Lamaxa occidentalis ( Muir, 1926 ) Bartlett & Kennedy, 2018

Bartlett, Charles R. & Kennedy, Ashley C., 2018, A review of New World Malaxa (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae), Zootaxa 4441 (3), pp. 511-528 : 517-518

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4441.3.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D40D474F-A461-4F3C-967E-C833FFB342F3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6485108

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038ACF05-B347-FF99-FF1D-68E8FD588E3A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lamaxa occidentalis ( Muir, 1926 )
status

comb. nov.

Lamaxa occidentalis ( Muir, 1926) , New combination

= Malaxa occidentalis Muir, 1926: 7 View in CoL .

( Figures 7–14 View FIGURES 7–14 , 25–26 View FIGURES 25–29 , 36 View FIGURES 35–37 , 38 View FIGURES 38–42 )

Type locality. Napo River near Tena , Ecuador.

Amended diagnosis. Color. Brownish-orange with characteristic paler and deep brown markings ( Figs. 7–12 View FIGURES 7–14 ); paler on disc of pronotum, above the frontoclypeal suture, and on middle portion of antennal segment II; dark brown on dorsal portion of clypeus, distal portion of antennal segment I, proximal and apical portion of antennal segment II, pronotal paratergites [often also marked with white], dorsum or mesonontum and the ventral portion of mesopleuron (details varying intraspecifically). Wings clear, usually with white marking along PCu in clavus (often faded in older specimens) and a broad dark, transverse, crescent-shaped marking, opened proximad [sometimes inclosing whitish patch], and a narrow dark crescent opening caudally along nodal line and trailing margin of wing to near wing apex; sometimes also a dark bar from nodal line diagonally to the near wing midline; sometimes also darkened near apex of clavus; details and extent of markings varied by species and locality. Structure. Body slender and elongate; length (from apex of vertex to tip of tegmina) males x ‾ = 4.97 mm (4.71–5.33 mm, n=4); females x ‾ = 5.31 mm (5.10–5.62 mm, n=6). Head much narrower than pronotum ( Figs. 7, 10 View FIGURES 7–14 ), carinae concolorous. Lateral carinae of clypeus, frons and vertex distinct, other carinae obscure, especially near fastigium. Frons elongate and parallel-sided, widest at frontoclypeal suture, narrowed to fastigium ( Figs. 9, 12 View FIGURES 7–14 ; l:w x ‾ = 2.6:1, range 2.3–3.2:1, n=10). Vertex longer than broad at base (l:w x ‾ = 1.4:1, range 1.2–1.5:1, n=10), distally narrowing and projected slightly in front of eyes; submedian carinae uniting before fastigium, basal compartments longer than wide. Rostrum reaching metathoracic coxae. Antennae cylindrical, both segments very long ( Figs. 10, 12 View FIGURES 7–14 ), surpassing apex of clypeus (and apex of mesonotum; Figs. 10, 12 View FIGURES 7–14 ), segment I close to half length of II (ratio I:II 0.4–0.5:1), length antennal segment I x ‾ = 0.47 mm (range 0.41–0.52, n=10), II x ‾ = 1.05 (range 0.95–1.11, n=10) (segment I about 0.67 × length of frons, II 1.49 × length of frons). Pronotum shorter than vertex in middle line (0.44–0.71: 1), lateral carinae usually not attaining hind margin. Mesonotum longer in middle line than vertex and pronotum together (1.21–1.72:1). Wings elongate (x ‾ = 4.3 mm, range 3.9–4.6, n=9), much longer than abdomen, nodus at about 2/3 length, wing apex acutely rounded ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 35–37 ); apparently, Sc, RA, RP and MP unbranched, CuA 3-branched; fork of SC+RA from RP distad of fork of CuA (inner subapical cell longer than outer subapical cell); fusion of PCu with AA in basal third of clavus. Spinulation of hind legs 5-7-5 (or 5-6-5). Pygofer irregularly quadrilateral in lateral view ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 25–29 ), in caudal view opening carinate, midventrally with forked process ( Figs. 13 View FIGURES 7–14 , 25 View FIGURES 25–29 , 41 View FIGURES 38–42 ), dorsocaudal margins expanded and inflected to partially enclose anal tube ( Fig. 42 View FIGURES 38–42 ). Diaphragm of pygofer evident, armature absent. Gonostyli broad basally, basal angles prominent, diverging and narrowed distally to apically to blunt or acute apex (similar to Fig. 40 View FIGURES 38–42 ). Aedeagus elongate and tubular ( Figs. 14 View FIGURES 7–14 , 26 View FIGURES 25–29 , 38 View FIGURES 38–42 ) with large, flattened, rather membranous subapical ventral process, with (as oriented in Figure 14 View FIGURES 7–14 ) anterior teeth on margin of flattened process and elongate spine near midlength of anterior margin. Anal tube (anal segment) small, without processes.

