Megalotomus Fieber, 1860
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5128.2.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:64977C0C-5A79-47C5-96BF-7895D1FFBC7B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6479760 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BD5626-8377-7E08-A3C0-FE0BB58569D4 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Megalotomus Fieber, 1860 |
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Genus Megalotomus Fieber, 1860 View in CoL
Megalotomus Fieber, 1860: 58 View in CoL . Type species by subsequent designation ( Oshanin, 1912: 24): Alydus limbatus Herrich-Schaeffer, 1835 View in CoL (= Cimex junceus Scopoli, 1763 ). Ghauri, 1972: 285–287; Hsiao, 1977: 276–277; Nonnaizab, et al., 1986: 305–313; Moulet, 1995: 272–273; Liu & Liu, 1998: 41–43; Dolling, 2006: 38.
Huphus Mulsant & Rey, 1870: 157–158 (Synonymized by Puton, 1872: 311). Type species by subsequent designation ( Kerzhner, 2003: 103): Alydus sareptanus Baerensprung, 1859 (= Alydus ornaticeps Stål, 1858 View in CoL ).
Diagnosis. Megalotomus differs from other genera of the family Alydidae by the combination of the following characters: body slender, small to large sized, body length range 10.0–17.0 mm, body colour from yellow to black; head almost triangular, slightly narrower than pronotum; antennal segment I longer than or equal length to segment II; posterior angles of pronotum prominent, slightly raised, always pointed; femur and tibiae straight with no curving, tibiae longer than femur, femora with 3–8 spines, inner surface with plectrum; genital capsule with a pair of surcapsular spines, never crossing over, parameres elongate, slender and curved; posterior margin of female abdominal sternite VII split longitudinally in middle [valid only if specimens of female Megalotomus quinquespinosus (Say, 1825) are examined and confirmed].
Distribution and diversity. This genus is distributed in the Palaearctic and Nearctic Regions, and according to the literature ( Dolling 2006) and the results presented herein contains eight species: Megalotomus junceus ( Scopoli, 1763) ; Megalotomus quinquespinosus (Say, 1825) ; Megalotomus ornaticeps ( Stål, 1858) ; Megalotomus costalis Stål, 1873 ; Megalotomus castaneus Reuter, 1888 ; Megalotomus angulus ( Hsiao, 1965) ; Megalotomus zaitzevi Kerzhner, 1972 ; Megalotomus acutulus Liu & Liu, 1998 . Among these, seven species occur in the Palaearctic Region, with only M. quinquespinosus (Say, 1825) recorded from the Nearctic Region. A new combination transferred from Alydus to Megalotomus and a new junior synonym are proposed below.
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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Megalotomus Fieber, 1860
Yi, Wenbo, Wang, Shijun, Zhang, Hufang & Bu, Wenjun 2022 |
Megalotomus
Dolling, W. R. 2006: 38 |
Liu, G. Q. & Liu, Q. 1998: 41 |
Moulet, P. 1995: 272 |
Hsiao, T. Y. 1977: 276 |
Ghauri, M. S. K. 1972: 285 |
Oshanin, B. 1912: 24 |
Fieber, F. X. 1860: 58 |