Anisops breddini Kirkaldy, 1901
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13244673 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B22C87F3-1449-E02E-FC68-FCB8E6BDF8EE |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Anisops breddini Kirkaldy, 1901 |
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Anisops breddini Kirkaldy, 1901 View in CoL
Anisops breddini Kirkaldy, 1901 View in CoL ; Fernando & Cheng, 1974; Fernando & Leong, 1976.
Anisops breddeni View in CoL - Brooks, 1951 (misspelling, redescription).
Anisops kempi Brooks, 1951 View in CoL (new synonymy).
Diagnosis. – This species is distinguished by the posteriorly holoptic eyes ( Figs. 25, 26 View Figs ). Moreover, it is the only Malayan species which is predominantly brachypterous.
Brachypterous form. Length, male 5.7-6.6, female 5.4-6.8; greatest width, male 1.2-1.6, female 1.2-1.7.
In dorsal view lateral margins of eyes only slightly convex giving the head a somewhat conical appearance; eyes holoptic posteriorly ( Fig. 25 View Figs ). Vertex projecting slightly beyond the anterior margins of eyes. Width of head about equal to width of pronotum and five to six times the anterior width of vertex. Tylus smoothly convex. Lateral margins of pronotum parallel ( Fig. 25 View Figs ). Scutellum with its basal width 1.2 times its median length (W/L 1.0/0.8) and 0.6-0.7 times the posterior width of the pronotum. Hemielytra with reduced membranes. Hind wings reduced to club-shaped elongate straps.
Male. Rostral prong slightly longer than third rostral segment originating in proximal third of third rostral segment, second rostral segment with a distal outgrowth posteriorly, which reaches the tip of the rostrum. Forefemur strongly swollen. Stridulatory comb on foretibia consisting of a few irregular teeth.
Female. Second rostral segment with a short distal outgrowth posteriorly which does not reach halfway the third rostral segment.
Macropterous form. Length, male 5.7-6.6, female 5.4-6.7; greatest width, male 1.3-1.6, female 1.4-1.7.
In dorsal view the lateral margins of the eyes are somewhat more convex than in the brachypterous form, giving the head a slightly rounded appearance ( Fig. 26 View Figs ). Vertex not or hardly projecting beyond anterior margins of eyes. Lateral margins of pronotum slightly diverging posteriorly; humeral width of pronotum somewhat larger than width of head ( Fig. 26 View Figs ). Basal width of scutellum 1.2 times its median length (W/L 1.3/ 1.1) and about 0.9 times the humeral width of pronotum. Hemielytra with fully developed membranes. Hind wings fully developed. Other structural characteristics, including secondary sexual characteristics of male and female, as in brachypterous form.
Remarks. – Brooks (1951) described A. kempi from India and Thailand. Some of his paratypes were taken at light. In his comparative notes he remarks that A. kempi “... appears very similar to A. breddeni Kirkaldy. However , the pronotal lateral margins of A. kempi diverge whereas in A. breddeni they are almost parallel. Also the head of the latter is more or less conical with the vertex extending beyond the anterior margins of the eyes, while in A. kempi the outline of the head is rounded. Also the latter species has a much larger scutellum which has a basal with one and one third its median length, whereas in A. breddeni the scutellum is small with its basal width only slightly more than its median length.” These are precisely the characteristics in which the macropterous form differs from the brachypterous form, so A. kempi is to be considered the macropterous form of A. breddini and is herewith synonymized.
Distribution. – A widespread species recorded from India and Sri Lanka through Indochina to Java and Sulawesi (Nieser & Chen, 1991). In the Malay Peninsula this is the commonest species occurring in ponds in wild and agricultural areas. Fernando & Cheng (1974) and Fernando & Leong (1976) recorded it from Kedah, Melaka, Johor and Singapore. In the ZRC there are additional samples from Melaka, Johor, Singapore, Negeri Sembilan, Pahang, Perak and Selangor.
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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Anisops breddini Kirkaldy, 1901
Nieser, Nico 2004 |
Anisops kempi
Brooks 1951 |
Anisops breddini
Kirkaldy 1901 |