A new genus and twenty new species of Australian jumping plant-lice (Psylloidea: Triozidae) from Eremophila and Myoporum (Scrophulariaceae: Myoporeae)
Author
Taylor, Gary S.
Author
Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P.
Author
Austin, Andy D.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4073
1
1
84
journal article
37193
10.11646/zootaxa.4073.1.1
8d4152c8-c67a-4d0c-92e7-266e6e31ad04
1175-5326
270709
A502D3A2-C070-4E9D-9F55-BA07C731FCF3
Myotrioza eremophili
Taylor
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs 47–54
,
79–80
,
87
;
Tables 1–8
)
Types
.
AUSTRALIA
, Western
Australia
:
Holotype
:
1 ♂
(dried, point) Credo Station Reserve, -
30°13'18''S
,
120°41'53''E
GDA94, M. Cheng & C. Symonds, swept
Eremophila scoparia
, MC042 (WAM).
Paratypes
:
4 ♂
, 7 ♀ (dried, point), same data as
holotype
(WAM, WINC);
4 ♂
, 5 ♀ (dried, point), Credo Station Reserve, SW,
30º32.140'S
,
120º45.890'E
, G.S. Taylor,
31.viii.2011
, swept
Eremophila scoparia
, 2011
126, CR7 (WAM, WINC);
1 ♂
, 1 ♀ (dried), Credo Station, -
30°13' 18.00''S
120°41' 53.00''E
,
432m
.
,
5 ix.2011
, M. Cheng & C. Symonds, beat
Eremophila scoparia
, UNSW Host No. HA17 (WINC);
5 ♂
(dried, point), Credo Station Reserve, Coolgardie North Rd,
30º25.402'S
,
120º48.242'E
, G.S. Taylor,
3.ix.2011
,
Eremophila oppositifolia
ssp.
angustifolia
, 2011
148, CR29 (WAM).
South
Australia
:
5 ♂
, 5 ♀ (dried), Gawler Range NP,
32º40.085'S
,
135º29.835'E
, G.S. Taylor,
15.xi.2012
, swept
Eremophila scoparia
, 2012
113 (H27) (SAM, WAM, WINC).
FIGURES 47–54.
Myotrioza eremophili
,
sp. nov.
(47), habitus, male, (dorsal aspect); (48), habitus, female (dorsal aspect); (49), habitus, male (lateral aspect); (50), habitus, female (lateral aspect); (51), head, male (dorsal aspect, from slide); (52), head, female (dorsal aspect); (53), fore wing, male (from slide); (54), fore wing, female. Scale = 1.0 mm.
Description. Adult
(
Figs 47–50
). Colouration. Male: [specimens point-mounted] Light yellow brown: vertex with distinct brown marking in vicinity of fovea; eyes greyish brown; antennal segments 8–10 progressively dark brown; mesopraescutum with a pair of orange brown anterior submedial markings; mesoscutum with a narrow medial and two pairs of orange brown submedial markings; fore and hind wings clear; fore wing veins equally pigmented brown; legs pale yellow-brown; abdominal tergites 1–5 dark brown to black; sternites brown to dark brown; abdominal membrane colouration pale green; proctiger, subgenital plate and parameres yellow-brown; anterior face of proctiger with brown infuscation; subgenital plate with a brown to dark brown marking anteriolaterally; apices of parameres black. Female: [specimens point-mounted] as for male except slightly paler with greyish green suffusion; abdominal sternites with brown transverse band with pale submedial marking; proctiger brown, darker anteriorly with apex dark brown to black; subgenital plate pale yellow-brown, dark brown anteriorly and medially and apex dark brown to black.
Structure. Measurements as in
Tables 4–8
. Body short, compact (
Figs 47–50
). Head (
Figs 51–52
); vertex with weak medial suture, moderately sunk in vicinity of fovea; genal processes short, 0.35–0.42 times as long as vertex; antenna very short, 0.56–0.72 times width of head, with a single subapical rhinarium on each of segments 4, 6, 8 and 9; segment 10 with a short bluntly rounded seta and a minute bluntly rounded seta. Fore wing (
Figs 53–54
) 3.90–4.50 times as long as head width, 2.50–2.75 times as long as wide, short, broad with rounded apex; vein Rs straight, slightly upturned distally, terminating short of wing apex, about same length as vein M, RsM: 0.81–1.06; medial and cubital cells subequal; veins M1+2 and M3+4 short, broadly diverging with corresponding low m1 cell value: 1.12–1.59; veins Cu1a short, arched and Cu1b short, each widely divergent with corresponding low cu1 cell value: 1.03–1.36; metatibia 0.64–0.96 times as long as width of head, longer than metafemur, without sclerotised apical spurs. Male terminalia (
Figs 79–80
); proctiger conoid, without expanded lateral lobes; subgenital plate broadly rounded; parameres (
Fig. 80
) short, narrow, blade-like, evenly tapering to incurved sclerotised apices; distal portion of aedeagus moderate in length, with asymmetrical apical expansion (
Fig. 79
). Female terminalia (
Fig. 87
): proctiger short, triangular, posterior margin flat from lateral aspect and with strongly sclerotised sharply pointed apex; subgenital plate, triangular with tapering, strongly sclerotised sharply pointed apex; distal portion of proctiger with dense long pale setae and sparse field of pale weakly hooked setae and subgenital plate with sparse long setae.
Comments.
Myotrioza eremophili
sp. nov.
can be distinguished by the following unique combination of characters: habitus as in
Figs 47–50
, antenna with normal arrangement of rhinaria, fore wing broad with rounded apex, Rs about same length as vein M (
Figs 53–54
), female proctiger with sparse field of hooked setae, rounded profile and weak terminal upward inflection, valvula ventralis little curved, ventral profile of female subgenital plate concave (
Fig. 87
), male proctiger conoid, aedeagus thin, elongate, paramere ovate with broadly rounded apex (
Figs 79–80
). For diagnosis from closely related species, see Comments for
M. darwinensis
sp. nov.
Etymology.
Named after
Eremophila
, the host genus.
Host-plant association and distribution
. (
Tables 2–3
).
Myotrioza eremophili
sp. nov.
is recorded from
Eremophila oppositifolia
from Credo Station, near Coolgardie, Western
Australia
and
Eremophila scoparia
(R.Br.) F.Muell. (Silver Emubush,
Scotia
Bush)
from the Gawler Ranges, South
Australia
. It is likely to occupy a broad distribution given that it occurs on multiple hosts that are widely distributed in southern
Australia
. It is one of 11 species of
Myotrioza
gen. nov.
and 17 species of
Triozidae
recorded for Western
Australia
and one of 10 species of
Myotrioza
gen. nov.
and 24 species of
Triozidae
recorded for South
Australia
. It is one of 4 species of
Myotrioza
, namely
M. darwinensis
sp. nov.
,
M. eremophili
sp. nov.
,
M. oppositifoliae
sp. nov.
and
M. scopariae
sp. nov.
from
E. oppositifolia
; and one of 3, namely
M. eremophili
sp. nov.
,
M. gawlerensis
sp. nov.
and
M. scopariae
sp. nov.
from
E. scoparia
. For distribution of
M. oppositifolia
, refer to
M. darwinensis
sp. nov.
Eremophila scoparia
is a broom-like shrub to
3 m
high with upright branches. It occurs in dryland mallee communities on sandy red earths in inland WA, SA, NSW, Vic (
Chinnock 2014
).