New records of Reduviidae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) from Colombia and other Neotropical countries
Author
Forero, Dimitri
text
Zootaxa
2006
1107
1
47
journal article
50829
10.5281/zenodo.171458
06ab81eb-f8e8-4b77-ad90-758c5ff37337
11755326
171458
Amauroclopius ornatus
Distant, 1903
Amauroclopius
Stål, 1868
, has two described species,
A. ornatus
and
A. bispinus
Stål, 1868
(
Maldonado 1990
)
. The genus is recognized by having the anterior femora somewhat thicker and longer than the medium and posterior ones, with the anterior tarsi extremely reduced, and first antennal segment thin (
Stål 1872
;
Wygodzinsky 1947b
).
Amauroclopius
is very close to
Beharus
and
Ponerobia
, but can be separated from them by the shape of the median process of the pygophore, which is bifurcated in the former, while in the other two it is truncated (
Wygodzinsky 1947b
;
Gutiérrez 1999
).
Wygodzinsky (1947b)
illustrated the dorsal aspect of the adult and nymph, and the head and male genitalia of this species.
Costa Lima
et al
. (1948)
referred to one female of
A. ornatus
from
Colombia
, also from the MEFLG collection, but without giving any specific locality data. Here, a different female from the same collection was examined. This specimen was found associated with
Beharus cylindripes
and
Ponerobia bipustulata
(see below) on the same tree, a “cativo” (
Prioria copaifera
[Leguminosae /
Caesalpinioideae
]).
Bérenger and PluotSigwalt (1997)
demonstrated that
B. cylindripes
,
P. bipustulata
,
and
Manicocoris rufipes
have strong associations with at least two species of
Caesalpiniaceae
[=
Caesalpinioideae
sensu
Mabberley (2002)
] found in
French Guiana
.
Wygodzinsky (1947b)
stated that
A. ornatus
was found feeding on a bee. Since the resins of
Prioria
are used by euglossine bees for their nest constructions (
Mabberley 2002
), this observation on
A. ornatus
is further evidence for the assumption that euglossine bees constitute the prey of this assassin bug. Furthermore, other
Apiomerini
also exhibit this kind of ‘beekilling’ behavior using plant resins (
Adis 1984
;
Johnson 1986
; Maldonado
et al
. 1993).
A. ornatus
is known from
Brazil
(Mato Grosso and Minas Gerais),
Colombia
,
French Guiana
and
Nicaragua
(
Wygodzinsky 1947b
;
Costa Lima
et al.
1948
;
Bérenger 1995
;
Bérenger and PluotSigwalt 1997
; GilSantana
et al
. 2003). This is the first time that an exact locality is known from
Colombia
for this genus.
Material examined:
COLOMBIA
,
1Ψ,
Antioquia,
Turbo (en cativo) [
8º06'N
76º43'W
],
2 m
,
II1965
, R. Vélez [
MEFLG
].