Discolopeus tetracaenus, Stiller, 2019

Stiller, Michael, 2019, A new leafhopper genus Discolopeus and nine new species (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae, Deltocephalinae) associated with shrubs, trees and poisonous plants in South Africa, Zootaxa 4559 (2), pp. 201-244 : 223-226

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4559.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F5FD59CB-D2B5-42ED-A5F3-ABF9D67205F9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5937174

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EE87F7-7A69-FF9A-FF4C-FA08EDF3FD57

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Discolopeus tetracaenus
status

sp. nov.

Discolopeus tetracaenus View in CoL sp.n.

Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 a–g, 15a–f, 19c.

Diagnosis. Crown short; subapically with dark brown to black submarginal, small, paired marking. Subgenital plate obovate; ratio of length to width 1.16–1.25. Aedeagal shaft with ventral paired sclerotized teeth subapically; dorsal elongate sclerotized ridge ending in distal subapical tooth; basally with ventral, single conical tooth; uniformly curved posterodorsally, tubular; membranous; dorsal apodeme in dorsal view inverted Y shape, with median longitudinal bar; aedeagal paraphysis preatrium produced into long, subparallel, straight, acuminate paraphysis, distal third acanthoid. Style apophysis curvate, weakly sclerotized, with median elongate, right-angled digitate process. Connective with median section concave, arms short. Pygofer lobe apex with acuminate, sclerotized posteroventrad process. Tergite X rectangular; large rhomboid, membranous recess ventromedially.

Etymology. Named for the four teeth on the aedeagal shaft, with two nouns in apposition, Greek, tetra, four and akaina, tooth.

Male. Color. Ground color stramineous. Crown with amorphous to angulate markings: small, paired dark brown to black marking apically on crown and near ocelli and on disc ( Figs 15 View FIGURE 15 a–c). Pronotum with small, circular marking near posterior margin of compound eye. Tegmina with some brown markings in discal, apical and claval cells, some reticulate markings in anteapical cells ( Figs 15 View FIGURE 15 a–d).

Male. Measurements. Overall length 4.51–4.79 mm; crown length 0.42–0.44 mm; crown length next to eye 0.36 mm; pronotum length 0.50 mm; head width 1.38 mm; pronotum width 1.04–1.11 mm; ocellus diameter 28.0 µm; interocellar distance 70.0 µm.

Male. Genitalia. Genital capsule short in lateral view, wide anterior apodeme, subgenital plate extending beyond posterior margin of pygofer lobe ( Figs 13a, 13b View FIGURE 13 ). Tergite X short, tubular, incised about half-way into genital capsule, ventrally with large membranous recess ( Fig. 13a View FIGURE 13 ). Subgenital plate slightly longer than wide (1.16–1.25 times longer than wide, n=2), basal and medial margins sub-parallel, posterior margin acutely angled to medial margin; macrosetae near apex, submarginal, fine setae subapically and laterally ( Fig. 13c View FIGURE 13 ). Pygofer lobe about half as wide as width across base of genital capsule, short (as long as basal length of genital capsule) ( Fig. 13b View FIGURE 13 ); lobe apex with sclerotized, acuminate ventroposteriad process. Aedeagus with shaft tubular, straight in dorsal view, curved in lateral view; dorsally with sclerotized ridge ending in subapical tooth; ventrally with subapical, paired short teeth; basally with large conical tooth-like process ( Figs 13d, 13e View FIGURE 13 ); gonopore apical, membranous; dorsal apodeme in lateral view triangular, in dorsal view inverted Y-shaped, arms short, medially with longitudinal ridge ( Fig. 13e View FIGURE 13 ); aedeagal paraphysis longer than shaft, tubular, distal third acanthoid ( Fig. 13d View FIGURE 13 ). Style with apophysis weakly sclerotized, curvate, narrowly acuminate, directed lateroposterially, smooth, with dorsomedial digitate process; lateral anterior arm narrow, elongate; medial anterior arm short, wide, apex curved dorsad ( Fig. 13g View FIGURE 13 ); style extending about half-way into plate ( Fig. 13c View FIGURE 13 ). Connective medially concave, arms short, triangular ( Fig. 13f View FIGURE 13 ).

Female. Unknown due to lack of suitable specimens. Specimen in Fig. 15c View FIGURE 15 with same collection details as males but different colour pattern, female in Figs 15 View FIGURE 15 d–f with similar colour pattern to that of male, but different collection details.

Material examined. Holotype male. Western Cape Province. Ladismith , (-33.4741, 21.2701), 1973/04/21, J.G. Theron . Paratypes. 1♂ 1♀. 1♂, ibid., holotype ; 1♀, Nietgenaamd Nature Reserve , -33.41325 23.19548, 6.v. 2015/05/06, M. Stiller .

Remarks. The most distinctive feature of this species is the digitate process on the apophysis of the style. The basal tooth-like process of the aedeagal shaft in lateral view suggests an association with the shaft, but in posterior or ventroposterior view the process appears associated with the atrium or preatrium. The styles of other species of Discolopeus have a single, small and short subapical or apical ventral tooth. The apophysis of the style of D. thigmacaenus and D. tetracaenus is weakly sclerotized, curvate, setose medially, but in D. tetracaenus with a digitate process. D. thigmacaenus ( Figs 12 View FIGURE 12 a–d) resembles D. viraktamathi in coloration ( Figs 17 View FIGURE 17 a–e), and to a lesser extent D. arctus , which has fewer markings on the crown ( Figs 8a, 8b View FIGURE 8 ). The point distribution map of D. tetracaenus is in Fig. 19c View FIGURE 19 .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadellidae

SubFamily

Deltocephalinae

Genus

Discolopeus

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