A review of the tribes of Deltocephalinae (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Cicadellidae)
Author
Zahniser, James N.
C44D6E44-FA1C-4B29-B7BB-FAF5940CD225
Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1816 S. Oak St., Champaign, IL 61820, United States of America & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: C 44 D 6 E 44 - FA 1 C- 4 B 29 - B 7 BB-FAF 5940 CD 225 & corresponding author e-mail: zahniser @ illinois. edu
Author
Dietrich, Chris H.
82FCB86C-54B4-456A-AE5E-D7847D271CB9
Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1816 S. Oak St., Champaign, IL 61820, United States of America & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 82 FCB 86 C- 54 B 4 - 456 A-AE 5 E-D 7847 D 271 CB 9
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2013
2013-05-29
45
1
211
journal article
22221
http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2013.45
a66592b8-63a8-4c2d-9471-e58ddb2c0559
2118-9773
3822710
41B10E4D-7DAB-40CA-A8FE-4ECA078E04A3
Arrugada linnavuorii
sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
24E57486-2093-4068-8054-57D22C2F59BD
Fig. 10
A-B, D-J
Diagnosis
A. linnavuorii
is similar to
A. rugosa
Osborn, 1924
and
A. affinis
(Osborn, 1924)
in the shape of the pygofer but can be distinguished from them by the medially unproduced head (produced in
A. rugosa
and
A. affinis
) and the shape of the aedeagus which, is longer, more bowed, and apex not spinose in the new species.
Etymology
This species is named in honor of Dr. Rauno E. Linnavuori, author of 5 valid tribes, 2 subtribes, 127 genera and 671 species of
Deltocephalinae
.
Type material
Holotype
♂
,
PERU
,
Pasco
,
Villa Rica
,
100 m
,
23 Nov. 1971
, R.T. &
J.C. Schuh
, coll.
AMNH
.
Paratypes
5 paratype ♂♂
: sama data as
holotype
. Two specimens have an additional label reading: Collected on mud road in forested area just east of town. Two other specimens have pink labels, one with #2885 and the other with #2990.
2 paratypes
are at
AMNH
and the remaining
paratypes
are at
INHS
.
Description
SIZE.
♂
7.5-8.0 mm.
BODY. Head wider than pronotum. Crown dark brown to black in color, sometimes yellowish in part; not produced medially; median length equal to length next to eye; texture strongly striate to rugose; depressed; sharply angled to face. Ocelli on anterior margin of head; 2-3x their diameter from adjacent eyes. Face strongly rugose. Clypellus widening apically. Antennal ledges distinct. Pronotum yellow anteriorly, dark brown to black on posterior 2/3; carinate laterally; lateral carina longer than half basal width of eye. Mesonotum yellow with pair of dark spots medially. Forewing brown; claval veins yellow; sometimes with a few extra crossveins; usually with 1 to several crossveins between A1 and claval suture. Protrochanter with stout apical seta. Profemur row AM with AM1 only; intercalary row with long fine setae; row AV with ~4 to 7 relatively long thick setae. Protibia flattened dorsally; dorsal margins angulate; macrosetae 5+1. Mesotrochanter with stout apical PV seta. Mesofemur row AV with ~4 to 6 relatively long thick setae. Metafemur apical setae 2+1+1. Metatarsomere I plantar setae irregularly arranged.
MALE. Pygofer incised dorsally to midlength; with several rows of macrosetae on posterior half; hind margin notched posterodorsally; lobate ventrally; on either side of basolateral cleft, pygofer lobes overlap, with posterior lobe articulating with dorsal extension of subgenital plate. Subgenital plates constricted medially; macrosetae uniseriate distant from lateral margin. Connective
Y
-shaped; stem as long as or longer than anterior arms; articulate with aedeagus. Style broadly bilobed basally; apophysis short, digitate. Aedeagus with base of shaft tall, turning dorsad after some length; tapering apically; gonopore subapical on ventral side. Segment X strongly sclerotized dorsally; elongate, narrow; basally with protuberant dorsal lobe.
Remarks
One specimen is especially lightly pigmented but has identical male genitalia. Also collected at the same time were three specimens of
A. rugosa
. These individuals, including the new species, were apparently mud-puddling, which has been reported before in
A. affinis
by
Rakitov
et al.
(2005)
.