Pilophorus okamotoi Miyamoto & Lee, 1966
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4942.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CDF398FE-B0F6-40E6-967D-FB857C1565BD |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4618378 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A16ADB37-EB0A-0C6D-FF47-C6D67FD7F98D |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Pilophorus okamotoi Miyamoto & Lee, 1966 |
status |
|
Pilophorus okamotoi Miyamoto & Lee, 1966 View in CoL
( Figs 5C View FIGURE 5 ̅D, 11D, 12I, 17A̅H, 19A–C)
Pilophorus okamotoi Miyamoto & Lee 1966: 379 View in CoL (n. sp., desc.); Schuh, 2002 –2013, online catalog; Aukema, 2018, online catalog.
Material examined. JAPAN: Kyushu, Nagasaki Pref., Tsushima Island, Izuhara Town , Hiyoshi , 34.209555, 129.291200, Artemisia sp., 21 Jul 2020, H. Asanabe, 3 ♂ 3 ♀ ( AMNH, TYCN) ( AMNH _ PBI 00380670 About AMNH ) GoogleMaps ; same data GoogleMaps except for date 4 Aug 2020, 3 ♂ 2 ♀ ( NIAES, TYCN); same locality, hatching on 3 Aug 2020 (from oviposited egg under reared), to 2nd instar on 6 Aug, to 3rd on 7 Aug, to 4th on 10 Aug and emerging on 15 Aug, 1 ♂ ( TYCN) .
Rediagnosis. Recognized by its moderate size; rather slender body: weakly shining dorsum with uniformly distributed, short, reclining setae and lacking long upright setae; comparatively long antennae and legs; somewhat W-shaped hemelytral median band of scale-like setae ( Fig. 5D View FIGURE 5 ); narrow and weak apical ridge of endosoma with bifurcate median process ( Figs 11D View FIGURE 11 , 17G View FIGURE 17 ); rather developed lateral fold of sclerotized ring ( Fig. 12I View FIGURE 12 ); and basal (anterior) half part of interramal lobe lacking spinules ( Fig. 18A View FIGURE 18 ). Detailed description including male genitalic structures was provided by Miyamoto & Lee (1966).
Measurements. See Table 2.
Biology. The population on Tsushima Island was observed to inhabit Artemisia vegetation growing along a residential street (Asanabe, pers. comm.). The first instar nymph of this species in a laboratory situation, developed to adult in 12 days. Two or three generations per year are assumed for P. okamotoi ; the eggs appear to hibernate. Further information on the biology and immature stages were documented by Fukuda et al. (2020).
Discussion. Since the type series of Pilophorus okamotoi (8 specimens from Gyeongnam and Jeju Provinces, Korea) appears to have been missing, most of previous records of P. okamotoi from Japan were apparently confused with P. satoyamanus described below (e.g., Yasunaga, 2001). Some wildlife are known to be endemic to Tsushima Island and Korean Peninsula ( Nagasaki Biological Society, 1976). In Japan, P. okamotoi is currently considered to be restricted to this island close to Korea. Each species can be identified by the characters in the above key (couplet 24) and allopatric distribution (see above checklist).
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Pilophorus okamotoi Miyamoto & Lee, 1966
Yasunaga, Tomohide, Duwal, Ram Keshari & Nakatani, Yukinobu 2021 |
Pilophorus okamotoi
Miyamoto & Lee 1966: 379 |