Zuata ohausi (Jacobi)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4169.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B8B067BF-F6E6-4122-B884-AA385FF04421 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A5742D-FFCA-AE15-FF76-A87DC8E2FB0A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2016-09-20 06:10:31, last updated 2016-09-20 06:15:44) |
scientific name |
Zuata ohausi (Jacobi) |
status |
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Zuata ohausi (Jacobi) , redefined.
Tomaspis ohausi Jacobi, 1908: 215 (to Zuata: Fennah, 1968 ). Tomaspisinella luteomaculata Lallemand, 1949: 117 , syn.nov.
Remarks. The female type of Z. luteomaculata is somewhat darker than the male type of Z. ohausi , and comes from Peru rather than Ecuador, but their size (male 8.5 mm, female 9 mm) and coloration are consistent with normal sexual dimorphism (e.g., in the similarly colored Z. hysginon from Colombia), and their countries of origin are adjacent.
Zuata obrienorum sp. nov.
Etymology. obrienorum (patronym), named in honor of the collectors.
Diagnosis. Each tegmen bears 2 pale spots.
Description. Black with yellow band across anterior half of pronotum and 2 ivory spots on tegmen, basal one across clavus and adjacent corium, distal one across bases of anteapical cells ( Fig. 13 D). Male pygofer short, with obliquely truncate tip and vertical posterior margin ( Fig. 43 A); subgenital plates rapidly tapered, ending in tiny spine directed ventrad, separated nearly to base by narrow slit ( Fig. 43 D); style long, bulbous at midlength, tip narrow and straight; theca recurved with 5 small preapical spines, a strongly curved one just before tip on caudal surface, pair of straight, divergent spines on anterior surface and below these a pair of parallel, retrorse spines with inturned tips. Length: male 5.7 mm, female 6.0 mm, width across eyes 1.6–1.7 mm, across pronotum 1.6–1.7 mm; length of eye 0.5 mm, of side margins of pronotum 0.6 mm.
Type. Holotype male, PANAMA, Cerro Campana , 29 July 1995 (C.W. & L.B, O’Brien) # 725,148 in ILNHS . Paratype, 1 female, same data but #725,147.
Remarks. I take great pleasure in naming this little beetle-like Hemipteran for the husband and wife team (Coleopterist and Hemipterist) who collected these insects and have done so much for entomology over the years.
Fennah, R. G. (1968) Revisionary notes on the New World genera of Cercopid froghoppers (Homoptera: Cercopoidea). Bulletin of Entomological Research, 58, 165 - 190. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0007485300055954
Jacobi, A. (1908) Neue Cercopiden des Andengebietes. Sitzungsberichte der Gesellschaft naturforschender Freunde, 8, 200 - 215. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. part. 12854
Lallemand, V. (1949) Revision des Cercopinae (Hemiptera Homoptera). Memoires de l'Institut royal des Sciences naturelle de Belgique, 32, 1 - 193.
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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Zuata ohausi (Jacobi)
Andrew Hamilton, K. G. 2016 |
Tomaspis ohausi
Lallemand 1949: 117 |
Jacobi 1908: 215 |
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