identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
C87787FBF954FFAADC2C6FD8FCC0FA2D.text	C87787FBF954FFAADC2C6FD8FCC0FA2D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Panaetius Stal 1865	<div><p>Panaetius Stål</p><p>Panaetius Stål 1865: 220 (original description; type species:  Panaetius lobulatus Stål 1866 by subsequent monotypy); Stål 1876: 112 (list); Lethierry and Severin 1893: 251 (catalogue); Kirkaldy 1909: 170 (catalogue); Kumar 1974: 19, 36–37 (redescription); Cassis and Gross 2002: 372 (Australian catalogue).</p><p>Ucia Walker 1867: 407 (original description; type species:  Ucia mutilata Walker 1867 by monotypy); Stål 1876: 112 (synonymy).</p><p>Diagnosis</p><p>Panaetius is recognised by the following combination of characters: body small, less than 6 mm in length (Fig. 1); paraclypei flat and arcuate distally, meeting in front of clypeus (Figs 1,7); AI not reaching apex of head, AII(a) longer than AII(b) (Fig. 1); labium reaching beyond posterior margin of mesocoxae (Fig. 1); pronotum with pair of short shelflike anterolateral processes and pair of elongate and robust humeral horns (Figs 1,7); scutellum broad basally and rounded distally; mesosternal carina weakly developed (Fig. 1); external efferent system of MTG small, with obovate and laterally directed peritreme, not reaching lateral margin of evaporative area (Fig. 8); abdominal basal spine strongly projected, almost reaching anterior margin of prosternum (Fig. 1); parameres broad and knifelike (Figs 2b, 3b, 4b, 5d); aedeagus with pair of short membranous lateral conjunctival lobes (Figs 2c,d, 3c,d, 4c,d, 5c,d) and pair of sclerotised dorsal conjunctival processes (Figs 2c,d, 3c,d, 4c,d, 5c,d); vesica membranous (Figs 2c,d, 3c,d, 4c,d, 5c,d); pair of Pendergrast’s organs on venter of abdominal sternites VI and VII, with VII organs larger than those of VI (Fig. 9).</p><p>Redescription</p><p>Body suboval in shape, with enlarged humeral horns (Fig. 1). COLOURATION. Medium brown to dark brown, with darker brown markings (Fig. 1). Head: medium to dark brown, sometimes with dark brown stripe along lateral margins of paraclypei and anteclypeus (Fig. 1). Antennae: AI-AIV pale to dark brown, progressively darker distally. Labium: LI-LIV pale to dark brown. Pronotum: yellowish to dark brown, with dark brown markings; calli yellowish to dark brown; anterolateral processes pale brown; humeral horns reddish brown or black, sometimes one or two transverse pale brown spot(s) medially on horns (Fig. 1). Scutellum: yellowish to dark brown, with dark brown markings, sometimes with longitudinal dark brown stripe on midline; V-shaped pale brown marking at apex (Fig. 1). Thoracic pleura: pale to dark brown, sometimes uniformly dark brown; metapleuron with a large yellowish brown callous spot along lateral margin (Fig. 1). MTG: external efferent system yellowish to dark brown (Fig. 1). Hemelytra: pale to medium brown, with dark brown markings, sometimes with reddish tinge, mostly with medium brown stripe along medial fracture; membrane medium to smoky brown, sometimes with a large irregular dark brown spot near inner base of membrane, veins dark brown (Fig. 1). Legs: pale to dark brown, progressively darker distally, claw black apically, sometimes tibiae with brown bands (Fig. 1). Abdomen: connexiva pale to medium brown, with dark brown markings; venter pale brown with dark brown stripe laterally; spine pale to medium brown (Fig. 1). VESTITURE. Dorsum mostly with moderate distribution of simple, white, adpressed setae, shorter semierect on vertex of head and decumbent hairlike setae on lateral margins of pronotum; abdominal venter with sparse distribution of simple, semierect setae. Antennae: sparsely distributed decumbent hairlike setae on AI; AII(a)-AII(b) with moderate distribution of setae; AIII-AIV with dense distribution of setae. Pronotum: mostly with white decumbent setae on lateral margins and humeral horns. Legs: uniformly pale brown; setae on femora rare; tibiae and tarsi with spinelike setae and apex of tarsi with a few hairlike setae. Abdomen: with moderate distribution of semierect setae. STRUCTURE. Head: paraclypei contiguous, arcuate (Figs 1,7). Eyes: semioval in frontal view, with medial margin straight, oval in lateral view (Fig. 7). Antennae: AI shortest, not surpassing anterior margin of head; AII(a) about as 1.5–2.0× long as AI. AIII-AIV slightly wider than other segments (Figs 1,7). Labium: reaching mesocoxae (Fig. 1); LI slightly wider than LII and LIII; LI shorter than ventral side of head; LII about as 2.0× long as LI; LIII slightly shorter than LII, LIV about 1.5× shorter than LII. Pronotum: anterolateral processes short and shelflike (Fig. 7); pronounced humeral horns, elevated distally, apically bifid, smooth, without ridges or teeth (Fig. 1). Scutellum: flat, width slightly longer than length (Fig. 1). MTG: external efferent system peritreme flat, obovate, laterally (Fig. 8b) to posterolaterally oriented (Fig. 8a,c,d), evaporative areas not extensively distributed on metepisternum, not extending to apex of peritreme (Fig. 8), usually without evaporative bodies on mesepimeron (Fig. 8a,c,d), rarely so (Fig. 8b). Legs: hind femora slightly broader and longer than mesofemora; tarsi narrow, tarsal segment I short, segment II ca. 1.5–2.0× longer than segment I. Abdomen: posterior angles of connexival segments short; abdominal spine of sternite III reaching between anterior margins of procoxae and propleuron (Fig. 1); pair of Pendergrast’s organs on venter of abdominal sternites VI and VII, with VII organs larger than those of VI (Fig. 9). Male genitalia: pygophore transverse, and wing-shaped, with genital opening broad, with two small black processes and setose patches on ventral rim (Figs 2a, 3a, 4a, 5a); parameres knifelike, with short stem, with crown moderately broad to greatly broad, mostly with black impressed line and hairlike setae medially (Figs 2b, 3b, 4b, 5b); aedeagus with phallotheca short and sclerotised; endosoma divided into a pair of sclerotised dorsal processes, with pair of lateral conjunctival lobes, rarely with pair of more distal central conjunctival lobes, vesica membranous (Figs 2c,d, 3c,d, 4c,d, 5c,d). Female genitalia: first gonocoxites large, posterior margin almost straight; sclerotised rings thin, contiguous medially, weakly sclerotised; vaginal intima weakly expanded; spermatheca moderate size to elongate, with capsula seminalis of moderate size, obovate, recurved (Fig. 6).