The oldest fossil of the family Issidae (Hemiptera, Fulgoromorpha) from the Paleocene of Menat (France)
Author
Bourgoin, Thierry
Author
Wang, Menglin
Author
Nel, André
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2020
2020-01-22
596
1
8
journal article
24115
10.5852/ejt.2020.596
bb0a8a5e-6a00-4b09-90e7-e7fc2c73bb2c
3659729
28C76456-50AA-4DD7-A143-052433A51DD2
Genus
Cubicostissus
Bourgoin & Nel
gen. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
3F1F9C1A-4698-4BFA-9541-2CFC3E5EECCB
Type
species
Cubicostissus palaeocaeni
sp. nov.
, designated here by monotypy.
Diagnosis
Cubicostissus
gen. nov.
separates from other Hysteropterini genera by their forewing more than 2.5 as long as wide, wider before mid-length, with anterior margin slightly and regularly convex and posterior margin slightly concave at the end of the clavus. The postcostal cell forms a narrow band, slightly narrower than the radial cell band, and as wide as C1 cell. ScP+RA and RP fork late with ScP+R more than 2.5 times as long as basal cell. MP forks in C3 at the same level of Pcu and A1 fusion and CuA remains single up to the apical level of the clavus, then forks in an open C5. CuP is almost straight, connected by transverse veins to CuA. Pcu and A1 are connected in the last quarter of the clavus.
Etymology
Arbitrary combination referring to the forewing CuA vein (
cubito costa
) single and the generic name
Issus
.
Note
Previously placed in
Issinae
sec.
Wang
et al.
(2016)
, Hysteropterini were recently regarded deserving a subfamily rank (
Zhao
et al.
2019
). They differ from
Issinae
Issini
by their late forking of CuA after the end of the clavus while CuA forks well before in
Issini
genera. By its venation schema,
Cubicostissus
gen. nov.
tegmen approaches species of
Tshurtshurnella
Kusnezov, 1927
, but it appears more elongated: 2.6 times as long as wide (× 2 or less in
Tshurtshurnella
) and with a late fusion of Pcu and A
1 in
the last quarter of the clavus (earlier in
Tshurtshurnella
). From
Hysteropterum
Amyot & Audinet-Serville, 1843
, it differs by the elongated tegmen, the absence of identified apical cells, the presence of some transverse veins between CuA and CuP and, at mid-length, the costal area almost as wide as C1 and the open radial cell. Its simpler venation also easily separates this new taxon from all the other issid fossils currently known.