A new genus Austrimonus for Eutettix melaleucae Kirkaldy (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Deltocephalinae: Opsiini) and nine new species
Author
Fletcher, Murray J.
Author
Dai, Wu
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-02-27
4387
2
310
330
journal article
30638
10.11646/zootaxa.4387.2.4
97b3cd0d-2b88-4a38-bf97-ced69cbff4b4
1175-5326
1187464
475FA4BE-EF7E-45CB-B34D-834C33859AD1
Austrimonus flagellatus
sp.nov.
zoobank.org:act:9FD5C33C-17BD-4AB5-AB8A-B99E1DA1D5E1 (Figs 11–12, 26)
Types
.
Holotype
, male,
Mt Spec
,
Qld
,
5–7.i.1965
,
J.G. Brooks
, ASCTHE009021 (
ANIC
)
.
Paratypes
.
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
.
3 males
(one missing head, one with head mounted separately),
Mt Lamington district
,
Northern
Division,
Papua
,
2.vii.1927
,
C.T. McNamara
(AM).
Description.
Head and scutellum (Fig. 12) pale yellow testaceous with indistinct pale brown mottling, slightly darker at apex of head. Pronotum with transverse brown ripples sometimes interrupted medially with thin pale longitudinal stripe and laterally with elongate pale marking on each side. Tegmen (Fig. 11) pale translucent testaceous with brown veins and brown speckling in cells, becoming smoky brown at apex and bearing irregular brown spot at apex of costal cell.
Genitalia. Male: Subgenital plates (
Fig. 26B
) narrow triangular tapering imperceptibly into apical process. Parameres (
Fig. 26D
) with preapical lobe poorly developed; apical lobe extended posteriorly then abruptly curved at 90o to finely acute apex. Connective (
Fig. 26E
) elongate with stem much longer than arms. Aedeagus shafts, in posterior view (
Fig. 26C
) divergent from base, obscured by long basal processes fused to posterior margin of shafts to near apex then extending to about twice length of shaft, apically recurved and finely acuminate; in lateral view (
Fig. 26F
), shafts evenly curved from base to acute apex, relatively short, apically acute with gonopore subapical on anterior surface, surpassed by posterior processes extending to level with anal segment and recurved strongly anteriorly. Basal apodeme (
Fig. 26F
) simple, tapering, of moderate length. Female: unknown.
Etymology.
The specific name refers to the whip-like basal processes of the aedeagus.
Comments.
This species differs from other species in the genus by having aedeagal shafts surmounted by elongate basal processes which extend beyond the apices of the shafts.