Nenema virgata ( Doering, 1941 )

de Freitas, Abner S., Dietrich, Christopher H. & Takiya, Daniela M., 2020, Five new species of Caliscelidae (Insecta, Hemiptera) from Mexico and Panama, with additional redescriptions of little-known species, European Journal of Taxonomy 717, pp. 27-69 : 50-53

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.717.1097

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A03063E4-23C7-4084-BDB6-7495687FFDC5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4330339

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C61685F-FF88-5F37-A441-90E84319FCB4

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Nenema virgata ( Doering, 1941 )
status

 

Nenema virgata ( Doering, 1941) View in CoL

Figs 16–17 View Fig View Fig , 26G View Fig

Aphelonema virgata Doering, 1941: 206 View in CoL , pl. XIII: fig. 4, pl. XIV: figs 16, 21, pl. XV: figs 11, 22.

Aphelonema (Nenema) virgata View in CoL – Emeljanov 1996: 834 (proposed new subgenus of Aphelonema View in CoL ). Nenema virgata View in CoL – Gnezdilov 2013: 212.

Diagnosis

Body mainly black and pale-yellow, with central plate of frons white and sublateral carinae black, forewing dark brown to black with oblique white stripe over claval suture, abdomen almost black, with broad pale-yellow median longitudinal stripe dorsally and narrower discontinuous white to paleyellow longitudinal stripes laterally, legs reddish brown ( Fig. 16 View Fig ); clypeus swollen ( Fig. 16A, C View Fig ), with weak carina incomplete ventrally ( Fig. 16A View Fig ); abdominal tergites ( Figs 16C View Fig , 26G View Fig ) with one sensory pit followed by single isolated ventral sensory pit (tergite IV and V) or isolated pair of diagonally aligned ventral sensory pits (tergites VI to VII).

Material examined

MEXICO • 1 ♀; “COAH” [Coahuila de Zaragoza], Cuahtemoc rd., Km 7.4; 25.27970° N, 100.98747° W; 2120 m a.s.l.; Oct. 2005; C. Dietrich leg.; vacuum sample; INHS GoogleMaps 1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; DNA voucher ENT4919; DZRJ GoogleMaps .

Description

BODY LENGTH. Females = 3.3 to 3.5 mm.

COLORATION. Body mainly black and pale-yellow ( Fig. 16 View Fig A–C). Central plate of frons ( Fig. 16A View Fig ) white, sublateral carinae black and side of frons pale-yellow in frontal view. Clypeus mainly black, with dorsal portion pale-yellow ( Fig. 16A View Fig ). Vertex ( Fig. 16B View Fig ) white to pale-yellow with two pairs of brown maculae; pronotum and mesonotum ( Fig. 16B View Fig ) with pale-yellow continuous median longitudinal broad stripe. Gena ( Fig. 16C View Fig ) pale-yellow; with oblique black stripe starting at ventral margin of eyes, reaching clypeus and drop-like black macula near anteroventral margin of eye. Lateral lobe of pronotum ( Fig. 16C View Fig ) with anterior portion black and posterior portion pale-yellow continuous to forewing stripe. Forewing ( Fig. 16 View Fig B–C) dark brown to black, with oblique white stripe over claval suture. Abdomen ( Fig. 16 View Fig B–C) dark brown, almost black, with broad pale-yellow median longitudinal stripe dorsally and narrower discontinuous white to pale-yellow longitudinal stripes laterally. Legs ( Fig. 16A, C View Fig ) reddish brown.

