Lispe nicobarensis Schiner, 1868
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4457.4.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5671530C-6A15-42C3-851D-62299170C804 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5980572 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DB87A5-D135-B84E-5197-55F5FDAF8FA6 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Lispe nicobarensis Schiner, 1868 |
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Lispe nicobarensis Schiner, 1868 View in CoL
Figs. 5–7 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 View FIGURE 7
Lispe nicobarensis Schiner, 1868: 297 View in CoL . Type locality: India, Andaman & Nicobar Islands.
Lispe binotata Becker, 1914: 81 View in CoL . Type locality: China, Taiwan.
Xenolispa yerburyi Malloch, 1922: 385 View in CoL . Type locality: Sri Lanka, Trincomali.
Lispe albimacula Malloch, 1923: 610 View in CoL . Type locality: Australia, Queensland, Babinda.
Lispe leigongshana Wei & Yang, 2007: 497 View in CoL . Type locality: China, Guizhou, Mt. Leigongshan. Syn. nov.
Material examined. 1♂, 18-VII-2009, Fujian Province, Quanzhou City, Anxi County, Xiping Town , N25°01′ E117°57′, Coll. J.H. Chen GoogleMaps ; 5♂♂, 4♀♀, 17-VII-2013, Guangdong Province, Meizhou City, Pankeng Scenic Resort , N24°15′19.09″ E116°08′48.13, Coll. Y.Q. Ge & W. Li [ MBFU] GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. L. nicobarensis can be easily separated from other Chinese Lispe by its shining black body color and the higher locaton of vibrissae (at half distance between oral margin and base of antenna). Other diagnostic characters include: frons black, parafacial and gena with silver pruinosity; few setae on thorax and legs; dc 0+1.
Male: body length 4.2–4.5 mm. Fore femur with 2 or 3 pv; mid femur swollen on basal half; hind femur with 3 long and curled v on basal half (the basal one more or less situated on av surface), with 1 short pv row; hind tibia short, with 1 v row; abdomen black, tergite 4 with a pair of lateral white spots and sternite 4 modified, with a asymmetric pointed process on right posterior side ( Fig. 6D View FIGURE 6 ); apex of abdomen with curled setulae ( Fig. 5F View FIGURE 5 ); cerci merged into one plate at 2/3 upper side, with a curved edge at lower side ( Fig. 6C View FIGURE 6 ).
Female: body length 6.0– 6.2 mm. Syntergite 1+2 and tergites 4 and 5 with silvery white lateral spots; and tergite 4 with a slim white median stripe posteriorly ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ).
Remarks. Wei & Yang (2007) published L. leigongshana from southern China. Their description and illustration ( Wei & Yang, 2007: 497–498) show that all main characters of L. leigongshana fall into the characterization of L. nicobarensis : 1) thorax shining black without dense pruinosity; 2) dc 0+1; 3) fore femur with 3 pv on apical half; 4) mid femur distinctly thinner on apical half; 5) hind femur with 3 curled and long v; 6) sternite 5 with a process on the right side (actually, it is sternite 4); and finally, by comparing the male terminalia we can observe they have same shape ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ). We compared the terminalia dissected from specimens recognized here as L. nicobarensis with the original drawings of L. leigongshana by Wei & Yang (2007). The comparisons above convinced us to synonymize L. leigongshana under L. nicobarensis .
Distribution. Widespread from northern Australia to eastern India. Distribution in CHINA: Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Taiwan and Yunnan.
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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Lispe nicobarensis Schiner, 1868
Ge, Ying-Qiang, Gao, Yun-Yun & Zhang, Dong 2018 |
Lispe nicobarensis
Schiner, 1868 : 297 |
Lispe binotata
Becker, 1914 : 81 |
Xenolispa yerburyi
Malloch, 1922 : 385 |
Lispe albimacula
Malloch, 1923 : 610 |
Lispe leigongshana
Wei & Yang, 2007 : 497 |