Acrorrhinium Noualhier
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3647.3.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BF938988-855D-4596-93C8-09DA272341C5 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3507674 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C787B4-FFBD-6C14-FF06-F997FD8FFEE0 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Acrorrhinium Noualhier |
status |
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Genus Acrorrhinium Noualhier View in CoL View at ENA
Diagnosis. Readily recognized by the following diagnostic characters: Body elongate, 3–7 mm in total length, with long antennae, labium and legs; dorsal surface as a rule matte; frons noticeably projecting anteriorly; and endosoma usually spiral and/or coiled. Detailed diagnoses are provided by Schuh (1984) and Zhang & Liu (2010).
Discussion. This distinctive genus is easily recognized by having a mesal projection on the frons. Currently 26 described species are known mainly from the Afrotropical Region. In Asia, eight species have hitherto been recorded (Schuh, 1984; Yasunaga, 2001; Zhang & Liu, 2010). However, most species appear to be rare, and biological information is still fragmentary for this unique genus.
Almost all members of Acrorrhinium are known to occur in the subtropics and tropics; only A. inexpectatum (Josifov, 1978) is restricted to temperate and cold temperate climate zones in Far Eastern Asia (Yasunaga, 2001; Zhang & Liu, 2010). Kerzhner (1988) reported that A. inexpectatum is associated with barks or branches of Quercus spp. ( Fagaceae ) and other deciduous trees, whereas both adults and nymphs of this species were confirmed to inhabit bark or trunks of a weeping willow, Salix babylonica L. ( Salicaceae ) and a Japanese cherry, Prunus yedoensis (Matsum.) A. V. Vassil (Rosaceae) , planted in some urbanized areas in Honshu, Japan (Yasunaga, 2001; Yasunaga, unpublished observation). Linnavuori (1965) cited Juniperus phoenicea L. ( Cupressaceae ) as a host plant of A. conspersum Noualhier , the type species of the genus.
In Thailand, one of the new species described below, A. tritonion , was confirmed to have been associated with a tropical broadleaf, Hibiscus tiliaceus L.
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