</p><p>Distribution</p><p>Panaetius is endemic to Australia, and most species are found in the coastal regions of eastern Australia. All four species are broadly distributed and each is known from Queensland and New South Wales, with  P. lobulatus also known from Victoria and Tasmania (Fig. 11).</p><p>Remarks</p><p>Kumar (1974) reported that  Panaetius is similar to  Monteithiessa but can be readily distinguished from it by the first antennal segment not extending beyond the paraclypei and the paraclypei not extending beyond the apex of the clypeus. In comparison, AI reaches beyond the paraclypei and the paraclypei are contiguous anteriad to the clypeus in  Monteithiessa .  Panaetius also differs from species of the  Blaudusini genera  Andriscus,  Duadicus,  Hiarchas and  Stauralia by the pronotum having two pairs of processes, with the anterolateral pair developed. In the other four genera, the pronotum has the anterolateral pair of processes absent or minute.</p><p>In all species of  Panaetius, the parameres are broad and knife-shaped, the aedeagus has a pair of elongate dorsal sclerotised conjunctival processes (e.g. Fig. 2d), a pair of short lateral membranous conjunctival appendages (e.g. Fig. 2d,e), and the vesica is membranous (e.g. Fig. 2d,e). In the female, the capsula seminalis is small, short and curved (Fig. 7a–d).</p><p>In  Andriscus the paramere is almost triangular, the aedeagus has two pairs of processes, and the vesica is membranous, and in the female the capsula seminalis is long, hatlike and medially recurved. In  Duadicus, the paramere is ‘L’ shaped and almost rectangular in apical view, the aedeagus has a pair of lateral conjunctival lobes, and the vesica is sclerotised and ‘C’ shaped, whereas the capsula seminalis of the female is small and oval. In  Hiarchas, the paramere is subtriangular, the aedeagus has two pairs of conjunctival lobes, the vesica is membranous, and in the female the capsula seminalis is small and oval. In  Stauralia, the paramere is almost triangular in apical view, the aedeagus has one pair of conjunctival lobes, and the vesica is short and sclerotised, and in the female the capsula seminalis is small and oval.</p><p>Key to species of  Panaetius Stål</p><p>1 Humeral horns apically undivided, smooth, devoid of ridges or teeth (Fig. 1); MTG peritreme laterally oriented, mesosternum with evaporative bodies (Fig. 8b); parameres moderately broad (Fig. 3b); aedeagus with short membranous ventral conjunctival lobes (Fig. 3c,d)...........................  P. laevicornis sp. nov.</p><p>– Humeral horns apically divided, with prominent ridges or teeth (Fig. 1, e.g.  P. eliasi); MTG peritreme posterolaterally oriented, mesosternum without evaporative bodies (e.g. Fig. 8a); parameres greatly broadened (e.g. Fig. 2b); aedeagus without ventral conjunctival lobes (e.g. Fig. 2c,d)........................2</p><p>2 Humeral horns uniformly black (Fig. 1); anterolateral processes of pronotum narrow with apices rounded (Fig. 7a); parameres apically emarginate (Fig. 2a) ....................................  P. eliasi sp. nov. – Humeral horns mostly brown and yellowish brown (Fig. 1,  P. lobulatus); parameres apically rounded (e.g. Fig. 2c).........................................................3</p><p>3 Anterolateral processes of pronotum broad (Figs 1,7c); humeral horns relatively short (Fig. 1)......................................  P. lobulatus Stål – Anterolateral processes of pronotum slender (Figs 1,7d); humeral horns greatly elongate (Fig. 1)...................................  P. trabifer Horváth</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C87787FBF954FFAADC2C6FD8FCC0FA2D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Wang, Xiao-Jing;Liu, Guo-Qing;Cassis, Gerasimos	Wang, Xiao-Jing, Liu, Guo-Qing, Cassis, Gerasimos (2015): Revision of Panaetius Stål (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Acanthosomatidae) from Australia, including the description of two new species and phylogenetic analysis. Austral Entomology 54 (4): 445-464, DOI: 10.1111/aen.12154, URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/aen.12154
C87787FBF95CFFA8DF956C32FBE1FACD.text	C87787FBF95CFFA8DF956C32FBE1FACD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Panaetius eliasi Wang & Liu & Cassis 2015	<div><p>Panaetius eliasi sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12</p><p>Zoobank registration: http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:60666B87-F52D-4915-8517-60A67AF9D2F0</p><p>Holotype: ♂, AUSTRALIA: New South Wales: <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=152.48027&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-32.39889" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 152.48027/lat -32.39889)">Smiths Lake</a>, 32°23′56″S 152°28′49″E, 6–10 IX 2010, M. Elias and C. Reid, ex Gleichaenia dicarpa (00002731) (AM)  .