Stenocranini Wagner, 1963

Wallner, Adam M. & Bartlett, Charles R., 2019, Comparative morphology of female gonapophyses IX in Delphacidae (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Fulgoromorpha) with key to tribes, Zootaxa 4564 (1), pp. 137-172 : 154-155

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4564.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5EA3EB07-F3FD-4F05-9478-EAE0AA797CDE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5943500

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039087C3-FFCC-FFAC-1388-B73EA4360069

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Stenocranini Wagner
status

 

Tribe Stenocranini Wagner

Description. Gonapophyses IX mostly broad and spatulate dorsally, predominately curvilinear laterally ( Figs 11– 14 View FIGURE 11 View FIGURE 12 View FIGURE 13 View FIGURE 14 ), average length 844.71–1740.74 µm, width 45.56–178.49 µm; teeth variable in shape and frequency, ranging from as a few as 12 on Stenocranus sp. ( Kyrgyzstan, Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ) to 30 for Embolophora monoceros ( Fig. 11A View FIGURE 11 ); teeth morphology varied from numerous short, sharp teeth; short and square-shaped; slanted and lobed; irregular-shaped flattened plates; notched teeth on distal half to third ( Figs 11–14 View FIGURE 11 View FIGURE 12 View FIGURE 13 View FIGURE 14 ). Pits or sensory structures near gonapophyses margins, sometimes (in dorsal view) concentrated near center ( Fig. 11A View FIGURE 11 ). Specialized features include nodulate teeth on Stenocranus sp. ( Kyrgyzstan; Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ); lateral teeth and a greatly projecting conical apex on Tanycranus elongatus ( Fig. 14A View FIGURE 14 ); and three Old World genera [viz., E. monoceros ( Fig. 11A View FIGURE 11 ), Terauchiana singularis ( Fig. 13A View FIGURE 13 ), and S. agamopsyche ( Fig. 12C View FIGURE 12 )] with concavity between teeth and shaft of gonapophyses.

Notes. Stenocranini is composed of 10 genera in 93 species. The greatest diversity of the tribe is Holarctic, especially Asia, with few taxa in the southern Hemisphere (e.g., Embolophora Stål in Africa, Tanycranus Bartlett in South America) ( Bartlett 2005, 2010a). Host associations are almost exclusively graminoids, with some species reported on ferns, and Equisetum (horsetail) ( Bartlett 2010a, Urban et al. 2010).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Delphacidae

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