Macropsidius karatavicus, Tishechkin, 2022

Tishechkin, Dmitri Yu., 2022, Macropsidius bogutensis (Mityaev, 1990) species group (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Cicadellidae: Eurymelinae: Macropsini) in Kazakhstan: taxonomy, biology, and evolution, Zootaxa 5165 (3), pp. 405-414 : 406

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5165.3.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C23CFB96-D56F-4C2F-AD98-3C0FD973DD9A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6838430

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BF87A7-C402-FF98-C984-6C9CCB78B7AC

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Macropsidius karatavicus
status

sp. nov.

Macropsidius karatavicus View in CoL sp. n.

Figs. 1–23 View FIGURES 1–18 View FIGURES 19–33

Material examined. Holotype, ♂, Southern Kazakhstan, southeastern part of Syrdaryinskiy Karatau Mtn. Range, Sayasay (=Sayasuu) Gorge, ca. 50 km west of Taraz, 42.894 N, 70.715 E, Artemisia (Seriphidium) juncea on stony slopes, D. Tishechkin, 13. VI. 2016, calling signals recorded at 32–33 o C; paratypes: 13 ♂, 19 ♀, same locality, host, and date, calling signals of 5 ♂ recorded at 32–33 o C. GoogleMaps

Description. Similar in appearance to other species of Macropsidius ( Figs. 1–5 View FIGURES 1–18 ). Pale yellowish brown with black spots on head, pro-, and mesonotum. Shape and location of spots typical for genus. Black pattern moderately developed, all spots separated from each other, specimens with partially merged spots absent in material studied. Forewings semitransparent, most veins of same color as membrane, veins of clavus and some other longitudinal veins sometimes milky white, especially, in basal parts. Anal margin, claval suture and, occasionally, apical margin and some cells darkened. Females usually lighter than males, with ovipositor sometimes extending beyond resting forewings.

Pygofer appendages do not reach dorsal margin of pygofer, slightly S-shaped, sometimes, with sharply narrowed tip ( Figs. 6–7 View FIGURES 1–18 ). Aedeagal shaft with very wide lateral carinae in basal half ( Figs. 8–10 View FIGURES 1–18 ), moderately developed ventral carina running along all shaft from base to gonopore ( Figs. 11–15 View FIGURES 1–18 ), and with one or several small denticles on each side near apex. Ventral and lateral carinae perpendicular to each other ( Figs. 11–12 View FIGURES 1–18 ); for this reason, ventral carina hardly distinguishable in back view ( Figs. 8–10 View FIGURES 1–18 ) and, vice versa, lateral carinae almost invisible in lateral view ( Figs. 13–15 View FIGURES 1–18 ). Styles with lobe-like rounded or somewhat angular tips ( Figs. 16–18 View FIGURES 1–18 ).

Body length: ♂, 3.1–3.4 mm; ♀, 3.4–4.2 mm.

Diagnosis. In external appearance, indistinguishable from most other members of the genus Macropsidius . Differs from M. araxes Dlabola, 1961 , M. valiturus Dlabola, 1963 , and M. kajkanus ( Figs. 70–71 View FIGURES 63–76 ), which also have one ventral and two lateral carinae on the aedeagus, in having very wide lateral carinae. In addition, M. araxes and M. valiturus were recorded only from Eastern Caucasus (Dagestan), Transcaucasia, and Iran, so their close relationship with species from Kazakhstan is dubious. Very similar to M. bogutensis but differing in the evenly curved ventral carina of the aedeagus almost reaching the gonopore ( Figs. 11–15 View FIGURES 1–18 ) (strongly narrowed in apical half and usually almost reduced before gonopore in M. bogutensis ; Figs. 42–54 View FIGURES 34–62 ). Also, distinctly differs from M. bogutensis in male calling signal pattern ( Figs. 19–23 and 24–28 View FIGURES 19–33 ).

Hosts. Adult specimens were collected from A. (Seriphidium) juncea on stony slopes ( Fig. 74 View FIGURES 63–76 ) and were not found on other species of Artemisia (Seriphidium) growing nearby.

Calling signal. Male calling signal is a short phrase lasting from 2.5 s, up to 8–9 s and consisting of 3–6 syllables in the recordings ( Figs. 19–23 View FIGURES 19–33 ). Syllable consists of 11–18 similar pulses and has duration of 0.37– 0.75 s. As a rule, pulse repetition period decreases towards the end of syllable. Occasionally, a train of pulses precedes or follows the sequence of syllables ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 19–33 ).

Distribution. Possibly, endemic to Syrdaryinskiy Karatau Range in Southern Kazakhstan.

Etymology. The species name derives from the name of the mountain range, where it was collected.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadellidae

Genus

Macropsidius

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