</p><p>Paratypes: 2♂♂ 9♀♀, same data as holotype (00002732– 00002742) (AM; UNSW);   1♂ 1♀,  Blacksmith, near golf course, 15 Mar 1981, R. Patterson (00002744–00002745) (ANIC) ;   1♀, Myall Lakes National Park, 10.3 km south of Seal Rocks Road, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=152.35&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-32.5" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 152.35/lat -32.5)">Hawks Nest Road</a>, 32°30’S 152°21’E, 20 X 1995, R. T. Schuh and G. Cassis (00002743) (AM)  .   AUSTRALIA: Queensland: 1♀, Central station,  Fraser Island, 14–15 X 1978, G. B. Monteith (00002794) (QM)  .</p><p>Diagnosis.  Panaetius eliasi is recognised by the following combination of characters: antennae brown (Fig. 1); anterolateral angles of pronotum slender, subequal in width to lateral margin of eyes (Figs 1,7a); humeral horns black, protruding, elevated upwards, apically bifid, anterior arm short, posterior arm robust, acute (Fig. 1); anterior part of scutellum dark brown, almost black (Fig. 1); membrane infuscate, veins dark brown (Fig. 1); parameres black, apically bifid with both arms rounded (Fig. 2a); aedeagus without ventral conjunctival lobes (Fig. 2c,d).</p><p>Description. Male. COLOURATION (Fig. 1). Head: dark brown, almost black, with reddish brown markings dorsally; yellowish brown or yellow stripe along medial and inferior margins of paraclypei; medial margin of eyes with yellow stripe and reddish brown markings; laterally with yellow spot along anterior margin of eyes; bucculae dark brown, with posterior angle and margin yellow. Eyes: reddish brown, with posterior margin yellowish brown. Antennae: AI yellowish brown, with apex black; AII(a)-AII(b) medium brown, AII black apically; AIII-AIV dark brown. Labium: LI-LIII medium brown, with base of LII pale brown; LIV dark brown, sometimes with greenish tinge. Pronotum: mostly medium brown, anteromedial region pale brown; anterolateral processes pale brown; two transverse dark brown stripes at medial and posterior region of pronotum, intersected by a pale brown stripe; humeral horns black. Scutellum: dark brown at base, with four yellowish brown spots along basal margin, sometimes two spots medially indistinct; V-shaped pale brown callose marking at apex. Thoracic pleura: propleuron mostly dark brown, with posterior and lateral margin yellowish brown; mesopleuron dark brown, with yellowish brown spot along lateral margin; metapleuron dark brown, with a big pale brown spot along lateral margin. MTG: external efferent system dark brown. Hemelytra: medium brown, with reddish brown markings; membrane smoky brown at base, sometimes with a large irregular dark brown spot near inner base of membrane; white at apex, transparent; veins dark brown. Legs: coxae pale brown; femora pale brown at base, medium brown apically; tibiae dark brown, with medium brown bands medially; tarsi pale brown, sometimes with reddish tinge; claw medium brown at base, black apically. Abdomen: connexiva pale brown to white, with dark brown markings; venter pale brown with dark brown stripes laterally; abdominal spine pale brown. STRUCTURE. Head: paraclypei flat, arcuate distally, contiguous (Figs 1,7). Antennae: AIII-AIV slightly wider than segments AI-AII(b); AI shortest; AII(a) about as 1.5× long as AI; AII(b) a little shorter than AII; AII(b) about as long as AIV; AIV slighter longer than AII(a). Labium: reaching mesocoxae or a little beyond; LI slightly wider than LII and LIII; LI shorter than ventral side of head; LII about 2.0× longer than LI; LIII slightly shorter than LII, LIV about 1.5× shorter than LII. Pronotum: anterolateral processes of pronotum slender, nearly reaching posterior margin of eyes (Fig. 7a); humeral horns distinctly protruding, elevated upwards, apically bifid, anterior tooth short, pointing laterally; posterior tooth sharp, more robust than anterior tooth, posteriorly oriented. Scutellum: flat, slightly wider than long. MTG: peritreme laterally oriented, mesepimeron without evaporative areas (Fig. 8a). Legs: metafemora slightly broader than mesofemora; tarsi narrow, tarsal segment I short, segment II ca. 2.0–3.0× longer than segment I. Male genitalia (Fig. 2): pygophore (Fig. 2a) and parameres heavily sclerotised; parameres broad, apically emarginate, with both branches rounded (Fig. 2b); aedeagus with a pair of basal lateral membranous conjunctival lobes and sclerotised dorsal processes, latter slender and apex sinuate; vesica narrow apically, apex weakly sclerotised (Fig. 2c,d).</p><p>Female. COLOURATION (Fig. 1). Mostly as in male, aside from following differences. Head: dorsum and anterior margin of paraclypei medium brown or almost black; small yellow spot between ocelli. Antennae: sometimes AV yellow brown. Pronotum: mostly yellowish brown. Scutellum: mostly with V-shaped yellowish brown stripe at apex. Thoracic pleura: one large or two small yellowish brown stripe(s) near lateral margin of propleuron. Legs: apex of tibiae medium brown, with reddish tinge. Abdomen: midline region of venter dark brown; abdominal spine of sternite III yellowish brown. VESTITURE. As in male. STRUCTURE. Mostly as in male, aside from following differences. Antennae: AI shortest; AII(a) about 0.5× longer than AI, and equal to AIII; AII(b) as long as AIV. Abdomen: Pendergrast’s organ (Fig. 9a). Female genitalia: see Figure 6a.</p><p>Measurements. Table 2.</p><p>Etymology. Named after one of the collectors of this species and colleague, Michael A. Elias from the University of New South Wales.</p><p>Distribution. Distributed in the mid-north coast of New South Wales and southeast Queensland (Fig. 11). This distribution suggests a major disjunction, but in all likelihood this reflects sampling inadequacy.