Macroscytus badius ( Walker, 1867 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.194079 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6200802 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/486387CE-FFB0-4C76-FF37-FD9BFCC7A46F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Macroscytus badius ( Walker, 1867 ) |
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Macroscytus badius ( Walker, 1867)
( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 )
Aethus badius Walker, 1867: 159 .
Macroscytus badius: Distant 1899: 222 ; Lis 2000: 392. Macroscytus expansus Signoret, 1883: 479 (syn. by Lis 1994: 236). Macroscytus subaeneus: Hsiao et al. 1977: 46 [part].
Diagnostic characters: Body length: 5.70–7.83 mm, body width: 3.15–4.44 mm. General colour from pale brown to black-brown, corium somewhat paler. Head dorsally impunctate, except for several almost indistinct tiny punctures on paraclypei; clypeus without subapical setigerous punctures (sporadically with a pair of setae – Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 a); each paraclypeus with a row of 4–8 submarginal hair-like setae; 2nd antennal segment about 1.2 times longer than the 3rd; ocular index 2.10–2.80; interocellar index 9.0–15.0. Pronotal transverse discal impression behind calli absent or shallow; lateral margins with 9–13 submarginal setigerous punctures ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 a). Propleural depression and its posterior convexity densely punctate, propleural anterior convexity sparsely punctate apically. Mesocorial disc and exocorium almost evenly punctate; costa separated from exocorium along its entire length; costal margin with 4–7 setigerous punctures ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 a). Male hind femora with large subapical tooth on dorsal margin ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 b); male hind tibiae carinate, without denticles ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 b). Abdominal sterna impunctate or with small punctures posterior to spiracles. Male pygophore as in Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 d (dorsal view); paramere as in Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 c; aedeagus as in Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 f, apical part of 2nd conjunctival appendages more or less curled laterally ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 g); proctiger as in Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 e.
Material examined (clypeus without subapical hair-like setae): CHINA: Hainan Province: Mt. Diaoluo, Lingshui county (18°66'N, 109°93'E), alt. 75m, 1 males, 1 female, 28.v.2007, light-trapped, Peng-zhi Dong leg., 1 male, 28.v.2007, light-trapped, Xu Zhang leg., 2 males, 3 females, 19.iv.2008, light-trapped, Geng-ping Zhu leg.; Datian Cervus eldi National Nature Reserve (19°11'N, 108°80'E), alt. 100m, 52 males, 45 females, 28.iv.2009, light-trapped, Geng-ping Zhu, Yi-ran Mu leg., 7 males, 6 females, 29.iv.2009, light-trapped, Yiran Mu leg., 2 females, 26.iv.2009, light-trapped, Li Xi leg., 2 females, 27.iv.2009, light-trapped, Yi-ran Mu leg.; Maoyang Town (18°94'N, 109°52'E), 1 male, 18.iv.2009, light-trapped, Geng-ping Zhu leg., 1 male, 18.iv.2009, light-trapped, Yi-ran Mu leg.; Tongguling National Nature Reserve (19°68'N, 111°02'E), 9 males, 16 females, 18.vii.2008, light-trapped, Zhong-hua Fan, Xu Zhang leg.; (clypeus with a pair of subapical hairlike setae): CHINA: Hainan Province: Mt. Diaoluo, Lingshui county (18°66'N, 109°93'E), alt. 70m, 1 male, 22.iv.2008, light-trapped, Geng-ping Zhu and Bo Cai leg., 1 female, 19.iv.2008, light-trapped, Geng-ping Zhu leg.; Datian Cervus eldi National Nature Reserve (19°11'N, 108°80'E), alt. 100m, 1 male, 1 female, 28.iv.2009, light-trapped, Geng-ping Zhu leg., 2 males, 3 females, 28.iv.2009, light-trapped, Li Xi leg., 3 males, 4 females, 28.iv.2009, light-trapped, Geng-ping Zhu,Yi-ran Mu leg., 3 males, 1 female, 29.iv.2009, light-trapped,Yi-ran Mu leg.; Maoyang Town (18°94'N, 109°52'E), 1 female, 18.iv.2009, light-trapped, Yi-ran Mu leg.
Distribution: China (Hainan), Burma, India, Maldive Islands, Nepal, Sri Lanka.
Notes: Wu (1935) listed this species from North China in his catalogue of the Chinese insects, but then its presence there was regarded as doubtful ( Lis 1994, 2000). Our present study confirms its occurrence in the Hainan Province (South China); however, its presence in northern regions of the country still needs confirmation. Several specimens studied by us had a cephalic chaetotaxy different of its typical specimens, i.e., possessed a pair of subapical setigerous punctures on the clypeus – Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 a (all hitherto known specimens of this species bear no hair-like setae on the clypeus).
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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Macroscytus badius ( Walker, 1867 )
Zhu, Geng-Ping, Liu, Guo-Qing & Lis, Jerzy A. 2010 |
Macroscytus badius:
Lis 2000: 392 |
Lis 1994: 236 |
Hsiao 1977: 46 |
Distant 1899: 222 |
Signoret 1883: 479 |
Aethus badius
Walker 1867: 159 |