Zygon, Andrew Hamilton, K. G., 2014

Andrew Hamilton, K. G., 2014, The old-world Zygonini tr. nov. (Hemiptera, Cercopoidea, Clastopteridae), with new taxa from the related Machaerotinae, Zootaxa 3768 (4), pp. 437-459 : 450-451

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3768.4.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B537D07F-E104-4B7A-8FD1-5C383AADB070

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5678123

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B80150-FFD2-341A-FF23-F92EFC28532E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Zygon
status

gen. nov.

Zygon gen. nov.

Type-species: Zygon desegregatum sp. nov., the only included species.

Etymology. zygon (n noun), Greek for “yoke”

Diagnosis. Head much narrower (0.70–0.65 ×) than pronotum, lateral margins of pronotum almost as long (0.8 ×) as interocular distance; antennal ledge small but prominent ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1 – 4 C); antenna with arista arising near centre of postpedicel ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 18 – 32 C); postpedicel and base of arista as strongly imbricate as pedicel ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 18 – 32 D) almost concealing small, globular basiconic sensillum (b 1 in Fig. 38 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ) flanked by an asymmetric pair of coeloconic sensilla (1 ventrally and 4 together in a dorsal pit, c1 and c 3 in Fig. 38 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ) and a peglike coeloconic sensillum resembling a small basiconic sensillum (c1,c 3 in Fig. 27 View FIGURES 18 – 32 D) beyond the coeloconic sensillum cluster; rostrum extending beyond hind trochanters; pronotum punctured, with obscure median ridge; scutellum sulcate. Tegmina densely punctate, opaque, veins strongly carinate throughout, forming 3 elongate anteapical cells, of which central one is more than half length of others and much longer than adjacent apical cell, basally closed by carinate vein ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 5 – 9 A). Hind wings each with 7 hooks on costal margin, 4 mounted on triangular process. Hind hind tibia short, broad, densely setose and with a single lateral spine located near midlength; tibial pectens broad, sometimes irregular, each with 11–12 spines, those of basitarsomere with 12–14 spines, of second tarsomere with 2–6 spines covered by long setae. Male anal tube with ringlike basal segment bearing a tiny pair of ventral lobes ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 5 – 9 C); paraprocts longer than 11th segment excluding epiproct; pygofer clearly divided into sclerous anterior two-thirds and membranous posterior one-third, with notch near dorsal margin; theca heavily sclerotized, stout, in lateral aspect abruptly angled at midlength, marginal serrations most clearly visible in lateral aspect, in posterior aspect ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 5 – 9 D) abruptly narrowed just before enlarged, cordate base, nearly parallel-margined above constriction almost to truncate tip. Ovipositor 2nd valvulae 1.8 mm long, crested on apical fifth, tip blunt ( Fig. 17A View FIGURES 17 A – R ).

Remarks. The small head contrasting with the wide, weakly bowed and elongate pronotum makes these insects appear to be wearing a yoke. The length of the apical cells differ considerably on the tegmina, but the middle one is always much shorter than its corresponding anteapical cell.

The highly imbricate arista arising in the centre of the postpedicel, and the two dissimilar forms of both basiconic and coeloconic sensilla are unique in Clastopteridae . These evidently are highly autapomorphic characters, perhaps representing a throw-back to the plesiomorphic condition of Cercopoidea, because the legs and genitalia show the close relationship between Zygon and Hemizygon .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Machaerotidae

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF