Amphinemura multispina (Wu, 1973)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4402.1.7 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FFE6512A-31A3-46F7-BEF6-A69290DF8A9C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5978865 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039C879F-1A61-A05F-30BE-48B8FDB3FE4B |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Amphinemura multispina (Wu, 1973) |
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Amphinemura multispina (Wu, 1973) View in CoL
Figures 7 View FIGURE7 & 8 View FIGURE 8 .
Male habitus ( Figs. 7a–b View FIGURE7 ). Head black with brown antennae. Pronotum amber with obscure rugosities. Legs generally yellow brown to brownish. Abdominal terga brownish with dark brown terminalia.
Male ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ). Tergum IΧ weakly sclerotiZed, lateral margin darkly sclerotiZed, with wide shallow median indentation and medial cluster of spinules and short strong hairs along posterior margin ( Fig. 8a View FIGURE 8 ). Vesicle of sternum IΧ claviform, basal portion slightly enlarged with short marginal hairs, distally parallel-sided and membranous. Hypoproct basally rectangular, apical ½ trapeZoidal with sinuous lateral margins ( Fig. 8b View FIGURE 8 ). Tergum Χ sclerotiZed, with lightly pigmented medial area beneath epiproct. Cercus membranous, longer than wide. Epiproct ( Figs. 7c–7e View FIGURE7 , 8c, 8d View FIGURE 8 ) nearly subrectangular, slightly over 2Χ longer than width, apex with short straight flagellum extended from ventral sclerite. Dorsal sclerite forming a pair of thin lateral sclerite that ends subapically from a typical short basal sclerite ( Fig. 8c View FIGURE 8 ); ventral sclerite forming gently angled rounded ridge distally, with several short teeth along the ventral surface ( Fig. 8d View FIGURE 8 ). Paraproct tri-lobed ( Figs. 8a, 8e View FIGURE 8 ): inner lobe sclerotiZed and triangular; median lobe heavily sclerotiZed, apical ¼ up-curved and enlarged in a triangular beak-like structure and armed with a row of 5 long spines. Outer lobe heavily sclerotiZed, apex greatly enlarged and baloon-shaped, with 3–5 large subapical spines and 2 additional smaller apical spines with opposite direction.
Female. Unknown.
Material examined. 1 male ( HIST), CHINA: Shaanxi Province, HanZhong , Yang County, Huayang town , Qingxi Village , 854 m, N 33°62.17' E 107°31.82', 2017. V.5, Haoyu Liu.
Distribution. China (Shaanxi, Sichuan provinces).Remarks. The dorsal view of the epiproct and paraproct of the above male after being treated by KOH agrees generally with the original illustrations (figs. 43 & 45 in Wu 1973). The light coloration of the pronotum was not mentioned in the original description. It is possible that our single male has not fully sclerotiZed. Herein, we provide new illustrations ( Figs. 7–8 View FIGURE7 View FIGURE 8 ) to assist in the identification of this species. Since the holotype and 7 paratypes of A. multispina are apparently lost, our single male from Shaanxi Province of northwestern China may not be conspecific with the original material from Sichuan Province of southwestern China (Yang et al. 2015). However, because of the close similarity, we are this time considering the above single male as A. multispina rather than naming it as new. Topotype material of A. multispina will be required to confirm our identification.
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.
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