Dactylissus armillarius Gnezdilov et Soulier-Perkins

Gnezdilov, Vladimir M., Thierry, Bourgoin & Soulier-Perkins, Adeline, 2014, Vietnamese Issidae (Hemiptera, Fulgoroidea): new taxa, new records and new distribution data, Zootaxa 3847 (1) : -

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3847.1.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4C151005-01FC-4503-961A-0A8CBB2F263E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5697962

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C28797-B15C-FFCE-FF50-FF73FE9FFA3D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dactylissus armillarius Gnezdilov et Soulier-Perkins
status

sp. nov.

Dactylissus armillarius Gnezdilov et Soulier-Perkins View in CoL sp. n.

FigS 10-21 View FIGURES 10 – 12 View FIGURES 13 – 14 View FIGURES 15 – 21 , 26-33 View FIGURES 26 – 29 View FIGURES 30 – 33

Type material. Holotype, ♂, Vietnam, Khanh Hoa Province, Hòn Bà massif, 12°6.961΄N, 108°58.734΄E, 13.XI. 2013, 850 m, sweeping, Th. Bourgoin leg., “Mission Hòn Bà MNHN 2013” ( MNHN). Paratypes: Vietnam, Khanh Hoa Province, Hòn Bà massif: 3♂, 3♀, same as holotype (2♂, 3♀— MNHN, 1♂ — ZIN); 1♂, 4♀, 12°6.961’N 108°58.734’E, 872 m, 18.XI.2013, sweeping, “collecte à vue et filet”, A. Soulier-Perkins leg. (1♂, 3♀— MNHN, 1♀— ZIN); 1♀, 12°6.773΄N 108°58.379΄E, 78 m, 17.XI.2013, “collecte à vue et filet”, A. Soulier- Perkins leg. ( MNHN).

Description. General coloration brown or dark brown including hind wings ( Figs 26–33 View FIGURES 26 – 29 View FIGURES 30 – 33 ). Head laterally light brown greenish. Metope (face) brown with two yellow markings medially besides of median carina and 2 yellow markings above the metopoclypeal suture ( Figs 28 View FIGURES 26 – 29 , 31 View FIGURES 30 – 33 ). Paranotal lobes of pronotum brown greenish each with large black spot. Legs light brown. Spines black. Abdominal sternites may have lateral yellow patches.

Male. Postclypeus sometimes brown greenish. Fore wings with brown reddish longitudinal veins and dark brown or black cells often with transverse yellow oringe band crossing medially clavus and reaching anterior branch of median vein ( Figs 26, 27, 29 View FIGURES 26 – 29 ). Sometimes face brown with yellow markins poorly visible or fore wings brown without bands but with transverse veins light yellow.

Female. Fore wings dark brown with brown reddish main longitudinal veins and yellowish secondary veins ( Figs 30, 32 View FIGURES 30 – 33 ).

Male genitalia ( Figs 15–21 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ). Anal tube elongate, 2.5 times as long as wide, rounded apically (in dorsal view). Anal column long, ¼ of the anal tube length ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ). Pygofer with convex medially hind margin and protruding caudo-dorsal angle (in lateral view) ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ). Style is massive with caudo-dorsal angle widely rounded ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ); capitulum on short neck, narrow apically (in dorsal view) ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ); apical tooth weak, lateral tooth well developed. Phallobase arc-shaped (in lateral view). Dorso-lateral phallobase lobes with pair of large triangular subapical lateral process ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ), pair of long and narrow hook-shaped ventral process arising below the triangular ones ventrally, spirally crossed on the dorsal side of phallobase, and coming directed apically again on its ventral side ( Figs 15, 17 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ), and with two pairs of wide basal processes fixing the hook-shaped ones ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ). Hook-shaped processes of the phallobase with denticles proximally. Ventral phallobase lobe wide, narrowing apically ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ). Aedeagus with no ventral hooks. Apical processes of aedeagus long, exceeding the upper margin of phallobase, each with small subapical semicircular process.

Total length. Males—5.0– 5.3 mm. Females—5.7–6.0 mm.

Etymology. Species name is derived from Latin “armilla” (ring) referring to the peculiar spiralic hook-shaped processes of the phallobase.

Ecological note. The species mainely occurs between 700 m and 900 m and was regularly collected by sweeping the vegetation while not in a great quantity. With two other yet undescribed species of Hemisphaeriini, the Issidae were one of the most collected taxa (in quantity) at this altitude in the Hòn-Bà massif. Dactylissus armillarius gen. et sp. n. appeared to be restricted and characteristic to this primary wet forest biotope at the altitute of around 800 m.

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

ZIN

Russian Academy of Sciences, Zoological Institute, Zoological Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Issidae

Genus

Dactylissus

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