HEAD AND THORAX. Vertex ( Fig. 16B View Fig ) hexagonal, as long as half its width, as long as pronotum; posterior margin slightly elevated. Frons ( Fig. 16A View Fig ) with weak median carina and pair of sublateral carinae; sublateral carinae reaching clypeus ventrally ( Fig. 16A View Fig ); central plate ( Fig. 16A View Fig ) longer than wide at widest portion, not visible in dorsal view ( Fig. 16B View Fig ), not extending anteriorly beyond sublateral carinae in lateral view ( Fig. 16C View Fig ); sides of frons partially visible in frontal view ( Fig. 16A View Fig ), not fused above clypeus, with two rows of sensory pits on each side in lateral view ( Fig. 16C View Fig ): anterior row with eight sensory pits, two ventral ones slightly displaced; posterior row with four sensory pits, ventral one slightly isolated. Clypeus ( Fig. 16C View Fig ) swollen, with weak carina incomplete ventrally. Ocelli absent. Eye oblong. Antenna short, with several small circular structures visible on pedicel. Pronotum ( Fig. 16B View Fig ) semicircular, shorter than half its width, without median carina; median portion of disc without sensory pits and with posterior portion slightly elevated; lateral portion of disc with 15 to 17 sensory pits; lateral lobe of pronotum ( Fig. 16C View Fig ) with one sensory pit. Mesonotum ( Fig. 16B View Fig ) without median carina and with pair of lateral carinae; region between lateral carinae depressed, without sensory pits; region laterad of lateral carina with 14 sensory pits. Brachypterous, with reduced venation. Legs simple, with carinae and setae; tibia III with single median spine.

ABDOMEN. Terga without longitudinal carinae. Tergite III ( Figs 16C View Fig , 26G View Fig ) without sensory pits. Tergites IV and V ( Figs 16C View Fig , 26G View Fig ) with one sensory pit followed by single isolated ventral one. Tergites VI and VII ( Figs 16C View Fig , 26G View Fig ) with one sensory pit followed by isolated ventral pair aligned diagonally. Tergite VIII with one sensory pit.

FEMALE TERMINALIA. Posterior margin of sternite VII ( Fig. 17B View Fig ) with sub-rectangular median projection; lateral portions concave; setose. Gonoplac ( Fig. 17C View Fig ) sclerotized, sub-rectangular with apex convex; setose. Anterior connective lamina of gonapophysis VIII ( Fig. 17D View Fig ) with three apical teeth: all subequal, two outermost closer to each other than to inner one. Posterior connective lamina of gonapophysis IX ( Fig. 17 View Fig E–F) distal part in lateral view ( Fig. 17F View Fig ) with longitudinal row of six wide triangular spines; spines extending anteriorly to stem ( Fig. 17F View Fig ); middle portion with several pits ( Fig. 17F View Fig ); apex setose ( Fig. 17F View Fig ). Segment X of anal tube ( Fig. 17 View Fig G–H) longer than wide at widest portion; caudal margin ( Fig. 17G View Fig ) pointed with apex rounded; setose.

Remarks

This species was originally placed in Aphelonema and later transferred to Nenema by Emeljanov (1996). This species has all the diagnostic combination of characteristics of this genus (see Discussion), so we are following Emeljanov’s allocation. The original description and illustrations of the dorsal view of the body and lateral view of the head by Doering (1941) suffice to identify this species. Unfortunately, we could not redescribe male terminalia of this species due to lack of male specimens. The original description does not include information about abdominal sensory pits or female terminalia. As indicated by Doering (1941), this species is similar to Nenema bivittata (Ball, 1902) , Nenema confragosa ( Doering, 1941) and Nenema convergens (Bunn, 1930) and can be distinguished from these species by the pattern of coloration ( Doering 1941).

INHS

Illinois Natural History Survey

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Caliscelidae

SubFamily

Caliscelinae

Tribe

Peltonotellini

Genus

Nenema

Loc

Nenema virgata ( Doering, 1941 )

de Freitas, Abner S., Dietrich, Christopher H. & Takiya, Daniela M. 2020
2020
Loc

Aphelonema (Nenema) virgata

Gnezdilov V. M. 2013: 212
Emeljanov A. F. 1996: 834
1996
Loc

Aphelonema virgata

Doering K. C. 1941: 206
1941
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