Polytoxus fuscovittatus ( Stål, 1860 )

Rédei, Dávid & Tsai, Jing-Fu, 2010, A survey of the saicine assassin bugs of Taiwan (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Reduviidae), Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae 50 (1), pp. 15-32 : 20-24

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5325170

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/552787F0-573A-FFDB-F2C3-CBE7FC11972E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Polytoxus fuscovittatus ( Stål, 1860 )
status

 

Polytoxus fuscovittatus ( Stål, 1860) View in CoL

( Figs. 1–32 View Figs View Figs View Figs )

Saica fuscovittata Stål, 1860: 262 . SYNTYPE (s) (J?, ♀!): ‘ Insulae Philippinenses’ [= Philippines], ‘ Manilla’ [= Manila]; NHRS!

Polytoxus selangorensis Miller, 1940: 426 View in CoL . HOLOTYPE (J): Malaysia: Selangor, Kuala Lumpur (BMNH); syn. nov. Polytoxus ruficeps Hsiao, 1965: 114 View in CoL . HOLOTYPE (J): China: Yunnan, Mang ( IZAS) ; syn. nov.

References. STÅL (1871): 701 (listed); WALKER (1873): 127 (listed); STÅL (1874): 91 (diagnosis); LETHIERRY & SEVERIN (1896): 78 (catalogue); DISTANT (1903): 219 (redescription, distribution); CHINA (1940): 207 (figure of fore wing); VILLIERS (1943b): 321 (catalogue, distribution, records); HSIAO & REN (1981): 405 ( ruficeps View in CoL , redescription, figures, photo, distribution); REN (1986): 404 ( ruficeps View in CoL , redescription, figures, distribution); LI et al. (1990): 12 ( ruficeps View in CoL , redescription, prey, distribution, habitus); MALDONADO CAPRILES (1990): 475, 477 ( fuscovittatus View in CoL , ruficeps View in CoL , selangorensis View in CoL , catalogue); HE (1991): 86 ( fuscovittatus View in CoL , ruficeps View in CoL , prey, distribution); BARRION & LITSINGER (1994): 112 ( fuscovittatus View in CoL and selangorensis View in CoL , in key, figures); HASSAN & IBRAHIM (1996):55 ( selangorensis View in CoL , biology); HASSAN & RASHID (1997): 45 ( selangorensis View in CoL , habitat); PUTSHKOV & PUTSHKOV (1996): 206 ( ruficeps View in CoL , catalogue, distribution); HUA (2000): 210 ( fuscovittatus View in CoL , ruficeps View in CoL , listed, distribution); ISHIKAWA & YANO (2002): 345 ( selangorensis View in CoL , diagnosis, male genitalia, variability, figures, records, distribution, habitat, prey), 357, 358 (in key); ISHIKAWA & OKAJIMA (2003): 134 ( selangorensis View in CoL , diagnosis, records, distribution, photo), 139 (in key); LIN (2003): 124 ( fuscovittatus View in CoL and ruficeps View in CoL , prey, distribution); BAMBARADENIYA et al. (2004): 1737 (listed); REN (2004): 149 (record, distribution, figures); SRIVASTAVA et al. (2004): 161 (listed); OSAFUNE et al. (2005): 7 (distribution, habitat, prey, reproduction, development, immatures); ISHIKAWA & YANO (2006): 13 (as selangorensis View in CoL , records, distribution); BAMBARADENIYA & EDIRISINGHE (2008): 45 (listed).

Type material examined. LECTOTYPE (♀): ‘ Manilla ’ [printed], ‘ Kinb. ’ [printed], ‘fusco-vittata \ Stål’ [handwritten] ( NHRS). Pinned, right hind leg except coxa missing; here designated.