</p><p>Plant associations. Specimens collected from Smiths Lake were found on the fern Gleichaenia dicarpa R. Br. ( Gleicheniaceae). On the basis of&gt; 10 specimens collected on this fern, we hypothesise it as the host plant of  P. eliasi . Its association on ferns is of interest, because few heteropteran taxa are known to have fern hosts, with the notable exception of bryocorine clades in the plant bug family  Miridae (Cassis &amp; Schuh 2012; tribe  Brycorini,  Felisacus spp.).</p><p>Remarks.  Panaetius eliasi can be separated from  P. laevicornis by its humeral horns being apically divided and with prominent ridges (Fig. 1). It is also differentiated from  P. lobulatus and  P. trabifer by its uniformly black humeral horns (Fig. 1), and the anterolateral processes of the pronotum are slender (Fig. 7a,c,d).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C87787FBF95CFFA8DF956C32FBE1FACD	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Wang, Xiao-Jing;Liu, Guo-Qing;Cassis, Gerasimos	Wang, Xiao-Jing, Liu, Guo-Qing, Cassis, Gerasimos (2015): Revision of Panaetius Stål (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Acanthosomatidae) from Australia, including the description of two new species and phylogenetic analysis. Austral Entomology 54 (4): 445-464, DOI: 10.1111/aen.12154, URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/aen.12154
C87787FBF95EFFAEDC2C6D11FC31F9CD.text	C87787FBF95EFFAEDC2C6D11FC31F9CD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Panaetius laevicornis Wang & Liu & Cassis 2015	<div><p>Panaetius laevicornis sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12</p><p>Zoobank registration: http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:5EF8D1E6-F5DC-47ED-AAB6-CF0F0ACB2036</p><p>Holotype: ♂, AUSTRALIA: New South Wales:  Comboyne, 10 XI 1932, K. C. McKeown (00002771) (AM)  .</p><p>Paratypes: AUSTRALIA: Queensland: 2♀♀,  National Park, Nov 1920, H. Hacker (00002778–00002779) (QM) ;   2♂♂,  Mt. Tambourine, 29 Nov 1925, H. Hacker (00002774) (QM) ;   1♀, National Park,  Macpherson Range, 1928, H. J. Carter (00002773) (AM) ;   1♀,  Stanthorpe, 01 I 1928, H. J. Carter (00002772) (AM) ;   1♂,  National Park, 01 Jun 1929, (00002776) (QM) ;   1♂,  Petrie, 16 Nov 1962, G. Monteith (00002775) (QM) ;   1♀,  Palmerston National Park, via Innisfail, 23–24 Apr 1968, B. Cantrell (00002780) (QM) ;   2♀♀, Basset site.  Mt. Glorious,  Argyrodendron actinophyllum ( Malvaceae), Jan 1988, Y. Basset (00002777) (QM)  .</p><p>Diagnosis.  Panaetius laevicornis sp. nov. is recognised by the following combination of characters: male eyes pink; female eyes yellow (Fig. 1); anterior margin of head concave medially (Fig. 7a); anterolateral processes of pronotum triangular (Fig. 7b); humeral horns projected anterolaterally, apically undivided, without ridges (Figs 1,7b); MTG peritreme anterolaterally oriented, mesepimeron with evaporative area (Fig. 8a).</p><p>Description. Male. COLOURATION. Head: yellowish brown, with dark brown markings dorsally; anterior region of paraclypei pale brown. Eyes: pink, with medial and posterior margins dark brown, almost black. Antennae: AI-AII(b) pale brown, except apex of AII(b) weakly medium brown; AIII-AIV medium brown, with apex of AIV dark brown. Labium: mostly medium brown; LIV darker brown, almost black.</p><p>Pronotum: yellowish brown, with dark brown markings; callus dark brown; humeral horns reddish brown, with anterior and posterior margins black, with pale brown stripe medially on humeral horns; anterolateral processes pale brown. Scutellum: lateral margins yellowish brown, medial region dark brown, V-shaped pale brown callose marking at apex. Thoracic pleura: uniformly dark brown, with black markings. MTG: external efferent system yellowish brown. Hemelytra: pale brown, with medium brown stripe along medial fracture; membrane medium brown, with two indistinct brown spots.</p><p>Legs: uniformly pale brown, with apex of tarsi medium brown, claws dark brown, almost black. Abdomen: yellowish brown, with dark brown stripes laterally; abdominal spine yellowish brown. Pronotum: white decumbent setae on lateral margins and humeral horns. Legs: uniformly pale brown; setae on femora sparse; tibiae and tarsi mostly dense, with bristlelike setae and apex of tarsi with a few hairlike setae. Abdomen: with moderate distribution of semierect setae. STRUCTURE.</p><p>Head: paraclypei arcuate, apically contiguous, with lateral margins weakly reflexed. Antennae: AIII-AIV slightly wider than other segments; AI shortest, not surpassing anterior margin of head; AII(a) second longest segment, ca. 0.5× longer than AI; AII(b) a little longer than AI, and shorter than AIII; AIV longest segment, ca. 1.5× longer than AII(b). Labium: extending just beyond procoxae, not reaching mesocoxae.</p><p>Pronotum: anterolateral processes of pronotum triangular; humeral horns distinctly protruding, projecting anteriorly; humeral horns smooth, without ridges or teeth, with vertex slightly downward; dorsum medially transverse concave.</p><p>Scutellum: flat, slightly longer than wide. MTG: external efferent system mostly as in genus description; peritreme posterolaterally oriented; mesepimeron with evaporative area (Fig. 8b). Legs: tarsi narrow, tarsal segment I short, segment II ca. 1.5–2.0× longer than segment I. Male genitalia (Fig. 3): pygophore with two prominent lateral spines on ventral rim of genital opening, with dense long hairlike setae medially; parameres slender, slightly arcuate medially; aedeagus with a pair of sclerotised dorsal processes, with ventral conjunctival lobe distally divided; vesica membranous.