Revision, Phylogenetic, Biogeographic, And Host Analyses Of The Endemic Western North American Phymatopsallus Group, With The Description Of 9 New Genera And 15 New Species (Insecta: Hemiptera: Miridae: Phylinae)
Author
Schuh, Randall T.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2006
2006-12-08
2006
301
1
115
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0090%282006%29301%5B1%3ARPBAHA%5D2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090(2006)301[1:RPBAHA]2.0.CO;2
0003-0090
KEY TO MALES OF
PHYMATOPSALLUS
Medial vesical spine very long, approximately one-third the length of vesica (figs. 33, 34)................... 2 Medial vesical spine much shorter, at most one-fourth the length of vesica (figs. 30– 32) .......................... 3
2. Medial vesical spine inserted relatively close to secondary gonopore, distance equal to less that half the length of spine; vesica not twisted on apical two-fifths, portion apical of secondary gonopore straight in lateral view (fig. 34)......................
tuberculatus
(Van Duzee)
– Medial vesical spine inserted farther from secondary gonopore, distance equal to more than half the length of spine; vesica twisted on apical two-fifths, portion apical of secondary gonopore weakly curving in lateral view (fig. 33)....
rinconae
Knight
3. Small species, total length 2.17 or les table 1); eyes small (fig. 3)..............................
acaciae
Knight
– Larger species, total length always greater than 2.36 (table 1); eyes larger (fig. 3)... 4
4. Medial vesical spine very short, removed from secondary gonopore by distance about equal to length of spine (fig. 31)...................
dubiosus
(Van Duzee)
– Medial vesical spine somewhat longer, removed from secondary gonopore by distance slightly less than length of spine (fig. 32)...........
patagoniae
Knight