Other material examined. TAIWAN: NANTOU COUNTY: Lienhuachi , 28.ix.1993, leg. C. W. Tsai (2 JJ, NTU) . INDIA: ASSAM: Baragolai , 16.iii.1953, leg. Neuhaus (1 J, MHNG) . MYANMAR: Bago State, Toungoo , 23.x.2003, leg. F. Buzzetti (1 J, NHMW) . VIETNAM: Cuc Phuong, Ninh Binh, No. 295, 6.–18.v.1966, ‘on lamp’, leg. Gy. Topál (1 ♀, HNHM) ; ‘ Tonkin’ , Hoa Binh, leg. A. de Cooman, coll. R. Oberthür, 1919 (1 J 2 ♀♀, MNHN) ; Thu Duc , 20.xii.1974, ‘sur riz’ [= on rice], leg. A. Delobel (1 J, MNHN) ; ‘ Saigon’ [= Ho Chi Minh City], coll. E. de Bergevin (3 ♀♀, MNHN) . PHILIPPINES: ‘ Ins. Philipp. ’, leg. Semper (1 ♀, NHRS) ; Luzon, Los Baños, No. 1, 12.xi.1993, leg. H. Schillhammer (1 J, NHMW) ; same locality, No. 2, 13.–18.xi.1992, at light, leg. H. Zettel (1 J [ Figs. 14–22 View Figs View Figs ], 1 ♀, NHMW) ; Luzon, Zambales Prov., Poonbato env., 28.ii.2000, leg. O. Safránek (1 J, MMBC > HNHM) ; Luzon, Ifugao Prov., Banaue env., 20.ii.2000, leg. O. Safránek (1 ♀, MMBC) ; Negros, Mambucal, Mt. Canlaon [= Mt. Kanlaon], 12.ii.1994, leg. F. Seyfert & M. Graindl (2 JJ, NHMW) . MALAYSIA: SARAWAK: Mulu National Park, Benarat Inn, No. 14, 3.–5.iii.1993, at light, leg. H. Zettel (1 ♀, NHMW) .

Diagnosis. Relatively small species (body length 6–8.5 mm) with dark brown median longitudinal stripe on pronotum ( Fig. 1 View Figs ) and smoky brown longitudinal stripe on fore wing ( Fig. 5 View Figs ). Metanotum carinate along meson ( Figs. 3 and 4 View Figs ). The species is best diagnosed by the male genitalia: pygophore ( Figs. 14 and 15 View Figs ) with an elongate posterior process of a characteristic shape ( Fig. 16 View Figs ) and endosoma of phallus with five sclerotized processes ( Figs. 20–32 View Figs ). The species was redescribed and figured under the name P. selangorensis by ISHIKAWA & YANO (2002).

Variability. Colour. Head red, sometimes with large black spot between eyes, or with black median spot on posterior lobe posteriorly ( Fig. 1 View Figs ), or both lobes greatly dark brown, or head generally dark brown except lateral yellowish suffusion to hind lobe; labium stramineous, or apparent first and second segments dark brown, apparent third segment brown; anterior lobe of pronotum yellowish to reddish, with wide dark brown median longitudinal stripe ( Fig. 1 View Figs ), dorsal elevated part sometimes greatly dark brown; posterior lobe of pronotum yellowish to reddish, with wide median longitudinal stripe dark brown; humeral spines whitish to stramineous, apically more or less extensively black; ventral part of proepisternum, prothoracic supracoxal lobes and ventral part of proepimeron dark brown, rest of thoracic pleuron yellowish to red; coxae and trochanters stramineous to brown; femora stramineous with apical red annulus, or with apical red and subapical brown annuli ( Fig. 11 View Figs ), or with wide apical dark brown annulus, or greatly brown throughout; tibiae stramineous, with more or less distinct brown annulus apically, with subbasal brown annulus, or with basal red and subbasal brown annuli ( Fig. 11 View Figs ), or with wide dark brown basal annulus, or greatly brown; tarsus yellowish brown to dark brown; fore wing ( Fig. 5 View Figs ) stramineous, sometimes with extreme base red, marginal vein and pterostrigma stramineous to orange, wide longitudinal stripe smoky brown. Abdomen yellowish with 1+1 dark brown sublateral longitudinal stripes occupying sternites III–VI ( Fig. 13 View Figs ), or greatly dark brown with lateral margins yellowish ( Fig. 12 View Figs ).

Structure. Length and direction of the mesonotal and humeral spines are variable as illustrated in Figs. 6–10 View Figs .

Distribution. Pakistan; India!; Sri Lanka; Japan: Honshū, Shikoku, Kyūshū, Tanegashima Is., Yakushima Is., the Ryūkyūs; China: Fujian, Guangxi, Hainan, Hubei, Yunnan; Taiwan! (new record); Myanmar!; Vietnam!; Philippines!; Malaysia!: Selangor, Sarawak!

