Review of the leafhopper genus Anufrievia Dworakowska (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Typhlocybinae: Erythroneurini)
Author
Cao, Yanghui
Author
Yang, Meixia
Author
Lin, Shuanghu
Author
Zhang, Yalin
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-07-17
4446
2
203
232
journal article
29348
10.11646/zootaxa.4446.2.2
afb880b8-a3a6-4ade-8dcf-ac47bbd00bb5
1175-5326
1444098
D7065DA2-6A27-4EA4-AA04-4E1DC748D90B
3.
Anufrievia arcuata
Yang & Zhang
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 2
)
Body orange yellowish. Transition area from vertex to face orange at central part. Eyes and basal triangles of mesonotum blackish. Pronotum with whitish dumbbell-shaped streak near middle anterior margin. Fore wing beige.
Male genitalia:
Pygofer with about 4 macrosetae at cephalo-ventral angle of lobe (
Fig. 2a
), apex of dorsal appendage not bifurcated, base broad, tapering to apex (
Fig. 2b
). Style with apical tooth shorter than subapical tooth (
Fig. 2c
). Aedeagal shaft broad in lateral view, almost straight, apical processes symmetric, hooked in ventral view; preatrial process developed, slightly sinuated, apex reaching gonopore; gonopore subapical (
Figs 2e, f
).
FIGURE 1.
Anufrievia adaucta
Cao & Zhang
sp. nov.
a. abdominal apodemes; b. pygofer side; c. pygofer dorsal appendage of holotype; d. pygofer dorsal appendage of paratype; e. subgenital plate, style and connective, dorsal view; f. subgenital plate, ventral view; g. style, lateral view; h. connective; i. aedeagus of holotype, ventral view; j. aedeagus of paratype, ventral view; k. aedeagus, lateral view.
Measurement:
Male
2.50mm
, female
2.55mm
.
Material examined:
Holotype
:
♂
[
NWAFU
],
CHINA
:
Yunnan
Prov.,
Menglong
,
24.xii.1999
, coll.
Qin Daozheng
.
Paratypes
:
1♀
[
NWAFU
], same data as holotype
;
1♂
[
NWAFU
],
CHINA
,
Yunnan
Prov.,
Mengyuan
,
Sancha River
,
950m
,
20.xii.1999
, coll.
I. Dworakowska.
Remarks:
This new species is similar to
A. cervena
Dworakowska
, but can be distinguished by bifurcated apex of style, straight pygofer dorsal appendage, and the shortened part of aedeagus from gonopore to apex.
Etymology:
The specific epithet is derived from the Latin word “
arcuatus
”, referring to the hooked apical processes of aedeagal shaft.