Montandoniola thripodes Bergroth, 1916

Yamada, Kazutaka, Yasunaga, Tomohide & Miyamoto, Syôiti, 2010, A review of Japanese species of the genus Montandoniola (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Anthocoridae), Zootaxa 2530, pp. 19-28 : 20-24

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.196531

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510444

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D387CE-FF94-5C73-FF7E-FB96907EC7ED

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Plazi

scientific name

Montandoniola thripodes Bergroth, 1916
status

 

Montandoniola thripodes Bergroth, 1916

( Figs. 1–4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 , 14 View FIGURES 14 – 16 , 21 View FIGURES 17 – 22 )

Montandoniola thripodes Bergroth, 1916: 233 (sp. n.); Carayon, 1961: 542 (note); Carayon & Ramade, 1962: 208 (note); Herring, 1966: 93 [syn. with M. moraguesi (Puton) ]. Restored by Pluot-Sigwalt et al., 2009: 33 View Cited Treatment (illustration, redefinition).

Montandoniola pictipennis ( Esaki, 1931) : Hiura, 1959: 2 (misidentification).

Montandoniola moraguesi (Puton, 1896) : Hiura, 1979: 122 (note, figure); Miyamoto & Yasunaga, 1989: 167 (list); Yasunaga, 1993: 169 (note, figure); Yasunaga, 2001: 287 (note) (misidentifications).

Diagnosis. In addition to the redefinition of M. thripodes by Pluot-Sigwalt et al. (2009), we herein provide the following revised diagnostic characters for Japanese specimens: Head ( Figs. 1–4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) dark brown to black; length excluding neck as long as width across eyes. Antennal segments I and II dark brown to black; segments III and IV pale yellow; segment IV somewhat fuscous ( Figs. 1, 3 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ); segment II ( Figs. 1, 3 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) greatly enlarged, slightly longer than head width across eyes; segment IV weakly flattened. Labium ( Figs. 2, 4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) dark brown to black, extending near fore coxae; apex of segment III pale yellow; segment IV pale yellow, except for dark apex. Pronotum ( Figs. 1, 3 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) dark brown to black; anterior margin about as wide as or slightly narrower than mesal length; lateral margin nearly straight; lateral carina well developed anteriorly; posterior margin concave, 2.37–2.55 times as wide as anterior margin. Scutellum ( Figs. 1, 3 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) overall black. Hemelytra ( Figs. 1, 3 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) dark brown to black with whitish central patch on most of clavus and corium; membrane mesially with distinct dark stripe, except for basal semi-transparent area. Legs ( Figs. 2, 4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) dark brown to black; fore and mid tibiae pale yellow, except for dark extreme bases; hind tibiae with paler extreme apex; male fore tibiae armed ventrally with a row of 16–22 minute, fuscous teeth, female without minute teeth ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 14 – 16 ); tarsi pale yellow, with dark apex. Ostiolar peritreme angular posteriorly. Abdomen ( Figs. 2, 4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) black and tinged with reddish brown.

Male genitalia: Pygophore covered with many long setae on right side and 8–10 very long, stout setae on posteroventral surface, of which the longest are longer than length of pygophore, with scattered short setae anterior to genital opening; flagellum straight, long, thin, shorter than twice width of cone, not surpassing left edge of pygophore, basally very close to cone; cone very thin and acute apicad, with conspicuous indentation at base.

Description of female genitalia. Copulatory tube ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 17 – 22 ) mesally fused on intersegmental membrane between sterna VII and VIII, very close to base of ovipositor, shortened, cylindroid, about twice as long as maximum width.

Measurements [% (n = 10)/ Ψ (n = 10)]. Body length 2.70–3.00/ 2.95–3.25; head length (excl. neck) 0.38–0.41/ 0.38–0.41; head width across eyes 0.39–0.41/ 0.38–0.41; vertex width 0.17–0.19/ 0.19–0.21; width between ocelli 0.11–0.13/ 0.13–0.16; length of antennal segments I-IV 0.12–0.14/ 0.13–0.15, 0.40–0.44/ 0.38–0.47, 0.23–0.28/ 0.24–0.28, and 0.28–0.31/ 0.26–0.31; length of labial segments II-IV 0.11–0.13/ 0.12–0.14, 0.31–0.36/ 0.33–0.39, and 0.23–0.25/ 0.23–0.26; anterior pronotal width 0.34–0.36/ 0.34–0.37; mesal pronotal length 0.33–0.36/ 0.37–0.40; basal pronotal width 0.77–0.89/ 0.85–0.96; length of embolial margin 0.69–0.81/ 0.75–0.81; length of cuneal margin 0.46–0.54/ 0.50–0.61; maximum width across hemelytra 0.78–0.92/ 0.89–0.98.