Taxonomy. The identity of Polytoxus fuscovittatus has remained doubtful for a long time. Only VILLIERS (1943a: 195, Figs. 9, 10 View Figs , 20 View Figs ) figured the male genitalia of this species; however, he did not mention any data of the specimen(s) examined by him. Based on his figures as well as several specimens deposited in the MNHN examined by one of us (DR), it is clear that the drawings represent P. vagans Miller, 1940 , so far recorded from Malacca and Japan.

Two historical female specimens deposited in the NHRS, one of them from the type locality (‘Manilla’ [= Manila], Luzon, the Philippines), were examined by one of us (DR). In the original description it is indicated that the description of S. fuscovittata (currently Polytoxus ) was based on male(s). This suggests that the specimen in question is not a type. However, the type of S. fuscovittata was collected during the 1851–1853 expedition of the Frigate Eugenie around the world commanded by Rear-Admiral C. A. Virgin. The zoological research work aboard the Eugenie was the responsibility of J. G. H. Kinberg (1820–1908), Swedish surgeon and zoologist. According to the second label of the examined female from Manila, the respective specimen was collected by Kinberg. Because of the above circumstances we consider the specimen as a syntype and we suppose that the sex was erroneously given in the original description. We designate this specimen as a lectotype.

We could examine recently collected specimens (2 JJ 1 ♀) of a Polytoxus species from Luzon as well as other conspecific specimens from Negros, deposited in NHMW. The specimens perfectly fit with the original description of P. fuscovittatus and the specimens deposited in NHRS, therefore we consider them conspecific with the lectotype. We provide figures of P. fuscovittatus based on these specimens ( Figs. 1–5 View Figs , 11, 13–22 View Figs View Figs ).

Additional specimens from continental South-East Asia ( Myanmar and Vietnam), Borneo and Taiwan were examined. The genitalia including phalli of the examined males were identical with the Philippine specimens. Consequently, we recognize P. fuscovittatus as a widely distributed species. According to the redescription and figures by ISHIKAWA & YANO (2002), the Japanese specimens identified as Polytoxus selangorensis Miller, 1940 by the above authors also belong to P. fuscovittatus .

The strong variability of the coloration in P. fuscovittatus was stressed by ISHIKAWA & YANO (2002). ISHIKAWA & OKAJIMA (2003: 135, Fig. 3 View Figs ) photographed an extremely dark specimen from Vietnam. BARRION & LITSINGER (1994) provided diagnostic characters for P. selangorensis and P. fuscovittatus . Examination of the genitalia of several differently coloured specimens showed that these differences are not of species value. The length and direction of the humeral spines is also highly variable ( Figs. 6–10 View Figs ) and cannot serve as a diagnostic character as used by HSIAO (1965) to distinguish P. ruficeps from P. fuscovittatus .

The original descriptions of P. selangorensis and P.ruficeps , including the illustrations of the most characteristic pygophore, perfectly fit specimens of P. fuscovittatus collected at the type locality. Consequently, we place the above two species in synonymy with P. fuscovittatus . We note that P. fuscovittatus has been reported from China by REN (2004). Since her record ( REN 2004: 149, Figs. 3a–c View Figs ) contained reproductions of figures provided with an earlier redescription of P.ruficeps by HSIAO & REN (1981: 406, Figs. 1204–1206), it can be inferred that she considered previous records of P. ruficeps as referring to P. fuscovittatus .

IZAS

Institut Zoologii Akademii Nauk Ukraini - Institute of Zoology of the Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

NHRS

Swedish Museum of Natural History, Entomology Collections

MHNG

Museum d'Histoire Naturelle

NHMW

Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien

HNHM

Hungarian Natural History Museum (Termeszettudomanyi Muzeum)

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

MMBC

Moravske Muzeum [Moravian Museum]

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Reduviidae

Genus

Polytoxus

Loc

Polytoxus fuscovittatus ( Stål, 1860 )

Rédei, Dávid & Tsai, Jing-Fu 2010
2010
Loc

Polytoxus selangorensis

HSIAO T. Y. 1965: 114
MILLER N. C. E. 1940: 426
1940
Loc

Saica fuscovittata Stål, 1860: 262

STAL C. 1860: 262
1860
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