</p><p>Female. COLOURATION. Mostly as in male, aside from following differences. Head: uniformly yellowish brown, anterior region with slightly reddish tinge. Eyes: pale brown, shining, sometimes anterior or medial region with slightly reddish tinge. Antennae: AIV-AV pale reddish brown. Labium: pale brown; LIV dark brown. Pronotum: callus reddish brown. Scutellum: medial region reddish brown, V-shaped medium brown callose stripe at apex. Legs: uniformly pale brown, with apex of claw black. Abdomen: Pendergrast’s organs yellowish brown. STRUCTURE. Mostly as in male. Labium: nearly reaching mesocoxae. Pronotum: humeral horns longer. Abdomen: Pendergrast’s organs (Fig. 9b). Female genitalia: capsula seminalis small and recurved (Fig. 6b); thickenings of vaginal intima cloud-shaped (Fig. 6b); two sclerotised rings long and thin, contiguous medially, with lateral and medial region of sclerotised rings elevated (Fig. 6b).</p><p>Measurements. Table 2.</p><p>Etymology. From the Latin  laevicornis meaning ‘smooth horns’, in reference to the lack of prominent ridges or teeth on the humeral horns.</p><p>Distribution. Distributed in coastal New South Wales and Queensland (Fig. 11).</p><p>Plant associations. Two specimens of this species were collected on  Argyrodendron actinophyllum ( Malvaceae), and based on the ‘&gt;10 specimens’ criterion, we do not hypothesise it as a host plant. It is noteworthy, however, that  P. trabifer was also collected on this plant species.</p><p>Remarks.  Panaetius laevicornis can be separated from other members of the genus by its humeral horns directed anteriorly, which are undivided, smooth and devoid of ridges (Fig. 1), and the anterolateral processes of the pronotum are triangular (Fig. 7b).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C87787FBF95EFFAEDC2C6D11FC31F9CD	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Wang, Xiao-Jing;Liu, Guo-Qing;Cassis, Gerasimos	Wang, Xiao-Jing, Liu, Guo-Qing, Cassis, Gerasimos (2015): Revision of Panaetius Stål (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Acanthosomatidae) from Australia, including the description of two new species and phylogenetic analysis. Austral Entomology 54 (4): 445-464, DOI: 10.1111/aen.12154, URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/aen.12154
C87787FBF958FFB2DC2C6C12FD6BFF0F.text	C87787FBF958FFB2DC2C6C12FD6BFF0F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Panaetius lobulatus Stal 1866	<div><p>Panaetius lobulatus Stål</p><p>Figures 1, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12</p><p>Panaetius lobulatus Stål 1866: 157 (original description); Lethierry and Severin 1893: 251 (catalogue); Kirkaldy 1908: 769 (list); Kirkaldy 1909: 170 (catalogue); Cassis and Gross 2002: 372 (Australian catalogue).</p><p>Ucia mutilata Walker 1867: 408 (sp. nov.); Stål, 1876: 112 (synonymy).</p><p>Diagnosis.  Panaetius lobulatus is recognised by the following combination of characters: anterolateral processes of pronotum broad at base, rounded at apex (Fig. 7c); humeral horns reddish brown, with margin black; humeral horns distinctly protruding, elevated upwards, apically bifid, anterior apical tooth short, laterally oriented (Figs 1,10a,b), posterior tooth more robust, posteriorly oriented (Fig. 1).</p><p>Redescription. Male. COLOURATION (Fig. 1). Head: pale brown dorsally with dark brown markings and dark brown ventrally; lateral margin of paraclypei and anteclypeus dark brown, not reaching the apex of paraclypei; paraclypei ventrally yellowish brown and buccula pale brown; posterior region of ocellus dark brown; yellowish brown spot along anterior margin of eyes. Eyes: reddish brown, with posterior and medial margin yellow. Antennae: AI pale brown, with apex medium brown; AII(a)-AII(b) medium brown; AIII-AIV dark brown. Labium: LI pale brown; LII and LIII medium brown, with base of LII pale brown; LIV dark brown, almost black. Pronotum: pale brown to grey, with reddish brown markings; callus yellowish brown, sometimes indistinct, with dark brown markings around and intersected by a longitudinal pale brown spot, impunctate; a transverse pale brown spot at medial regions of humeral horns; anterolateral processes pale brown; humeral horns reddish brown, with margin black; one distinct spine dorsally, with margin black. Scutellum: yellowish brown at base, with V-shaped pale brown callose marking at apex; triangular dark brown callose stripe at base, with a medial longitudinal dark brown stripe, sometimes reaching apex. Thoracic pleura: propleura mostly pale brown, with dark brown markings and sometimes anteromedial region dark brown, almost black; pterothoracic pleura dark brown, almost black, with yellowish brown spot along lateral margin. MTG: anterior region of external efferent system yellowish brown, posterior region and lateral margins dark brown. Hemelytra: pale brown to grey, with dark brown markings, sometimes medium brown stripe along medial fracture; membrane medium brown at base, almost transparent at apex; veins dark brown. Legs: coxae pale brown; femora pale brown at base and apex, medium or dark brown medially; tibiae dark brown, with medium brown bands medially and apically, medial band about 2× longer than apical band in length; tarsi medium brown; claws medium brown at base, black apically. Abdomen: connexiva medium brown, punctate dark brown markings; venter yellowish brown with dark brown stripes laterally and base of sternites III-V; abdominal spine medium brown. STRUCTURE. Head: paraclypei flat, arcuate distally and contiguous apically. Antennae: AIII-AIV slightly wider than other segments; AI shortest segment, not passing anterior margin of head; AII(a) longest segment, ca. 1.5× longer than AI; AII(b) slightly shorter than AIV; AII(a) about as long as AIV; AIV slightly shorter than AIII. Labium: reaching mesocoxae or a little beyond; LI slightly wider than LII and LIII; LII about as wide as LIII; LIV slightly thinner than LII; LII longest