An annotated and illustrated Type Catalogue of the predacious Shieldbugs (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Pentatomidae: Asopinae) in the Collection of the Natural History Museum, London
Author
Roell, Talita
Author
Lemaître, Valérie A.
0000-0003-4802-2711
v.lemaitre@nhm.ac.uk
Author
Webb, Michael D.
0000-0002-1312-6142
m.webb@nhm.ac.uk
Author
Campos, Luiz A.
0000-0001-5414-8746
luiz.campos@ufrgs.br
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-02-03
5232
1
1
105
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5232.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5232.1.1
1175-5326
7609794
E7B67882-2148-49C5-9F09-D5CAA95A21D1
conspersus
(
Platynopus
)
Walker 1867a: 123–124
. [
Figs. 41–42
]
Original data
: “
a, b.
Orizaba. From M. Sallé’s
collection.” [
two syntypes
]
LECTOTYPE
♁ (designated by
Thomas 1992: 58
): purple-margined
lectotype
disc; green-margined type disc; “3.
PLATYNOPUS CONSPERSUS
.”; “NHMUK 010592398”. Fifth left antennomere, fourth and fifth right antennomeres, right middle leg, and left posterior leg missing (
Fig. 41
).
PARALECTOTYPE
sex unknown: blue-margined
paralectotype
disc; “Mex / 56.143”; “
Oplomus conspersus
Walker’s catal.”; “NHMUK 010592400”. Right antenna, third to fifth left antennomeres, middle and posterior legs, and the abdomen missing (preventing the sex determination) (
Fig. 42
).
Current status
:
Oplomus mutabilis
Stål, 1862
(
Platynopus conspersus
Walker, 1867
was synonymised to
Oplomus
(
Stictocnemus
)
proteus
Stål, 1862
by
Stål 1870: 30
[see also
Distant 1880: 32
,
1900a: 63
;
Schouteden 1907: 36
]; the latter species was synonymised to
Oplomus mutabilis
Stål, 1862
by
Thomas 1992: 58
).
Notes
:
Walker (1867a: 124)
had noted: “The spines of the thorax in this species are hardly apparent, and thus it resembles
Oplomus
.” Indeed, the species was later synonymised to species of
Oplomus
.
Thomas (1992: 58)
stated: “The type of
Platynopus conspersus
, a female, was located in the British Museum (Natural History). It is labeled: (a) “Type,” (b) “
Platynopus conspersus
.””
Walker (1867a: 124)
had described: “Abdomen blackish blue, except at the tip; under side with a large quadrate spot of whitish tomentum on each side of the hinder disk, which is wholly black”. The “whitish tomentum” mentioned by him is a bristle set which occurs only in males of some species of
Asopinae
(glandular patches). Therefore, we assume that Thomas made a mistake when copying the sex of this specimen from his notes. Even so, as he detailed the labels and called the specimen “the type”, we consider he has “unambiguously selected [this] particular
syntype
to act as the unique name-bearing type of the taxon” (
ICZN 1999
, Art. 74.5).