A review of the Neotropical sharpshooter genus Onega Distant, 1908 (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Cicadellini)
Author
Takiya, Daniela Maeda
Author
Cavichioli, Rodney Ramiro
text
Zootaxa
2004
718
1
19
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.158154
d533e2f6-2b20-45b6-8047-e48e8cdf6af5
11755326
158154
A844C3C1-2938-4E4F-A818-19FE80E3E967
Key to species of
Onega
1) Forewings without supernumerary crossveins ............................................................. 2
1’) Forewings with supernumerary crossveins on corium and clavus ............................... 3
2) Crownfrons transition with carina only on median portion, not continuous with carina on antennal ledges; forewings light brown maculate with translucent white (
Fig. 1
D); male pygofer with posterior margin forming a lobe bearing short stout macrosetae (
Fig. 2
A); subgenital plates much shorter than pygofer (
Fig. 2
A); aedeagus with single apical process (
Fig. 2
D); female unknown......................................
O. freytagi
sp. nov.
2’) Crownfrons transition with carina complete, continuous with carina on antennal ledges; forewings translucent yellow with few small lighter yellow spots at base (
Fig. 1
B); male pygofer without setigerous lobe (
Young 1977: Fig. 232c
); subgenital plates extending posteriorly beyond pygofer apex (
Young 1977: Fig. 232c
); aedeagus with pair of apical processes (
Young 1977
: Figs 232f, p); female sternite VII with very elongate lateral margins (
Cavichioli & Wyler 1992:
Fig. 4
)..........
O. bracteata
Young
3) Forewings mostly dark with large unpigmented oblique area on basal half of clavus (usually covered with brochosomes) (
Figs 1
F, G) ...................................................... 4
3’) Forewings variably colored, but without large unpigmented area on basal half of clavus (
Figs 1
A, C, E, H) .................................................................................................. 5
4) Females smaller, 12.3–13.3 mm; forewings dark brown to black (
Fig. 1
F); male pygofer with apical margin serrate (
Fig. 4
A); aedeagus with dorsal robust elongate process extending from base posteriorly beyond apex of shaft (
Fig. 4
D); female sternite VII with posterior margin broadly round and without median projection (
Fig. 4
G); female pygofer with macrosetae along most of posteroventral margin (
Fig.
4
I) ........... ..........................................................................................................
O. orphne
sp. nov.
4’) Females larger, approximately 14.9 mm; forewings dark red (
Fig. 1
G); male unknown; female sternite VII with small median projection on posterior margin (
Fig. 5
A); female pygofer with few macrosetae restricted to dorsal anteapical region (
Fig. 5
C) ...
...............................................................................................
O. sanguinicollis
Latreille
5) Forewings with costal margin bordered with red and clavus never red (
Figs 1
C, E); males with paraphysis present as median sclerite (
Fig. 3
D,
Young 1977
: Fig. 233f); female sternite VII abruptly narrowed on apical portion (
Fig. 3
E,
Young 1977
: Fig. 233i) ....................................................................................................................................... 6
5’) Forewings with costal margin usually not bordered with red (
Figs 1
A, H), if costal margin is red then clavus is red; males without paraphysis (
Young 1977
: Figs 234f, 235f, 236f); female sternite not abruptly narrowed distally (female of
O. stella
unknown) (
Young 1977
: Figs 234i, 235i) .................................................................... 7
6) Forewings with small translucent white speckles (
Fig. 1
F); male pygofer with apex broadly round (
Fig. 3
A); aedeagus without dorsal elongate process (
Fig. 3
D) .............
..........................................................................................................
O. krameri
sp. nov.
6’) Forewings without speckles (
Fig. 1
C); male pygofer with apex modified into a narrow
lobe extending posterodorsally (
Young 1977: Fig. 233c
); aedeagus with dorsal elongate process arising near base, extending posteriorly almost to apex of median ventral process (
Young 1977: Fig. 233f
)...........................................................
O. fassli
Young
7) Male pygofer produced apically into an acute process (
Young 1977
: Figs 235c, p, 236c); styles with apex broadened and footshaped (
Young 1977
: Figs 235e, 236e)... 8
7’) Male pygofer with apex broadly round (
Young 1977: Fig. 234c
); styles with apex round, not footshaped (
Young 1977: Fig. 234e
)
.............................
O. stipata
(Walker)
8) Forewings with broad black subcostal stripe extending from near base to just beyond middle (
Fig. 1
A); claval crossveins limited posteriorly and laterally by outer claval vein
..............................................................................................................
O. avella
Distant
8’) Forewings without black subcostal stripe; claval crossveins occurring more extensively
...............................................................................................................
O. stella
Distant