Plant associations. Label reads “ex: Cana / silvestre”, and Muir (1926) reports this as Gynerium sp. ( Poaceae ); however, the common name is also used for the exotic grasses Arundo donax L. or Saccharum spontaneum L., although we assume that Muir correctly reported the plant association.

Distribution. Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, Costa Rica; tentatively also Peru.

Remarks. A male paratype (barcode UDCC_TCN 00042688) examined here was evidently the reference subject for Muir’s (1926) figure 6 (compare with Figure 14 View FIGURES 7–14 ). The specimen has had the abdomen removed and cleared, the parts of the male terminalia disarticulated and mounted in balsam between to microscope cover slips, which in turn are inserted into a cardboard holder and pinned beneath the specimen. This technique was frequently used for specimens studied by Muir (possibly by W. Giffard).

Specimens varied noticeably in coloration, especially in the extent and intensity of the dark patterning; but no substantive genitalic differences were found among specimens. Some specimens were noticeably faded, particularly the oldest specimens and these that had been collected into alcohol.

Material examined. Paratypes “ Napo, River / Ecuador / Apr. 5–10, 1923 // F. X. Williams / Collector / Paratype // [handwritten, partly illegible] Napo R. / ex Cana silvestre” (1 male, 3 females BPBM; 1 female USNM) . Other Material Examined. COSTA RICA: Heredia, near Puerto Viejo, La Selva Biological Station , 18– 19 Aug. 2003, C. R. Bartlett (1 female, UDCC) ; same 20 Aug 2003 (1 male, UDCC); same 28 Feb. 2004 (1 female, UDCC); Limon, 24 km SE of Limon , 4 Aug 1990, W. F. Chamberlain (1 male, TAMU) . BOLIVIA: Santa Cruz, 3.7 km SSE Buena Vista, Hotel Flora & Fauna , 14–28 Oct 2000, M. C. Thomas (2 female, UDCC) ; Santa Cruz, nr. Buena Vista , 13-Nov-09, G. J. Svenson (1 male, UDCC) . COLOMBIA: Choco [Department], PNN Utría Centro de Visitantes , 15–30 Oct, 2000, J. Perez, Malaise Trap sample m.816 (2 male, UKIC) ; same, 30 June 2000 – 5 July 2000, M. Sharkey, Malaise trap (1 female, UKIC), same, J. Perez , 15 Sept 2000 – 7 Sept 2000, Malaise trap m.820 (1 female, UKIC) ; Meta, Villavicencio, vic. Gunaviche Estadero, nr Rio Guatiquía ; 4.1751, -73.63722, 1465 ft [447 m], 3-5.vii.2013, J E Eger & A A Calixto, MV Light (3 male, UDCC) . Tentatively included: PERU: Huanuco, 5 km s. Tingo Maria, P[uen]te Perez , 600m, 9 20’51”S, -75 58’51”W, 25 Oct 2002, C. H. Dietrich, [sample] 02-41-1, merc. vapor light (1 female, INHS) .

BPBM

Bishop Museum

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

UDCC

University of Delaware

TAMU

Texas A&M University

PERU

Universit� di Perugia

INHS

Illinois Natural History Survey

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Poales

Family

Poaceae

Genus

Lamaxa

Loc

Lamaxa occidentalis ( Muir, 1926 )

Bartlett, Charles R. & Kennedy, Ashley C. 2018
2018
Loc

Malaxa occidentalis

Muir, 1926 : 7
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