segment, ca. 2× as long as LI; LIII ca. 1.5× shorter than LII; LIV slightly shorter than LIII. Pronotum: anterolateral processes of pronotum broad at base, rounded and recurved at apex, not reaching anterior margin of eyes; humeral horns prominent, elevated dorsally, apically bifid, anterior tooth short, oriented laterally; posterior tooth stronger, oriented posteriorly. Scutellum: flat, slightly wider than long. MTG: mostly as in genus description; peritreme posterolaterally oriented, mesepimeron without evaporative areas (Fig. 8c). Legs: hind femora slightly broader and longer than mesofemora; tarsi narrow, tarsal segment I short, segment II ca. 2–3× longer than segment I. Abdomen: posterior angles of connexiva short, apex weakly recurved; abdominal spine reaching beyond anterior margin of procoxae (Fig. 1). Male genitalia: pygophore (Fig. 4a); parameres broad, knife-shaped, with apex almost at a right angle and an obscure black line from apex to middle of lateral margin (Fig. 4b); vesica tapering apically (Fig. 4c,d); aedeagus with a pair of lateral and dorsal conjunctival lobes (Fig. 4c,d).</p><p>Female. COLOURATION (Fig. 1). Mostly as in male. Head: sometimes with a short longitudinal yellowish brown stripe at medial region of ocelli. Eyes: black, posterior and medial margins yellow brown with slightly reddish tinge. Antennae: AIV pale brown, with apex medium brown. Pronotum: humeral horns mostly orange brown. Thoracic pleura: mesopleuron and metapleuron dark brown, almost black, with orange brown spot along lateral margin. MTG: anterior and lateral regions of external efferent system orange brown; posterior region dark brown. Hemelytra: uniformly pale grey, no medium brown stripe along medial fracture; sometimes with a large dark brown spot near inner base of membrane. Legs: tarsi pale brown, with reddish tinge. Abdomen: midline dark brown. STRUCTURE. Mostly as in male. Antennae: AII(b) almost as long as AIV; AIII slightly shorter than AII(a), and longer than AIV. Abdomen: Pendergrast’s organs (Fig. 9c). Female genitalia: capsula seminalis small, short curved medially (Fig. 6c); thickenings of vaginal intima semi-circular (Fig. 6c); sclerotised rings subtriangular laterally, broad inside and gradually narrowed laterally (Fig. 6c).</p><p>Specimens examined. AUSTRALIA: New South Wales: 2♀♀,  Collaroy, 10 Dec 1982, I. W. Watson (00002813– 00002814) (QM) ;   1♂,  Gosford, 16 Oct 1903, W. W. F (00002748) (AM) ;   1♀, Brooklana,  E Dorrigo, 1929, W. Heron (00002755) ex. (Andrews)  parviflorus Lindl. ( Ericaceae) (AM) ;   1♀,  Mount Tomah, 29 Feb 1932, J. Armstrong (00002759) (AM) ;   1♂,  Leura, Jan 1933, A. V., (00002750) (AM) ;   1♂,  Whip Mountain, nr. Taylors Arm, NSW, 3 Nov 1958, T. G. Campbell (00002749) (AM) ;   3♂♂ 2♀♀,  Pearl Beach NSW, 12 Oct 1968, F. McDonald (00002803– 00002804, 00002795–00002797) (UNSW) ;  1♀, Pearl Beach NSW, 14 Apr 1971, N. W. Forrester (00002805) (QM);   1♀, Forest Walk, 7.5 km S of <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=150.95357&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-34.266468" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 150.95357/lat -34.266468)">Helensburgh/Stanwell Park roundabout on Old Princess Hwy</a>, 34°15′59.28″S 150°57′12.84″E, 385 m, 19 IX 2000, R. Silveira and M. Elliott (00002753) (AM) ;   1♂, Bournda National Park, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=149.9568&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-36.7845" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 149.9568/lat -36.7845)">North Wallagoot</a>, Turingal Head, 16 m, 36°47.07’S 149°57.408’E, 20 XI 2002, R. T. Schuh, G. Cassis, R. Silveira, M. D. Schwartz (00002757) ex.  Acacia mearnsii De Wild (naturalised) ( Fabaceae) (AM)  .   AUSTRALIA: Queensland: 1♂,  Brisbane (00002798) (QM) ;  2♂♂ 1♀, Brisbane, 02 Nov 1924, H. Hacker (00002809) (QM);   1♂,  Brisbane, 06 Apr 1952, S. G. Grimmett (00002799) (QM) ;   1♀,  Beenleigh, 29 Jun 1956, T. E. Woodward (00002815) (QM) ;   1♂,  Brisbane, 21 Oct 1957, R. Metcalfe (00002800) (QM) ;   1♂,  Brisbane, 19 Sep 1959, K. Korboot (00002801) (QM) ;   1♀,  Highvale, 20 Mar 1961, P. Coyne (00002817) (QM) ;   1♀,  Lever’s Plateau, 18 Apr 1964, R. A. McLachlan (00002812) (QM) ;   1♀,  Upper Mulgrave River, 01–03 Nov 1965, G. Monteith (00002810) (QM) ;   1♀,  Yungaburra, 20 Aug 1966, D. Smith (00002811) (QM) ;   1♀,  Sandgate, 09 Apr 1967, J. A. McKenna (00002816) (QM) ;   1♀,  Durack Brisbane, 27 Nov 1986, Y. Risk (00002806) (QM) ;   1♀,  Brisbane, ex.  Melaleuca quinquenervia (Cav.) S.T. Blake ( Myrtaceae), 13 May 1987, M. Purcell (00002807) (QM) ;   1♀, Brisbane,  Corinda, 30 Jul 1987, M. Purcell (00002808)  Melaleuca quinquenervia (Cav.) S.T. Blake ( Myrtaceae) (QM) ;   1♀, Bakers Blue Mt, 17 km W  Mt. Molloy, 09 Jan 1990, Anzses Expedition (00002802) (QM)  .   AUSTRALIA: Tasmania: 1♂,  Mt. Wellington, 30 Sep 1917, G. H. Hardy (00002746) (AM) ;   1♀,  Mt. Wellington, 21 Jan 1918, G. H. Hardy (00002752) (AM) ;   1♀, Trevallyn,  Launceston, 22 Apr 1930, V. V. Hickman (00002756) (AM) ;   1♀, ca. 1 km S of <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=146.6108&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-41.16078" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 146.6108/lat -41.16078)">Narawntapu National Park</a>, 40 m, 41 ° 9.647’S 146 ° 36.648’E, 12 XI 2002, R. T. Schuh, G. Cassis, R. Silveira, M. D. Schwartz (00002751) ex.  