Wygomiris paveli Yasunaga & Duwal, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.2478/aemnp-2019-0007 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:027CE86F-9E75-44C3-A35E-E0C20BA4B693 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5062806 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CDBD54-EC49-FFE7-FCE8-F8D3FD50FD63 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Wygomiris paveli Yasunaga & Duwal |
status |
sp. nov. |
Wygomiris paveli Yasunaga & Duwal sp. nov.
( Figs 14–15 View Figs 9–18 , 36–39 View Figs 33–39 , 140–143 View Figs 131–145 , 196–200 View Figs 192–200 )
Type material. HOLOTYPE: ♁, TAIWAN: PINGDONG (= PINGTUNG): Siangjiao Bay , 21°55′42.7″N, 120°49′40″E, UV lighting, 16 Feb 2011, C.T. Chiu & Y.C. Lan ( AMNH _ PBI 00380634 ) ( NMNS) GoogleMaps . PARATYPES: TAIWAN: PINGDONG: Same locality as for holotype, 14 Mar 2012, Y.C. Lan & J.Z. Wang, 1 ♁ ( NMNS); Nanrenshan, UV lighting, 26 Apr 2011, Y.C. Lan & Y.H. Peng, 1 ♁ ( NMNS); Mutan, Cacevakan, 22°06′34.9″N, 120°48′06.1″E, UV lighting, 16 Mar 2017, T. Yasunaga, 1♁ (00380635) ( TYCN). HUALIEN: Yuri, Chohsishan, Malaise trap, 24 Apr 2009 – 12 Dec 2012, W.T. Yang & K.W. Huang, 5 ♁♁, 2 ♀♀ ( NMNS); Hsiulin, Wenlan, Malaise trap, 24 Jun–25 Aug 2009, K.W. Huang & W.T.Yang, 1 ♁ (00380636) ( NMNS); same data except for date 13 Sep–24 Nov 2010, 1 ♁ ( NMNS). CHIAYI: Chungpu, Yunshui Station, Mercury lighting, 7–8 Nov 2006, Lin, Chan, Liang & Lan, 1 ♁ (00380637) ( NMNS).
Differential diagnosis. Recognized readily by its moderate size; generally castaneous basic coloration ( Figs 14–15 View Figs 9–18 ); rather small eyes; rather slender antenna; weakly shining pronotum; yellowish brown fascia on hemelytron; possession of stridulatory device (FWS+MFP, Figs 55 View Figs 40–55 , 141–142 View Figs 131–145 ); and contrastingly darkened abdomen ( Figs 164–165 View Figs 161–167 ). Based on the similar genitalic structure (endosomal shape in particular), this new species is apparently sister to W. indochinensis which however has larger eye ( Fig. 144 View Figs 131–145 ) and rather terete antennal segments, and lacks the stridulatory device ( Fig. 145 View Figs 131–145 ) (see YASUNAGA 2012 and DUWAL et al. 2017, for detailed diagnosis and color habitus images of W. indochinensis ).
Description. Male. Macropterous; body generally castaneous, elongate oval, parallel-sided, moderate in size; dorsal surface weakly shining, with sparsely distributed, simple upright setae and woolly (not scalelike) reclining setae. Head somewhat produced anteriorly, with pale, short, erect setae. Antenna pale reddish brown, rather slender, not significantly terete; apex of segment II slightly inflated, about as long as basal width of pronotum; two distal segments reddish brown. Labium shiny pale reddish brown, slightly exceeding apex of mesocoxa, slightly longer than antennal segment II or metafemur; segment IV dark reddish brown. Pronotum weakly shining, not polished; pleura including scent efferent system yellowish brown. Hemelytron chestnut brown, with a yellowish transverse fascia posterior to scutellum; FWS weak, minutely sutured ( Figs 55 View Figs 40–55 , 141 View Figs 131–145 ); membrane smoky brown, with pale, translucent basal half. Coxae and legs pale brown; each femur and tibia partly obscure; MFP minutely scattered ( Figs 55 View Figs 40–55 , 142 View Figs 131–145 ). Abdomen widely shiny dark brown. Male genitalia ( Figs 196–198 View Figs 192–200 ): Pygophore with a small pygophoral spine ( Figs 143 View Figs 131–145 , 196 View Figs 192–200 ). Left paramere with tumid, bulbous sensory lobe ( Fig. 197 View Figs 192–200 ). Endosoma L-shaped, with a long, tapered apical process ( Fig. 198 View Figs 192–200 ).
Female. Similar in overall appearance to male; body somewhat rounded laterally. Female genitalia ( Figs 199–200 View Figs 192–200 ): Bursa copulatrix rather narrow, not strongly sclerotized; sclerotized ring thickened posteriorly ( Fig. 199 View Figs 192–200 ); ovipositors (gonapophyses I and II) rather elongate.
Measurements (♁♁/ ♀♀, mm). Total length of body 3.18–3.26 / 3.18–3.43; head width including eyes 0.67– 0.70/ 0.64–0.70; vertex width 0.28–0.30 / 0.33–0.38; lengths of antennal segments I–IV 0.25–0.27, 1.03–1.05, 0.57–0.60, 0.45–0.47 / 0.24–0.30, 0.91–1.00, 0.54,? [in aberrant ♁ specimen ( Figs 14–15 View Figs 9–18 , 142–143 View Figs 131–145 ): 0.29, 1.19, 0.60, 0.51 (right) and 0.29, 1.35, 0.86 (left)]; labial length 1.21–1.23/ 1.36–1.37; basal width of pronotum 1.03–1.05 / 1.00–1.08; maximum width across hemelytron 1.06–1.16 / 1.21–1.32; and lengths of metafemur, tibia and tarsus 1.03–1.05, 1.66–1.68, 0.30–0.32/ 1.22, 1.53, 0.32.
Etymology. Named in honor of the eminent Czech heteropterist, Dr. Pavel Štys (former head of Department of Zoology of the Charles University, Praha), who regrettably passed away in 2018.
Biology. Adults were occasionally attracted to UV light at night. Collection records suggest that this mirid has two or three generations per year.
Distribution. Taiwan: Hualien, Pingtung (this paper).
AMNH |
American Museum of Natural History |
NMNS |
National Museum of Natural Science |
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.