Material examined. JAPAN: Ryukyus: [Tokara Isls.] 1Ψ, Takarajima Is., 26.v.–1.vi.1953, S. Miyamoto ( OMNH). [Amami-Ôshima Is.] 3Ψ (one shown in Fig. 14 View FIGURES 14 – 16 ), Sokaru, Setouchi-chô, 12.ix.2002, K. Yamada ( TKPM). [Okinawa Is.] 3%3Ψ (one shown in Figs. 3, 4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ), Hedo, Kunigami-son, 24.iii.2002, T. Ueda & K. Yamada ( TKPM); 2 % (one shown in Figs. 1, 2 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ) 3Ψ (one shown in Fig. 21 View FIGURES 17 – 22 ), same locality, 25.iii.2002, K. Yamada ( TKPM); 3 %14Ψ, Shurisakiyama, Naha-shi, 19.v.1993, T. Yasunaga ( TYCN); 3%3Ψ, 4 nymphs, Naha-shi, 30.i.1993, N. Shingaki ( TYCN). [Kume Is.] 1%, Higa, 21.iii.1977, Y. Hori ( TYCN). [Ishigaki Is.] 1Ψ, Urasoko-rindô, 29.x.1998, K. Takahashi ( TKPM). [Iriomote Is.] 1Ψ, Takana, 6.iv.2003, M. Takai ( TKPM). [Yonaguni Is.] 1%2Ψ, Mt. Kuburadake, 18.v.2000, T. Ishikawa ( TKPM).

Distribution. Hong-Kong ( Bergroth 1916); Japan [the Ryukyus: Tokara (Takarajima Is.), Amami- Ôshima, Okinawa, Kume, Ishigaki, Iriomote and Yonaguni Islands]. This species is recorded from Japan for the first time. Hiura (1959) recorded M. pictipennis from Tokara Islands on the basis of a female collected in 1953 by S. Miyamoto. However, we examined it and confirmed that the specimen is actually M. thripodes .

Remarks. Montandoniola thripodes was originally described from Hong-Kong by Bergroth (1916). No additional specimen has been recognized since the original description. In this study, we found it on the Ryukyu Islands of Japan and described the female genitalia for the first time.

The copulatory tube of M. thripodes somewhat resembles that in M. confusa Streito & Matocq, 2009 , but can be distinguished by its location and length: located very near base of ovipositor in M. thripodes , but mesally located in middle of sternum VII in M. confusa ; and, about twice as long as wide in M. thripodes , but slightly longer than wide in M. confusa .

Montandoniola thripodes and M. pictipennis have erroneously been reported as M. moraguesi in Japan ( Hiura 1959; Yasunaga 1993); these three species are similar in general appearance and may be easily confused with one another. However, M. thripodes may be easily distinguished from M. pictipennis by antennal segment II being slightly longer than the head width across eyes (in M. pictipennis , about 0.8 times as long as head width across eyes), the pale yellow mid tibiae, except for the darkened extreme base (cf. mid tibiae dark brown, except for the pale yellow apical half), and the significantly different shape of the male paramere and female copulatory tube (see Pluot-Sigwalt et al. 2009, Figs. 33, 36, 39; Figs. 17–21 View FIGURES 17 – 22 ).

Biology. No information on biology of this species is currently available. In our field observations on Amami-Ôshima and Okinawa Islands, most specimens were found to be associated with leaf-curl galls induced by the Cuban laurel thrips, Gynaikothrips ficorum (Marchal, 1908) ( Thysanoptera : Phlaeothripidae ) on Ficus microcarpa (Moraceae) .

OMNH

Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Anthocoridae

Genus

Montandoniola

Loc

Montandoniola thripodes Bergroth, 1916

Yamada, Kazutaka, Yasunaga, Tomohide & Miyamoto, Syôiti 2010
2010
Loc

Montandoniola moraguesi

Yasunaga 2001: 287
Yasunaga 1993: 169
Miyamoto 1989: 167
Hiura 1979: 122
1979
Loc

Montandoniola pictipennis (

Hiura 1959: 2
1959
Loc

Montandoniola thripodes

Pluot-Sigwalt 2009: 33
Herring 1966: 93
Carayon 1962: 208
Carayon 1961: 542
Bergroth 1916: 233
1916
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