Enithares ciliata ( Fabricius, 1798 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13244673 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13244857 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B22C87F3-1441-E027-FEA7-FB14E782FDF0 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Enithares ciliata ( Fabricius, 1798 ) |
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Enithares ciliata ( Fabricius, 1798) View in CoL
Notonecta ciliata Fabricius, 1798 .
Enithares ciliata View in CoL - Lansbury, 1968 (redescription); Fernando & Leong, 1976.
Diagnosis. – Length, male 8.5-9.6, female 9.0-9.6; width, male and female 3.0-3.6. Pale form can be entirely pale yellowish brown ( Lansbury, 1968). Dark form is generally blackish in dorsal view, with dark brown eyes; vertex yellowish; anterior half to two thirds of pronotum yellowish with variable brown markings; remainder translucent with blackish underlying parts showing through. Lateral margins of scutellum in living specimens with a greenish fluorescent stripe, which becomes yellow in dead specimens; abdomen black; basal part of hemielytra and caudal lobe of membrane translucent.
Head in dorsal view rounded anteriorly, its width about 2.75 times anterior width of vertex. Anterior width of vertex more than twice the synthlipsis (vertex 2.1-2.2x synthlipsis). Dorsal margin of pronotal fovea directed straight caudad before turning laterad. Mesotrochanter rounded. Metasternal xiphus as in Fig. 35c View Fig .
Male. Foretibia on its inner side with a wide indentation halfway its length apically of this indentation the tibia is widened into a triangular projection. Second segment of middle tarsus short and wide, about a wide as long ( Figs. 7 View Fig , 38 View Fig ).
Remarks. – Males can be easily recognized by the middle tarsus and also the foretibia. Females are distinguished by the shape of the metasternal xiphus combined with their size.
Distribution. – Widespread, Mauritius, Bhutan, India, Sri Lanka, continental SE Asia, SE China and Indonesia: Sumatra ( Lansbury, 1968, Polhemus et al., 1995). Also recorded from Kedah: Pulau Langkawi by Lansbury (1968). In addition specimens have been studied from Johor and Perak (ZRC), not recorded from Singapore. Apparently distributed throughout most of the Malay Peninsula but rare. Usually found still parts of streams and in ponds and pools associated with streams.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Enithares ciliata ( Fabricius, 1798 )
Nieser, Nico 2004 |
Notonecta ciliata
Fabricius 1798 |