Rhagovelia auga, Polhemus, 2024

Polhemus, Dan A., 2024, Thirty-four new species of Rhagovelia (Heteroptera: Veliidae) from the East Papua Composite Terrane, far eastern New Guinea, Zootaxa 5400 (1), pp. 1-214 : 83

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5400.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7B6AC3A4-9187-4336-AAC7-82C3FD046D29

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A37987E3-2B18-0060-95EA-FB38FA8A6394

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rhagovelia auga
status

 

Rhagovelia auga subgroup

The R. auga subgroup is a set of large-sized species, with body lengths exceeding 4 mm, occurring at higher elevations in the mountains of New Guinea proper, but absent on the proximal offshore islands. Members of this subgroup are locally abundant on cool, rocky streams in the central highlands and northern coastal ranges of the island, whereas only a single representative is so far known from the EPCT. Males in this subgroup are distinguished by their highly modified fore tibia, which is slightly expanded distally to form a concavity, the posterior margin of which is bordered with stiff, black setae, causing the tibia to appear spatulate ( Fig. 133 View FIGS ). Females possess a somewhat expanded and upwardly-domed thoracic morphology coupled with a relatively narrow head, giving them a distinctive "broad shouldered " appearance when encountered in the field ( Fig. 134 View FIGS ). The male paramere shape is typical of that in the R. novacaldeonica group, being distally expanded and apically truncate ( Fig. 137 View FIGS ), and the male proctiger has the distolateral lobes only weakly developed, whereas the basolateral lobes are strongly produced ( Fig. 138 View FIGS ). Other species extralimital to the EPCT that fall within this subgroup are R. crinita Lansbury and R. thysanotos Lansbury , and additional undescribed species are also at hand from the New Guinea central highlands.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Veliidae

Genus

Rhagovelia

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