Scapteriscus abbreviatus Scudder 1869
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4531680 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EDD2E0AA-A581-4AEE-A494-7E5EF21F9D0B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4532263 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FA878C-FFCE-FF8E-10E7-DE6EEA43FCB9 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Scapteriscus abbreviatus Scudder 1869 |
status |
|
Scapteriscus abbreviatus Scudder 1869
Adults and nymphs have very widely separated tibial dactyls ( Fig. 7 View Figures 5-8 ). Adults are short-winged, and the apices of the tegmina are truncate ( Fig. 13 View Figures 9-14 ). This species is a pest of highly managed turf (golf courses) in coastal southern Florida and St. Croix, and a minor pest (because of its restricted range) of crops elsewhere. The species’ distribution in the West Indies:
Guadeloupe – 1938 ( Nickle and Castner 1984).
Jamaica – 1926 ( Gowdey 1926, misidentified as S. didactylus !) – see Frank and Walker (2003), who identified specimens from the Institute of Jamaica as S. abbreviatus , for explanation.
US Virgin Islands: St. Croix – 1918 (Zwaluwenburg 1918 p. 6, misreported as “the changa”, the vernacular name bestowed on S. didactylus in Puerto Rico!) – year? ( Miskimen and Bond 1970 as probably S. abbreviatus ) – 1940 ( Nickle and Castner 1984 as S. abbreviatus ) – ( Ivie and Nickle 1986 discounted presence of any species other than S. abbreviatus ) – 1991 ( Frank and Keularts 1996: fresh specimens of S. abbreviatus collected and identified with explanation of history).
Puerto Rico – 1910 (one specimen in NHM labeled “Antilles P. Rico 1910-339” examined by J.H. Frank in September 2011 and identified as S. abbreviatus – 1917 Wolcott (1924) as S. abbreviatus – 1920 Nickle and Castner (1984) as S. abbreviatus ).
Haiti – 1929 ( Nickle and Castner 1984).
Cuba – 1906 ( Cook 1906, misidentified as S. didactylus ! and Rehn 1909 consequently listed as S. didactylus !) – ( Bruner 1940, with an unequivocal photograph, as S. abbreviatus ) – (Zayas 1974 as S. abbreviatus ) – (Ruíz Baliú and Fernández Iriana 1996, as S. abbreviatus ). Nickle (2003) stated that S. abbreviatus may have been present in Cuba “perhaps as early as 1750” but provided no evidence – the earliest reference he cited is Saussure 1874, but Saussure does not mention the presence of this species in Cuba).
Bahamas: New Providence Island, Nassau – 1922? ( Caudell 1922 as S. abbreviatus ; the specimen examined by Caudell, supposedly collected by W. M. Mann in Nassau sometime before 1922, and now in the US National Museum of Natural History) – this is curious because W.M. Wheeler is known to have collected on New Providence in May 1904, whereas his student W.M. Mann collected on other Bahamian islands (Andros and Mangrove Cay) in May-June 1917 – Nickle and Castner (1984) re-examined the specimen and confirmed its identity but added no details – it is even more curious because of a specimen in the University of Iowa collection mentioned by Caudell (1922) as being labeled as S. variegatus and B 1047.013 but identified by him (Caudell) as S. abbreviatus , collector and collection locality unknown (see below).
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.