Erythmelus (Erythmelus) agilis ( Enock, 1909 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1641.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E7C7AD48-AF05-46CB-802E-DA6C6B046E23 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F56F87A0-866C-EE28-FF60-FBB598CAFC9A |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Erythmelus (Erythmelus) agilis ( Enock, 1909 ) |
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Erythmelus (Erythmelus) agilis ( Enock, 1909) View in CoL
( Figs 4, 5 View FIGURES 4, 5 )
Enaesius agilis Enock 1909: 456 View in CoL , plate XIV (lectotype female, designated by Graham 1982: 221 [Natural History Museum, London, England, UK], examined. Type locality: Woking, Surrey Co., England, UK).
Erythmelus (Enaesius) agilis (Enock) View in CoL : Debauche 1948: 197–200 (redescription); Donev 2004: 123–124 (diagnosis, distribution).
Erythmelus agilis (Enock) View in CoL : Graham 1982: 221 (lectotype designation).
Erythmelus (Erythmelus) agilis (Enock) View in CoL : Triapitsyn 2003: 12–14 (diagnosis, distribution, host associations).
Enaesius laticeps Enock 1909: 456 View in CoL (holotype female [?lost from the Natural History Museum, London, England, UK], not examined. Type locality: Woking, Surrey Co., England, UK). De facto synonymized under E. agilis View in CoL by Kryger 1950: 57.
Enaesius limburgensis Soyka 1932: 82 View in CoL (holotype female [?lost from Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, Vienna, Austria], not examined. Type locality: Valkenburg, Limburg, Netherlands). Synonymized under E. agilis View in CoL by Triapitsyn 2003: 12.
Material examined. CANADA. BRITISH COLUMBIA, Burnaby , 13.vii.1979, D. Gillespie [1 female, CNCI] . ONTARIO: Near Ancaster, 43°15’N 80°00’W, 7–28.vii.1995, B. DeJonge [1 male, CNCI]. Gloucester, 5–7.vii.1977 [1 female, CNCI]. Guelph, University of Guelph Arboretum , 43°32’N 80°13’W, 14.vi.2006, L. Coote [1 female, UCRC]. Hamilton: 13.vii.1980, M. Sanborne [1 female, CNCI]; 13.vi.1981, M. Sanborne [1 female, CNCI]; 22–29.vi.1981, M. Sanborne [1 female, CNCI] GoogleMaps . NORTHWEST TERRITORIES, Martin River , 6.ix.1972, FWI– Pipeline Project [1 female, CNCI] . PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: Harrington , 19.viii.1993, M.E.M. Smith [1 female, CNCI] . QUEBEC, Frelighsberg , 14.vii.1995, N. Bostanian [1 male, CNCI] . USA. ALASKA, Bristol Bay Co., King Salmon, Naknek River, 16.viii.1952, J.B. Hartley [1 female, CNCI] . CALIFORNIA: Solano Co., Dozier, Hog Wallows , 27.iii.1972, E.E. Grissell (“emerged 1–12.iv.1972 ex grass stems ( Avena ) containing Tetramesa ”) [5 females, 2 males, USNM]. Yuba Co. , Sierra Foothill Field Station , 3 mi. N of Smartville, 4.v.1980, J. Whitfield [1 female, EMEC] . WASHINGTON, Okanogan Co.,
Okanogan National Forest , Wauconda, 25.vii.1985, A. Finnamore, T . Thormin [1 female, CNCI] .
Diagnosis. Member of the agilis species group ( Triapitsyn 2003). This species is similar to the Palaearctic species E. (E.) magnus S. Triapitsyn and E. (E.) soykai Donev , from which it differs by the morphological features given in the key by Triapitsyn (2003). Females of E. (E.) agilis are characterized by the following: body coloration dark brown, except midlobe of mesoscutum with a narrow, light brown, transverse, submedian stripe, and with basal two terga of the gaster and the base of the third gastral tergum yellow; antenna ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 4, 5 ) slender, with a long scape, F1 about as long as or only slightly longer than the pedicel, F4 and F6 each with 2 longitudinal sensilla, and clava with 6 longitudinal sensilla; forewing ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 4, 5 ) 4.3–5.3 x as long as wide, the longest marginal cilia 0.95–1.00 x greatest forewing width, the blade more or less uniformly, densely setose in apical half; hind wing about 20 x as long as wide; ovipositor about 4/5 length of gaster, a little exserted beyond apical gastral tergum (by about 1/10–1/6 of ovipositor length), 0.9–1.3:1 x length of metatibia. Males of E. agilis are similar to females except for the normal sexually dimorphic features: all flagellomeres of the antenna longer than scape, forewing slightly wider than in female, and genitalia occupying about 1/2 length of gaster.
Distribution. Canada and USA (new records) as well as Belgium, Denmark, England ( UK), Finland, Germany, Italy, Kyrgyzstan, Netherlands, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and Switzerland ( Triapitsyn 2003), and also Bulgaria, Greece, Macedonia, and Serbia ( Donev 2004).
Host. Leptopterna dolabrata (Linnaeus) (Miridae) ( Triapitsyn 2003).
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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Erythmelus (Erythmelus) agilis ( Enock, 1909 )
Triapitsyn, Serguei V., Berezovskiy, Vladimir V., Hoddle, Mark S. & Morse, Joseph G. 2007 |
Erythmelus (Erythmelus) agilis (Enock)
Triapitsyn, S. V. 2003: 12 |
Erythmelus agilis (Enock)
Graham, M. W. R. de V. 1982: 221 |
Erythmelus (Enaesius) agilis (Enock)
Donev, A. D. 2004: 123 |
Debauche, H. R. 1948: 197 |
Enaesius limburgensis
Triapitsyn, S. V. 2003: 12 |
Soyka, W. 1932: 82 |
Enaesius agilis
Graham, M. W. R. de V. 1982: 221 |
Enock, F. 1909: 456 |
Enaesius laticeps
Kryger, J. P. 1950: 57 |
Enock, F. 1909: 456 |