A remarkable new plant bug genus and species (Hemiptera, Heteroptera, Miridae, Deraocorinae) from the Australian wet tropics
Author
Hosseini, Reza
Author
Cassis, Gerasimos
text
Zootaxa
2017
4232
1
123
130
journal article
36541
10.11646/zootaxa.4232.1.9
6037268b-0c87-43b5-94b9-a6319301b792
1175-5326
292737
21FD7F4A-9A40-41FB-98E8-4BE67B85F54E
Genus
Kalamemiris
gen. nov.
(
Figs 1–5
)
Etymology.
From the Greek ‘kalame’ in reference to the stalked eyes; noun in apposition.
Diagnosis.
Kalamemiris
is recognised by the following characters: body robust, tumid, dorsal surface strongly convex; eyes stalked, extending beyond the anterolateral angles of pronotum; female AII incrassate; scutellum in male tumid and hump shaped, female pyramid-like; pronotum and scutellum strongly punctate; R+M and clavus with row of punctures; embolium broad; cuneus strongly deflexed; metathoracic peritreme short and tongue-like; pretarsal claws weakly dentate; male parameres interlocking; left paramere larger than right, distally hook-shaped, with apex truncate; right paramere spoon-like.
Description.
(
Fig 1
) Macropterous, body elongate-ovoid, female broader than male; body mostly dark to reddish brown with yellowish highlighting. TEXTURE. Head, pronotum, scutellum and anterior part of corium densely punctate, with punctures dark brown; female punctures darker than in male. R+M and clavus with row of deep punctures. VESTITURE. Male dorsum with dense and uniform distribution of semi-erect to decumbent white hair-like setae; vestiture short and less densely distributed in females. STRUCTURE. Head strongly transverse and strongly deflexed; frons anteriorly rounded; posterior margin of vertex carinate. Eyes reniform, stalked in both sexes, stalk elongate and thickened, stalk weakly reflexed, eyes reaching well beyond anterolateral angle of pronotum, longer in female than male; extending dorsally above plane of vertex. First antennal segment shorter than interocular distance. Pronotum tumid, lateral margins strongly divergent; collar narrow; calli near obsolete; disc convex medially; posterior margin thickened, broadly rounded, more so in female, weakly excavate laterally; posterolaterally angulate in both sexes. Mesoscutum not exposed in female. Scutellum tumose, pyramid-like in female. Hemelytra with broad embolium; strongly deflexed at costal fracture; two membrane cells, minor cell minute. Legs mid size; pretarsal claws weakly dentate, setiform parempodia symmetrical. Propleuron narrow. Junction of mesobasisternum and mesepimeron with row of elongate and shallow fractures (
Figs 3
c,d). Metathoracic spiracle mostly hidden, slit-like at most (
Figs 3
a,b); evaporative area small size, ca. 1/3rd metepisternum; peritreme short, not reaching lateral margin of evaporative area (
Figs 3
e,f). Pretarsal claws weakly dentate, evenly rounded; parempodia setiform (
Fig. 4
a).
Remarks.
The genus
Kalamemiris
is described to accommodate a single species
Kalamemiris collessi
sp.nov.
The punctation and colouration of the pronotum and hemelytra is typical of many taxa belonging to the nominotypical tribe
Deraeocorini
. The efferent system of the metathoracic glands are also consistent with those of the
Deraeocorini
, possessing a short peritreme, which is positioned in the middle of the metepisternum. It also lacks an evident metathoracic spiracle, with the caveat that the male mesepimeron is separated from the metepisternum. These characters alone support its placement in the
Deraeocorini
. In contrast, to the other tribes of the
Deraeocorinae
; it lacks an impressed line extending from the anterolateral angle to the posterior margin of the pronotal calli (cf. Clivinemini), has a robust and opaque body (cf. hyaline body of Hyaliodini), is non-mimetic (cf. myrmecomorphy of Surinamellini), mostly brown in colouration (cf. aposematice colouration of Saturniomirini), and has a robust body with the first labial segment extending to the proxyphus (cf. anthocorid-like facies and short first labial segment of the
Termatophylini
).
FIGURE 1.
Habitus photographs of
Kalamemiris collessi
sp. nov.
: male and female, dorsal and lateral views; Scale=1 mm.
Kalamemiris
is unique amongst the
Deraeocorinae
that we have examined and in our reading of the literature, having remarkably stalked eyes. This genus also has somewhat rounded pretarsal claws, weakly dentate compare to the typical toothed base of the subfamily, but nonetheless has typical setiform parempodia. In comparison to other
Deraeocorini
of the paleotropics, we find no taxa that are readily comparable. The Australian
Deraeocorini
comprises 5 genera and 8 species, with all of these possessing unstalked eyes and dentate pretarsal claws, and the monotypic genera
Eurybrochis zanna
Kirkaldy and
Pseudocamptobrochis pilosus
Poppius sharing similarities with
Deraeocoris
(incl.
Cimicapsus brunneus
Poppius; see
Kerzhner & Schuh 1995
).
Ghauri (1975)
described
Termatomiris proboscidocoris
from
Araucaria
(Araucariaceae), and this species is unlike
Kalamemiris
, in having a porrect head and an abbreviated pronotum posteriorly and the apophysis of the left paramere is longer and more tapered apically; in common with
T. proboscidocoris
it does have more rounded pretarsal claws. The relationship of
Kalamemiris
with
Fingulus
Distant, 1904,
Angerianus
Distant, 1904 and
Stethoconus
Flor, 1861
requires further study, especially with the latter two genera where the eyes are prominent, but in contrast are in an anterolateral position, and are not stalked.
In the
Miridae
, stalked eyes are rare, found in species of three subfamilies, the Bryocorinae, Orthotylinae and
Phylinae
; they are known in the eccritotarsine genus
Hesperolabops
Kirkaldy, 1902
, the halticine genus
Labops
Burmeister, 1835
(see
Tatarnic & Cassis 2012
for habitus) and pilophorine genera
Lasiolabops
Poppius, 1914 and
Dilatops
Weirauch, 2006
(
Weirauch 2006
;
Cassis & Weirauch 2008
,
Schuh & Menard 2013
). In addition, the eyes of
Coridromius
Signoret, 1862
are known for their transverse head and have the eyes narrowly placed on the head, but are not stalked as in
Kalamemiris
(
Tatarnic & Cassis 2008
).