Phylogeny and classification of jumping plant lice of the subfamily Liviinae (Hemiptera: Psylloidea: Liviidae) based on molecular and morphological data
Author
Aléné Geonho Cho, Daniel Burckhardt Liliya Š. Serbina Igor Malenovský Dalva L. Queiroz Désirée C.
Author
Percy, Diana M.
Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Boulevard, Vancouver V 6 T 1 Z 4, Canada
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2024
2023-10-09
201
2
387
421
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad128
journal article
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad128
0024-4082
13219879
35B2566-E5C4-4C18-BCDC-550464F33B1E
Melanastera
Serbina, Malenovský, Queiroz and Burckhardt
gen.nov.
Zoobank registration:
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
4201F6CF- FBF3-4BBD-BA1E-B9EBF39F9137
.
Type
species:
Diclidophlebia lucens
Burckhardt
et al
., 2005
, by present designation.
Diagnosis:
Adult. Head in lateral view, deflexed 45–80° from longitudinal axis of body (
Fig. 1J
); in dorsal view, slightly narrower than thorax, moderately transverse. Vertex rhomboidal; covered in imbricate microsculpture; passing smoothly into genae anteriorly; coronal suture fully developed; genae weakly produced ventrally but not enlarged into processes (
Fig. 2C
); frons widely trapezoidal; median ocellus visible or hidden in perpendicular view to vertex; compound eyes, in dorsal view, hemispherical, adpressed to head. Clypeus pear-shaped, medium- to large-sized, flattened ventrally, hardly visible in lateral view as it is hidden by genae. Antenna 10 segments, slightly to distinctly longer than head width; flagellum with simple setae; segment 3 longest, longer than segment 4 and shorter than segments 4–6 together; segments 4, 6, 8, and 9 bearing each a subapical rhinarium usually surrounded by a wreath of spines (partly lacking in
Melanastera
Venezuela
). Thorax moderately slender; dorsal outline in lateral view, weakly curved. Pronotum, in dorsal view, weakly curved posteriad laterally; propleurites narrowly subrectangular, divided by perpendicular suture into larger epimeron and smaller episternum. Metapostnotum (
Fig. 4C
) with laterally compressed tooth. Mesosternum narrower than head, forming transverse band more than three times as wide as long laterally; anterior margin weakly concave with median hump; pleurosternal suture well visible; basisternum triangular; katepisternum large antero-laterally, not bent dorsad laterally; angle between arms of precoxale obtuse. Pro- and mesotibiae cylindrical. Metacoxa with blunt or subacute horn-shaped meracanthus. Metafemur with the three ventral sense organs in medial position (
Fig. 6M
); apex with a group of stout long setae. Metatibia longer than metafemur, slightly widened apically; bearing 4–11 grouped apical sclerotized spurs separated by one to seven unsclerotized bristle-like setae anteriorly or antero-laterally (rarely lacking), without posterior peg-like or thorn-like setae (
Fig. 7J, K
). Both metatarsal segments relatively short, subequal in length. Forewing oval or oblong-oval, widest in the middle or in apical third; 1.9–2.7 times as long as wide, membranous; vein C + Sc weakly or strongly convex, slender, distinctly delimited from cell; costal break developed, close to apex of vein R
1
; pterostigma narrow to wide, entirely membranous (
Fig. 8C
); nodal line developed; vein R as long as or shorter than M + Cu; vein Rs weakly or strongly convex relative to costal margin; vein M longer than M
1 + 2
; vein Cu
1a
curved towards anal margin; veins M
1 + 2
and M
3 + 4
perpendicular or oblique to wing margin apically; anal break adjacent to apex of vein Cu
1b
; surface spinules (
Fig. 8G
) fine or coarse, spaced or dense, present in all cells or sometimes partially reduced. Hindwing slightly shorter than forewing; with two to four costal setae proximal to costal break and two distinct groups distal to costal break, with three to six dense setae proximally and three to five spaced setae distally; vein R + M + Cu bifurcating into R and M + Cu. Abdominal base with a sclerotized area on either side covered in spines. Aedeagus with proximal portion bearing many weak folds subapically or strongly subdivided subapically; apex of distal portion differentiated from stem (
Fig. 9I
). Female subgenital plate lacking apical process.—Last instar immature. Antenna 10-segmented; bearing sectasetae or lanceolate setae on antennal flagellum. Mid- and hindlegs without massive peg-like setae. Tarsal arolium small (
Fig. 9N
). Dorsal body surface bearing minute clavate setae. Precaudal abdominal tergites lacking densely spaced simple setae or sectasetae. Anus in terminal position; with additional pore fields developed.
Etymology:
Melanastera
is a pun using the first syllables of some host families: Mel-astomataceae, An-nonaceae, and Astera-ceae, and is a tribute to the British musician David Bowie in reference to his final studio album ‘Blackstar’ (from Ancient Greek μέλας = black and Latin aster = star).
Comments:
The monophyly of
Melanastera
is strongly supported in all molecular analyses if the single taxon,
M.
Venezuela
is excluded. With the inclusion of the latter taxon the genus is not (ML-mix,
Fig. 11
), or only weakly (ML-part; Supporting Information, File S4A) or moderately (BI; Supporting Information, File S4B) supported. In the morphological analysis, the monophyly of
Melanastera
(including
M.
Venezuela
) is supported by one synapomorphy (and five homoplasies) (
Fig. 11
). Included species, distribution, and host plants are summarized in
Table 3
and Supporting Information, File S3. The following new combinations are proposed here:
Melanastera fava
(
Brown and Hodkinson 1988: 44
)
,
comb. nov.
(from
Haplaphalara
;
Diclidophlebia
, BurckhardtandMifsud 2003: 14
);
M. heterotrichi
(
Caldwell and Martorell 1952: 605
)
,
comb. nov.
(
Paurocephala
;
Haplaphalara
,
Brown and Hodkinson 1988: 40
;
Diclidophlebia
,
Burckhardt and Mifsud 2003: 14
);
M. longitarsata
(
Brown and Hodkinson 1988: 42
)
,
comb.nov.
(
Haplaphalara
;
Diclidophlebia
,
Burckhardt and Mifsud 2003: 14
);
M. lucens
(
Burckhardt, Hanson and Madrigal 2005: 742
)
;
comb. nov.
(
Diclidophlebia
);
M. maculipennis
(
Brown and Hodkinson 1988: 47
)
,
comb. nov.
(
Haplaphalara
;
Diclidophlebia
,
Burckhardt and Mifsud 2003: 14
);
M. paucipunctata
(
Brown and Hodkinson 1988: 40
)
,
comb. nov.
(
Haplaphalara
;
Diclidophlebia
,
Burckhardt and Mifsud 2003: 14
);
M. pilosa
(Burckhardt
et al
., 2006: 384)
,
comb. nov.
(
Diclidophlebia
);
M. smithi
(Burckhardt
et al
., 2006: 242)
,
comb. nov.
(
Diclidophlebia
);
M. tuxtlaensis
(
Conconi 1972: 51
)
,
comb. nov.
(
Paurocephala
;
Haplaphalara
,
Brown and Hodkinson 1988: 40
;
Diclidophlebia
,
Burckhardt and Mifsud 2003: 14
).