Revision of Ascra with proposition of the bifida species group and description of two new species (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae: Edessinae)
Author
Santos, Bianca Tamires Silva Dos
Author
Silva, Valeria Juliete Da
Author
Fernandes, Jose Antonio Marin
text
Zootaxa
2015
4034
3
445
470
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4034.3.2
8d4ae7bf-0427-4539-8dfb-6ca52d647b73
1175-5326
240340
0A762FED-A91A-4589-8991-BD629EDF1CE5
Ascra
Say, 1832
new status
Pentatoma (Ascra)
Say, 1832
: 7
, 1891: 303
Edessa
;
Stål, 1872
: 49
;
Berg, 1879
: 60
;
Lethierry & Severin, 1893
: 188
;
Edessa (Ascra)
Kirkaldy, 1909
: 153
;
Banks, 1910
: 84
;
Barber, 1939
: 301
.
Type
species:
Pentatoma (Ascra) bifida
Say, 1832
(
holotype
by monotypy).
Diagnosis
. Medium sized specimens (
10−15mm
). Body oval (
Figs. 52−65
). Dorsally darker than ventrally–green to greenish brown dorsally (
Figs. 52−58
), and pale yellow to brown or reddish ventrally (
Fig. 59−65
). Body densely punctate with large dark punctures on pronotum and scutellum. First labial segment longer than bucculae. Pronotum conspicuously gibbous; anterolateral margin impressed, straight to gently convex, and yellow or red; humeral angles not developed, concolorous with pronotal disk, and rounded (
Figs. 52−58
). Arms of metasternal process short, not reaching middle of mesosternum. Posterior angle of abdominal segment VII barely projected. Legs and antennae monochromatic. Pygophore densely punctate at least on distal half of the ventral surface. Female internal genitalia with
capsula seminalis
armed with three short digitiform projections (
Figs. 11
,
19
).
Head. Dorsally greenish brown. Margin sinuous. Clypeous and cephalic disk level or slightly above the level of mandibular plates. Antennae in some species punctate or maculate.
Thorax. Dorsal surface with large brown and/or black punctures. Anterolateral angle acute. Anterolateral margin not punctate. Humeral angle rounded (
Figs. 52−58
) or slightly acute. Embolium with punctures darker, deeper and larger than those in the corial disk. Evaporatorium dull. Peritreme yellow and flageliform. Tarsus claws with black apices.
Abdomen. Dorsal surface brown to dark brown. Connexival segments densely punctate. Spiracles rounded and partially surrounded by a yellow callus.
Female genitalia. Gonocoxites 8 convex, punctate, and posterior margin somewhat rounded. Laterotergites 8 slightly convex; apices surpassing lateral angles of abdominal segment VII and apex of laterotergites 8. Gonocoxites 9 convex and trapezoidal. Laterotergites 9 excavated basally; apices passing segment VII (
Figs. 4
,
12
,
20
,
34
,
41
,
48
). Thickening of vaginal intima elongate and narrow (
Figs. 3
,
11
,
19
,
33
). Anterior annular flanges translucid and convergent.
Pars intermedialis
subcylindrical to globose (
Figs. 3
,
11
,
19
,
33
).
Capsula seminalis
globose with two or three short digitiform projections not surpassing posterior annular flanges (
Figs. 3
,
11
,
19
,
33
).
Male genitalia. Pygophore. Rectangular (
Figs. 5
,
13
,
21
,
42
,
49
) or trapezoidal (
Fig. 35
) and yellow to dark brown. Dorsal rim brown to dark brown and usually punctate. Posterolateral angles rounded and punctate. Superior process of genital cup absent (just in some species of
privata
group) or small, narrow, black, slightly curved, and tumid. Lateral face of proctiger with a tuft of setae on an excavated area. Pygophore densely punctate on distal half or 2/3 of ventral surface.
Comments
.
Ascra
can be identified by a combination of characters that may be primitive within
Edessinae
, such as dense and large punctures on the thorax and abdomen, and humeral angles rounded not developed. Most of these characteristics are shared with subgenus
Aceratodes
; both taxa share very short arms of the anterior bifurcation of the metasternal process and short antennae (compared with body length). But
Ascra
has the pronotal disk tumid instead of level; ventral surface of the pygophore densely punctate (usually in other species of
Edessa
punctures are distributed in a Y or V pattern even when densely distributed); and females with short digitiform projections of the
capsula seminalis
not surpassing posterior annular flanges (usually in other edessines these projections surpass annular flanges). Another characteristic, shared by
Ascra
and
Aceratodes
is both genera inhabit mainly open environs, natural or human-altered areas. However,
Ascra
is almost completely restricted to Central
America
whereas
Aceratodes
is distributed in South
America
with only a few species crossing the Panamanian Isthmus.
Stål (1872)
included in group
Ascra
the species
Edessa punctiventris
and
E. mexicana
, but neither species belong in
Ascra
and are not considered here. Both are related to the
pudibunda
species group of
Edessa
.
Ascra
is clearly divisible into two groups of species based on morphological characteristics (basically related with punctuation of body and pygophore). The
bifida
species group is composed of
A. abdita
(Distant, 1890)
, A.
bifida
(
Say, 1832
)
,
A. championi
(Distant, 1881)
,
A. cordifera
(
Walker, 1868
)
,
A. petersii
(Distant, 1881)
,
A. flavoscutellata
Santos & Fernandes
n. sp.
and
A. vluteum
Santos & Fernandes
n. sp.
The
privata
species group (manuscript in preparation) is composed by
A. conspersa
(
Stål, 1872
)
,
A. morbosa
(Breddin, 1907)
, instead and
A. privata
(
Walker, 1868
)
and four new species. Herein we discuss only the
bifida
species
group. A key including all species from both groups will be presented in
privata
group description.