Anisops exiguus Horváth, 1919

Nieser, Nico, 2004, Guide To Aquatic Heteroptera Of Singapore And Peninsular Malaysia Iii. Pleidae And Notonectidae, Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 52 (1), pp. 79-96 : 86

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13244673

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B22C87F3-1448-E02E-FF5D-F856E1FAFAD0

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Anisops exiguus Horváth, 1919
status

 

Anisops exiguus Horváth, 1919 View in CoL

Anisops exigua Horváth, 1919 .

Anisops exigera - Brooks, 1951 (misspelling, redescription); Fernando & Cheng, 1974; Fernando & Leong, 1976.

Diagnosis. – Generally a small, sordid white, shiny species. Greatest width at pronotal humeri. Lateral margins of abdomen with hemielytra, anteriorly parallel, posteriorly converging.

Length, male 4.3-4.8, female 4.3-5.2; width, male and female 1.2-1.4.

In dorsal view the head is anteriorly truncate with vertex slightly indented. Width of head 0.8-0.9 times the humeral width of pronotum and about six times anterior width of vertex. Synthlipsis very narrow, one fifth to one eighth the anterior width of vertex. Labrum without specialized bristles. Male. Tylus slightly swollen with a smooth surface. Rostral prong slightly shorter than third rostral segment, originating in its proximal third ( Fig. 16 View Figs ). Forefemur apically narrowed. Stridulatory comb on foretibia with 9-11 teeth which are longest in the middle.

Female. Tylus flat.

Brachypterous form unknown.

Remarks. – Anisops exiguus is very similar to A. lansburyi . Males can be recognized by the rostral prong, which is short in A. exiguus and long in A. lansburyi ( Figs. 16, 17 View Figs ). In addition the stridulary comb on the foretibia although similar in the number and structure of its teeth, lacks the one or two small teeth present apically in A. lansburyi ( Fig. 21 View Figs ). Females of A. exiguus are comparatively broader than those of A. lansburyi but these species are difficult to distinguish in the female sex. (See also under A. niveus ).

Distribution. – A widespread species, recorded from Papua New Guinea, Malaysia, Vietnam and India ( Brooks, 1951; Lansbury 1964). Fernando & Cheng (1974) and Fernando & Leong (1976) recorded it from Kedah and Johor. In ZRC there are samples from Melaka, Selangor, Johor and Bukit Timah Nature Reserve, (13 Dec.1996, coll. T. Wong, H. K. Lua et al.), first record for Singapore. The species is apparently widespread in the Malay Peninsula but has been collected infrequently, and with only a few specimens in each sample.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Notonectidae

Genus

Anisops

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Notonectidae

Genus

Anisops

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