Pediopsoides (Pediopsoides) quadrispinosus Li & Dai, 2023

Li, Hu, Li, Juan, Webb, Michael D., Wang, Jia-Jia & Dai, Ren-Huai, 2023, Six new species of the leafhopper subgenus Pediopsoides (Pediopsoides) (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae, Eurymelinae, Macropsini) from China, ZooKeys 1165, pp. 183-201 : 183

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1165.81776

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6EAEB205-1F0F-4215-8228-4A4D0A4EC742

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1DD04166-668A-4A8E-A25D-B37F8779973F

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:1DD04166-668A-4A8E-A25D-B37F8779973F

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Pediopsoides (Pediopsoides) quadrispinosus Li & Dai
status

sp. nov.

Pediopsoides (Pediopsoides) quadrispinosus Li & Dai sp. nov.

Figs 23-33 View Figures 23–33

Material examined.

Holotype ♂, China: Yunnan Province, Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture , Shangri-La, 08.viii.2012, collected by Zhi-Hua Fan (GUGC).

Description.

Body color (Figs 23-25 View Figures 23–33 ). Dorsum yellowish brown. Head (Fig. 23 View Figures 23–33 ) yellowish with intense brown maculae; face (Fig. 23 View Figures 23–33 ) yellowish, punctures on surface brown, postclypeus with pair of slight brown spots, below ocelli with paired spots also, eyes dark brown with reddish tinge. Pronotum (Fig. 23 View Figures 23–33 ) yellowish brown with darker striations and punctures. Mesonotum (Fig. 23 View Figures 23–33 ) yellow-brown with darker punctures. Forewing (Figs 23 View Figures 23–33 , 24 View Figures 23–33 ) yellowish brown, several cross veins black. Legs yellow-brown with darker markings.

Body form (Figs 23-25 View Figures 23–33 ). Head including eyes (Fig. 23 View Figures 23–33 ) almost as wide as pronotum, crown short and nearly parallel-sided, vertex clearly projecting forward angularly. Face (Fig. 25 View Figures 23–33 ) slightly depressed in central part in lateral aspect (Fig. 24 View Figures 23–33 ), face including eyes wider than long, surface with clear intense punctations and striae, postclypeus with distinct longitudinal carina, distance between ocelli nearly 4.3 × that from ocellus to adjacent eye. Pronotum (Fig. 23 View Figures 23–33 ) broad, 2.3 × wider than long, with weak longitudinal carina at midlength, obliquely striated, anterior margin strongly produced forward, and posterior margin concave at midlength. Mesonotum (Fig. 23 View Figures 23–33 ) nearly 1.2 × as long as pronotum. Forewing (Figs 23 View Figures 23–33 , 24 View Figures 23–33 ) with veins prominent.

Male genitalia (Figs 26-33 View Figures 23–33 ). Pygofer side (Fig. 26 View Figures 23–33 ) broad basally, lobe caudally truncate with dorsal and ventral margin nearly straight, apical half distinctly serrated. Subgenital plate (Fig. 26 View Figures 23–33 ) slender, shorter than ventral margin of pygofer, surface with fine setae. Dorsal connective (Fig. 28 View Figures 23–33 ) S-shaped, with medial long process from its ventral margin and directed posteriorly with irregular serrated margins, apex bifurcated. Style (Fig. 29 View Figures 23–33 ) angled at basal 2/5, stem parallel-margined. Connective (Figs 30 View Figures 23–33 , 31 View Figures 23–33 ), anterior margin wider than posterior margin, both lateral arms prolonged, and twisted dorsally. Aedeagus (Figs 32 View Figures 23–33 , 33 View Figures 23–33 ) broad basally, shaft slender, with lateral margins sinuated in ventral view, apex with pair of short acute processes on each side of gonopore.

Measurement.

Body length (including tegmen): 4.4 mm.

Distribution.

China (Yunnan Province).

Etymology.

The specific epithet, Pediopsoides quadrispinosus , is derived from the Latin words quadri - and spinosus, referring to the aedeagal shaft with four apical spines.

Remarks.

The new species is similar to P. (P.) jingdongensis in having the same yellowish brown body and body form and male pygofer ventral margin with distinct serrations in apical half formed by a row of numerous short regularly spaced denticles. It differs, however, from P. (P.) jingdongensis and all other congeners by its slender aedeagal shaft in lateral view with four apical spines and also by the shape of its dorsal connective.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadellidae

SubFamily

Eurymelinae

Tribe

Macropsini

Genus

Pediopsoides

SubGenus

Pediopsoides