Teleorhinus, UHLER, 1890

Wyniger, Denise, 2010, Resurrection of the Pronotocrepini Knight, with Revisions of the Nearctic Genera Orectoderus Uhler, Pronotocrepis Knight, and Teleorhinus Uhler, and Comments on the Palearctic Ethelastia Reuter (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae), American Museum Novitates 2010 (3703), pp. 1-68 : 48-49

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1206/3703.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4574309

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A87EAD38-FF11-EB65-F0A6-3FD3FDB7FCB0

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-02-26 17:07:49, last updated 2024-11-26 07:13:38)

scientific name

Teleorhinus
status

 

GENUS TELEORHINUS UHLER View in CoL View at ENA

Type species: Teleorhinus cyaneus Uhler, 1890: 74 (by monotypy).

Teleorhinus Uhler, 1890: 74 View in CoL (original description); Kirkaldy, 1906: 128 (catalog); Reuter, 1909: 65 (description, comments), 1910: 166 (catalog); Van Duzee, 1917: 367 (catalog); Knight, 1922: 67 (note), 1923: 474 (key), 1941: 15 (description), 17 (description), 52 (comments), 1968b: 64 (key to species); Blatchely, 1926: 915 (key); Carvalho, 1952: 71 (catalog), 1955a: 60 (key), 1958: 179 (catalog); Schuh, 1974: 298 (description, discussion), 303 (note); McIver and Stonedahl, 1987a: 258 (note), 1987b: 278 (note).

DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by complete black dorsal surface with deep punctation on pronotum and hemelytra; head elongate, vertical (fig. 7); second antennal segment inflated distally; vesica simple; secondary gonopore not readily identifiable as closed sclerotized ring, but rather as elongate structure with lobes laterally bearing distinct denticles, dorsal labiate plate of female genitalia with large rings. Distinguished from Orectoderus by shape of metathoracic pleuron and scent-gland auricle with evaporatory area (figs. 4B, 10B) and by vesica (figs. 5, 9), shape of head (figs. 4A, 10A), and shape of pronotum (figs. 3, 7). Females in Teleorhinus always macropterous (fig. 7) whereas in Orectoderus females brachypterous (fig. 3).

REDESCRIPTION: Male: Total length 5.99–8.23, length apex clypeus-cuneus fracture 4.41– 5.77, width across pronotum 1.50–1.55. COLORATION: Entire dorsal surface black (fig. 7), sometimes vertex castaneous; cuneus reddish black; antennal segments 1 to 4 black with second antennal segment sometimes yellowish; venter black; pro-, meso- and metapleuron black; coxae lighter than femora, yellowish or orange, with brown base; trochanter and femora bright redorange or femora red-orange and tibiae more yellow-brown; tibia usually brown basally; all tarsal segments brown or second segment lighter. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: General aspect very shiny; pronotum and scutellum rugose; dorsal surface including antennal segments clothed with reclining short black setae or lighter golden shiny setae (fig. 10D); dull area below ventral margin of eye (fig. 7); tibia with strong long black spines; claws over most of length straight, curved apically; pulvillus connate to claw on its entire length (fig. 10C). STRUCTURE: Elongate to elongate ovoid (fig. 7); pronotum and corium punctated; head elongate and vertical (figs. 7, 10A); labium reaching to mesocoxa or beyond; vertex with or without carina; second antennal segment inflated (fig. 7). GENITALIA: Phallotheca elongate or short and stout (fig. 9); vesica simple, apical part beyond secondary gonopore bent or straight, tapering into point (fig. 9); anterior process of leπ paramere rounded apically; right paramere straight or apical part distinctly bent (fig. 9).

Female: Total length 5.91–7.15, length apex clypeus-cuneus fracture 4.60–5.72, width across pronotum 1.54–1.77. Coloration, surface, vestiture and structure as in male, except second antennal segment more inflated distally (fig. 7); body more strongly ovoid than male. GENI-

TALIA: Dorsal labiate plate sclerotized laterally; sclerotized rings of dorsal labiate plate ovoid and roundish apically or distinctly elongated and pointed apically; dorsal labiate plate sometimes with medioposterior triangular sclerotized process caudally; posterior wall with spinose field on surface; sclerotized part of posterior wall with lobe medially (fig. 12).

HOSTS: Asteraceae , Ericaceae , Fabaceae , Grossulariaceae , Pinaceae, Rhamnacea , and Rosaceae .

DISTRIBUTION: United States, Canada, and Mexico.

DISCUSSION: Knight (1968b) based his species key mainly on characters of the second antennal segment. Although there is a faint difference in the inflation of the apical part of the second antennal segment, it is difficult to characterize. The genitalic structures are a far more reliable indicator of species differences (figs. 9, 11). For the females the posterior wall seems to be the best character to separate the species (fig. 11).

A very similar looking Mirinae species, Ectopiocerus anthracinus Uhler, 1890 , can be collected in the same habitats as Teleorhinus and confused with Teleorhinus species on the great similarity of appearance, but its pretarsal and genitalic characters clearly distinguish E. anthracinus as a member of the Mirinae .

Carvalho, J. C. M. 1952. On the major classification of the Miridae (Hemiptera). (With keys to subfamilies and tribes and a catalogue of the world genera.). Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias 24: 31 - 110.

Kirkaldy, G. W. 1906. List of the genera of the pagiopodous Hemiptera-Heteroptera, with their type species from 1758 to 1904 and also of the aquatic and semi-aquatic Trochalopoda. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 32: 117 - 156, 156 a- 156 b.

Knight, H. H. 1922. The genus Cyrtopeltis Fieber in North America (Heteroptera-Miridae). Bulletin of the Brooklyn Entomological Society 17: 65 - 67.

Knight, H. H. 1968 b. Taxonomic review: Miridae of the Nevada test site and Western United States. Brigham Young University Science Bulletin Biological Series 9: 1 - 282.

McIver, J. D., and G. M. Stonedahl. 1987 a. Biology of the myrmecomorphic plant bug Coquillettia insignis Uhler (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylidae). Journal of the New York Entomological Society 95: 258 - 277.

Reuter, O. M. 1909. Bemerkungen uber nearktische Capsiden nebst Beschreibung neuer Arten. Acta Societatis Scientiarum Fennicae 36 (2): 1 - 86, 3 pl.

Schuh, R. T. 1974. The Orthotylinae and Phylinae (Hemiptera: Miridae) of South Africa with a phylogenetic analysis of the ant-mimetic tribes of the two subfamilies for the world. Entomologica Americana 47: 1 - 332.

Uhler, P. R. 1890. Observations on North American Capsidae, with descriptions of new species (No. 5). Transactions of the Maryland Academy of Sciences 1: 73 - 88.

Van Duzee, E. P. 1917. Catalogue of the Hemiptera of America north of Mexico (excepting the Aphididae, Coccidae, and Aleurodidae). University of California Publications Technical Bulletins Entomology 2: xiv, 1 - 902.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Miridae

Tribe

Pronotocrepini