefore, documenting this variation is important to avoid misidentification.
Putative synapomorphies.
After the study of all described species of
Limnocoris
, we were able to recognize characters that remain intraspecifically constant that were not mentioned in the literature by previous authors. Except for those of the 6th and 7th abdominal terga, and terminalia, all the characters have the same state in males and females. Usually, these characters also have the same state in morphologically similar species, which suggests they can be informative at a more comprehensive level (i.e., species groups or complexes). In the head, the anterior region of the maxillary plate can be tumescent or flat. In all species from North America, the maxillary plate is tumescent. A flat maxillary plate occurs in some species from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest (e.g.,
L. abbreviatus
La Rivers, 1974
,
L. insignis
,
L. sattleri
De Carlo, 1966
,
L. submontandoni
La Rivers, 1974
). The antenna has four segments: scape, pedicel, and two flagellomeres. The flagellomeres may or may not be partially fused.
The propleuron has different patterns of the pubescent area and no intraspecific variation was observed in that condition. The pubescence may (
Figs. 1
A–C) or may not be extended posteriorly (
Fig. 1D
); when extended, it may extend posteriorly beyond halfway along the entire length of the lateral margin (
Figs. 1
A–B), or be only slightly extended, equal to or less than halfway along the lateral margin (
Fig. 1C
). The posterior margin of the propleuron can be almost straight (
Fig. 1A
), convex (
Figs. 1
B–D), or concave. This latter state is present only in species of the
L. insignis
group
sensu
Nieser & López-Ruf (2001)
. The region between the mesobasisternum and mesoepisternum may (
Fig. 2C
) or may not (
Fig. 2D
) have a longitudinal row of elongate golden setae. The presence of these setae on the mesosternum is correlated with the presence of three other characters: (1) sinuous row of elongate golden setae on the posterior region of the metapleuron and abdominal sternum II (
Fig. 1H
), (2) elongate golden setae generally dispersed mainly on segments III–V [in addition to the typical pubescence that covers most of the abdominal sterna] (
Fig. 2H
), and (3) a tuft of golden setae on the lateral margin of the female subgenital plate (=mediosternite VII) (
Fig. 2H
). Sternum II may also exhibit a rounded (
Fig. 1F
) or irregular (
Fig. 1G
) patch of golden setae. In some species, most of these setae may be absent (
Fig. 1E
).
The male accessory genitalic process of tergum VI is usually present, but is not well developed and its shape does not differ greatly among species; it is absent in species of the
L. insignis
group
sensu
Nieser & López-Ruf (2001)
. The lateral and mesal margins of the lateral lobe of male tergum VI can be curved (
Fig. 6A
) or subparallel (
Figs. 6C, E
). The posterior margin of male mediotergite VII varies among species and can form small rounded lobes (lateral and/or medial) (
Figs. 6A
,
10A, 10C
), be almost straight (
Fig. 10E
), or broadly convex (
Fig. 6C
). The medial lobes of male tergum VIII (=pseudoparameres) have a more homogeneous shape among species, although the apex of the left lobe may (e.g.,
Figs. 6B, 6D, 6F
,
10B
) or may not be angled laterally (
Figs. 10D, F
). These characters, together with those already presented by other authors, should be explored in a phylogenetic context, in order to corroborate or refute these hypotheses of homology.