Melaleuca quinquenervia (Cav.) S.T. Blake ( Myrtaceae) (AM) ;   1♀, Friendly Beaches, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=148.28764&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-41.988167" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 148.28764/lat -41.988167)">Freycinet Peninsula</a>, 19 m, 41 ° 59.2899’S 148 ° 17.2587’E, 13 XI 2002, R. T. Schuh, G. Cassis, R. Silveira, M. D. Schwartz (00002754) (AM) ;   1♀, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=148.178&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-40.884815" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 148.178/lat -40.884815)">Mt. William National Park</a>, Waterhole, 50 m, 40°53.089’S 148°10.68’E, 13 XI 2002, R. T. Schuh, G. Cassis, R. Silveira, M. D. Schwartz (00002758) ex.  Kunzea ambigua ( Myrtaceae) (UNSW_ENT 00002758) (AM) ;   Victoria: 1♀, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=146.13377&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-38.16806" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 146.13377/lat -38.16806)">Trafalgar</a>, 38.16806°S 146.13377°E, no other collected data provided (UNSW_ENT 00002760) (AM) ;   1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=146.2749&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-38.97705" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 146.2749/lat -38.97705)">Wilsons Promontory National Park</a>, Darley River area, 38.97705°S 146.2749°E, 50 m, 18 Nov 2002, Cassis, Schuh, Schwartz, Silveira, (UNSW_ENT 00002747) (AM)  .</p><p>Plant associations.  Panaetius lobulatus has been collected on four plant species, including  Pimelea nivea ( Thymelaceae),  Leucopogon parviflorus ( Ericaceae),  Melaleuca quinquenervia ( Myrtaceae),  Kunzea ambigua ( Myrtaceae) and  Acacia mearnsii ( Fabaceae). None of these plant associations yielded &lt;10 specimens of this acanthosomatid species, and as such none are hypothesised as host plants.</p><p>Tony Daley and Kristi Ellingsen (pers. comm. 2013) found specimens of  P. lobulatus in Tasmania on  Pimelea nivea (Figs 10a,b). The specimens of this acanthosomatid species on  Melaleuca quinquenervia were found in shrub woodland habitat (Fig. 10c).</p><p>Remarks. See  P. eliasi and  P. laevicornis remarks section for differential diagnosis.  Panaetius lobulatus can be separated from  P. trabifer by its anterolateral processes of pronotum being broader and the humeral horns shorter (Fig. 1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C87787FBF958FFB2DC2C6C12FD6BFF0F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Wang, Xiao-Jing;Liu, Guo-Qing;Cassis, Gerasimos	Wang, Xiao-Jing, Liu, Guo-Qing, Cassis, Gerasimos (2015): Revision of Panaetius Stål (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Acanthosomatidae) from Australia, including the description of two new species and phylogenetic analysis. Austral Entomology 54 (4): 445-464, DOI: 10.1111/aen.12154, URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/aen.12154
C87787FBF944FFB1DF956953FD86F9F8.text	C87787FBF944FFB1DF956953FD86F9F8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Panaetius trabifer Horvath 1902	<div><p>Panaetius trabifer Horváth</p><p>Figures 1, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12</p><p>Panaetius trabifer Horváth 1902: 602 (original description); Kirkaldy 1909: 170 (catalogue); Cassis and Gross 2002: 372 (Australian catalogue).</p><p>Diagnosis.  Panaetius trabifer is distinguished by the following characters: anterolateral processes of pronotum slender (Fig. 7d); humeral horns greatly elongate, laterally oriented, with posterior tooth directed posteriorly (Fig. 1); humeral horns yellowish brown, with margins dark brown (Fig. 1); laevigate midline stripe on pronotum (Fig. 1); MTG peritreme directed posterolaterally (Fig. 8d); parameres apically rounded (Fig. 5b); and aedeagus lacking ventral conjunctival lobes (Fig. 5c,d).</p><p>Redescription. Male. Total length 5.23–5.47 mm (Table 2). COLOURATION (Fig. 1). Yellowish brown. Head: dark brown markings, more dense at base and lateral margin of anteclypeus. Eyes: shining, brown, with medial and posterior margin yellow. Antennae: AI-AIV medium to dark brown. Labium: LI-LIII pale brown; LIV dark brown. Pronotum: yellowish brown, with dark brown markings; callus yellowish brown, sometimes indistinct, with dark brown markings around and intersected by a laevigate pale brown midline stripe; anterolateral processes of pronotum yellowish brown; humeral horns yellowish brown, with margins dark brown; one distinct spine dorsally, with margin dark brown. Scutellum: yellowish brown at base, V-shaped medium brown stripe at apex, with dark brown markings and more dense at base; triangular dark brown stripe at base, with a medial longitudinal dark brown stripe, sometimes almost reaching to apex. Thoracic pleura: propleura pale brown, with dark brown markings; mesopleura yellowish brown, with wide dark brown stripe at medial region; metapleura dark brown, with a large yellowish brown spot along lateral margin. MTG: anterior region of evaporative area yellowish brown; lateral and posterior regions dark brown, almost black. Hemelytra: yellowish brown, with medium brown stripe along medial fracture; membrane almost transparent, a large irregular dark brown spot near inner base of membrane; veins dark brown. Legs: mostly pale brown; femora medium brown near apex; tibiae medium brown, with pale brown bands medially and apically, medial bands ca. 2× longer than apical bands; tarsi medium brown; claw black apically. Abdomen: connexiva uniformly pale brown, sometimes brown bands at base; venter medium brown with dark brown stripe laterally; abdominal spine of sternite III medium brown. STRUCTURE. Head: paraclypei flat, arcuate distally and contiguous. Antennae: AIII-AIV slightly wider than other segments. AI shortest segment, not passing anterior margin of head; AII(a) longest segment, ca. 2× longer than AI; AII(b) about as long as AIV; AIII slightly shorter than AII(a); AIV ca. 4/5th length of AII. Labium: