Revision Of New World Plagiognathus Fieber, With Comments On The Palearctic Fauna And The Description Of A New Genus (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae)
Author
SCHUH, RANDALL T.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2001
2001-11-08
2001
266
1
267
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0090%282001%29266%3C0001%3ARONWPF%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090(2001)266<0001:RONWPF>2.0.CO;2
0003-0090
5381844
Tuxedo
,
new genus
Figure 40
TYPE
SPECIES:
Chlamydatus bicinctus
Van Duzee, 1914
.
DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by the mostly castaneous background coloration of the dorsum with one or two large white maculae on the hemelytra. Sexual dimorphism moderate to very pronounced, male with long to very long hemelytra, parallelsided; females ovate. Antennal segment 2 sexually dimorphic, cylindrical and slightly enlarged in males, more slender and tapered toward base in females. Male genitalia (fig. 40) with vesica more or less Jshaped, very weakly twisted; secondary gonopore very close to apex, with an adjacent sclerotized rod. Most similar in coloration, sexual dimorphism (including antennae), and structure of male genitalia to
Coniferocoris
Schwartz and Schuh. Distinguished
by the polished and shining dorsum, the strongly contrasting black and white coloration in at least the males of most species, and the fact that
Coniferocoris
spp.
are restricted to members of the
Pinaceae
whereas
Tuxedo
spp.
all feed on angiosperms.
DESCRIPTION:
Male
: Macropterous, of small to moderate size, delicate, elongate, nearly parallelsided. COLORATION: Dorsum reddish or castaneous, with distinctive contrasting white or creamcolored maculae on coriumclavus and cuneus or less frequently only on cuneus. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsal body surface polished and shining, impunctate. Dorsal vestiture of recumbent simple, often shining, setae. STRUCTURE: Head short, barely protruding beyond anterior margin of eyes, only slightly projecting below ventral margin of eyes; antennal segment 2 cylindrical, not tapered, about the same diameter as antennal segment 1; labium reaching to about apex of hind coxae; abdomen slender, genital capsule relatively small. GENITALIA (fig. 40): Vesica more or less Jshaped, very weakly twisted; secondary gonopore very close to apex, with an adjacent sclerotized rod; phallotheca with apical portion elongate and slender, at nearly right angle to body of structure; left paramere boatshaped; right paramere lanceolate.
Female
: Ovate, body form more compact than in male; submacropterous, hemelytra just covering abdomen; coloration similar to male, but sometimes showing dimorphism; surface and vestiture as in male; antennal segment 2 sexually dimorphic, more slender and strongly tapered toward base in female than in male.
ETYMOLOGY: Named for the distinctive black and white color pattern found in most species. From American English.
DISCUSSION: The species listed below appear to form a monophyletic group whose distribution is restricted to far western North America, ranging from Oregon south to northern
Baja California
,
Mexico
, and east as far as the Wasatch Range in Utah and eastern Arizona. All appear to feed on woody perennials, including species of
Ceanothus
,
Cercocarpus
,
Quercus
,
and others.
In the present treatment I have made no attempt to determine issues of synonymy among the described nominal species, but establish only that they might be treated as congeneric. Material I have examined suggests that there are at least 12 species assignable to
Tuxedo
; more detailed study may increase that number.
The structure of the genitalia appears to be quite constant across species. The overall size and
type
of coloration are similar to species placed in the genus
Sejanus
Distant
, from the IndoWest Pacific (see Schuh, 1984) and might also be compared to species of
Psallovius
Henry
from North America. The form of the male genitalia and the
type
of sexual dimorphism is most similar to that of species placed in
Coniferocoris
Schwartz and Schuh.
The shining dorsum, the bold black and white coloration in the males of most species, and the habit of feeding on angiosperms (rather than
Pinaceae
) in most species of distinguish
Tuxedo
spp.
from those of
Coniferocoris
,
however.