reaching mesocoxae or a little beyond; LI slightly wider than LII and LIII; LII about as wide as LIII; LIV slightly thinner than LII; LII longest, ca. 2× longer than LI; LIII ca. 1.5× longer than LI; LIV slightly shorter than LIII. Pronotum: anterolateral processes of pronotum broad at base, rounded and dorsally recurved at apex; humeral horns elevated dorsally, apically bifid, anterior tooth short, oriented laterally, posterior tooth more robust, oriented posteriorly. Scutellum: flat, slightly longer than wide. MTG: external efferent system as in genus description; mesepimeron without evaporative bodies (Fig. 8d). Legs: hind femora slightly broader and longer than mesofemora; tarsi narrow, tarsal segment I short, segment II about 2–3× longer than segment I. Abdomen: posterior angles of connexival segments, apically rounded and weakly recurved. Male genitalia: pygophore (Fig. 5a); parameres broad, knife-shaped, apex rounded and medially curved inwardly, with a short black line near apical margin, dense hairlike at apex of lateral margin (Fig. 5b); aedeagus with a pair of basal lateral and dorsal conjunctival lobes (Fig. 5c,d).</p><p>Female. Total length 5.76–6.46 mm (Table 2). COLOURATION. Brownish grey. Head: dark brown marking, most pronounced at base and lateral margin of paraclypei and anteclypeus. Eyes: reddish brown, with medial and posterior margins yellowish brown. Antennae: AI-AIV mostly pale brown. Labium: LII and LIII pale brown. Pronotum: impunctate pale brown stripe on medial regions of humeral horns. Legs: tarsi pale brown, with reddish tinge. Abdomen: venter brown with red stripes laterally medial to spiracles; abdominal spine of sternite III pale brown. STRUCTURE. Abdomen: Pendergrast’s organs (Fig. 9d). Female genitalia: capsula seminalis small, short, recurved (Fig. 6d); thickenings of vaginal intima bifid (Fig. 6d); medial region of sclerotised rings more elevated than lateral region (Fig. 6d).</p><p>Specimens examined. AUSTRALIA: New South Wales: 1♀,  E. Dorrigo NSW, 29 Dec (year unknown), W. Heron (00002767) (AM) ;   1♀,  Dorrigo, NSW, Nov 1928, W. Heron (00002768) (AM) ;   1♂,  Brooklana, E. Dorrigo, 1929, W. Heron (00002766) (AM) ;   1♀,  Salisbury, 18 Oct 1971, R. Menzies (00002784) (QM) ;   1♂, 32.08°S 151.27°E, Allyn River, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=151.27&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-32.08" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 151.27/lat -32.08)">Chichester State Forest</a>, 10–11 Nov 1981, T. Weir and A. Calder (00002764) (AM) ;   1♀, 30.21°S 152.47°E, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=152.47&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-30.21" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 152.47/lat -30.21)">Dorrigo National Park</a>, Never Never picnic site, 6 Apr 1993, C. Reid (00002769) (AM)  .   Queensland: 1♂,  Mt. Tamborine, Oct 1924, A. Musgrave and C. Gelssmann (00002765) (AM) ;   1♀,  Tooloom, Jan 1926, H. Hacker (00002786) (QM) ;   1♀,  Brisbane, Qld, R. Kumar (00002783) (QM) ;   2♂♂,  National Park, Nov 1923, H. Hacker (00002792) (QM) ;   1♂,  National Park, Dec 1923, H. Hacker (00002793) (QM) ;   1♂ 1♀,  Bunya Mountains, 10 Nov 1925, H. Hacker (00002791) (QM) ;   1♂ 1♀,  Mt. Glorious, 18 Sep 1927, H. Hacker (00002790) (QM) ;   1♂,  National Park, 04 Jun 1929 (00002789) (QM) ;   1♀,  Lamington National Park, Queensland, 20 Aug 1962, G. Monteith (00002787) (QM) ;   2♀♀,  Lamington National Park, Queensland, 03 Feb 1963, G. Monteith (00002782, 00002785) (QM) ;   1♀,  Mt. Glorious, Basset site, 700 m,  Argyrodendron actinophyllum ( Malvaceae), Jan 1988, Y. Basset (00002781) (QM) ;   1♂,  Mt. Glorious, Basset site, 700 m,  Argyrodendron actinophyllum ( Malvaceae), Mar–Apr 1988, Y. Basset (00002788) (QM)  .</p><p>Plant associations. As with  Panaetius laevicornis, this species was collected on  Argyrodendron actinophyllum ( Malvaceae), but only a pair of specimens was collected on it, and we do not hypothesise it as a host plant.</p><p>Distribution. Distributed in coastal New South Wales and Queensland (Fig. 11).</p><p>Remarks. See Remarks section of  P. eliasi,  P. laevicornis and  P. lobulatus for differential diagnosis.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C87787FBF944FFB1DF956953FD86F9F8	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Wang, Xiao-Jing;Liu, Guo-Qing;Cassis, Gerasimos	Wang, Xiao-Jing, Liu, Guo-Qing, Cassis, Gerasimos (2015): Revision of Panaetius Stål (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Acanthosomatidae) from Australia, including the description of two new species and phylogenetic analysis. Austral Entomology 54 (4): 445-464, DOI: 10.1111/aen.12154, URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/aen.12154
C87787FBF946FFB0DF956B24FDA1FDCF.text	C87787FBF946FFB0DF956B24FDA1FDCF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Duadicus namyatovae WANG, LIU AND CASSIS	<div><p>E R R AT U M TO  DUADICUS NAMYATOVAE WANG, LIU AND CASSIS 20 1 4</p><p>The type depository of  Duadicus namyatovae Wang, Liu and Cassis was incorrectly given in Wang et al. (2014), and is to be deposited in the Western Australian Museum.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C87787FBF946FFB0DF956B24FDA1FDCF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Wang, Xiao-Jing;Liu, Guo-Qing;Cassis, Gerasimos	Wang, Xiao-Jing, Liu, Guo-Qing, Cassis, Gerasimos (2015): Revision of Panaetius Stål (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Acanthosomatidae) from Australia, including the description of two new species and phylogenetic analysis. Austral Entomology 54 (4): 445-464, DOI: 10.1111/aen.12154, URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/aen.12154
