Drepanoza fruticulosi Bastin, Burckhardt & Ouvrard, 2023

Bastin, Saskia, Burckhardt, Daniel, Reyes-Betancort, Alfredo, Hernández-Suárez, Estrella & Ouvrard, David, 2023, A review of the jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) of the Canary Islands, with descriptions of two new genera and sixteen new species, Zootaxa 5313 (1), pp. 1-98 : 47-48

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5313.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:23A82A24-C933-482C-9A23-E1EDA86E2581

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8189868

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AA87A7-0B20-1943-FF28-B968FB29F2A5

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Drepanoza fruticulosi Bastin, Burckhardt & Ouvrard
status

sp. nov.

* Drepanoza fruticulosi Bastin, Burckhardt & Ouvrard sp. nov.

( Figs 70–72 View FIGURES 67–75 , 173–178 View FIGURES 167–185 , 206, 207 View FIGURES 202–211 , 264–265 View FIGURES 259–268 ) urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:52A22E6F-6862-4B7E-B864-3CF16608746B

Material examined. Holotype ♂, Tenerife: Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Mirador los Campitos , 28.4753 N, 16.2603 W, 250 m alt., 1.iii.2019, Convolvulus fruticulosus (A. González & S. Bastin) ( NHMB, dry mounted). GoogleMaps

Paratypes. Tenerife: 11 ♀, 9 immatures, same data as holotype ( NHMB, slide mounted, 70% ethanol); 2 ♂ GoogleMaps , 4 ♀ same but ( SBPC, slide mounted, 70% ethanol); 2 ♂ , 4 ♀, same data but 18.iii.2021, C. fruticulosus (S. Bastin) ( MUSA, 70% ethanol) ; 4 immatures, same data but 24.ii.2022, C. fruticulosus (S. Bastin) ( SBPC, 70% ethanol) ; 2 ♀, 18 immatures, same data but 22.iii.2022, C. fruticulosus (S. Bastin) ( ICIA, 70% ethanol) .

Description. Adult. Colouration of material preserved in 70% ethanol. Head green yellowish. Compound eye dark red. Ocelli orange. Antennal segments 1–3 light yellow, segments 4–6 together light yellow brown and segments 7–10 dark brown or black. Thorax green with yellow spots on pronotum, mesoscutum, mesopraescutum and mesoscutellum. Legs light yellow. Wing membrane transparent and veins yellow. Abdominal sclerites green with more-or-less expanded yellow pattern. Terminalia light yellow. Teneral specimens with body green.

Structure. Body length 2.5 – 2.8 mm. Head inclined at about 45º from longitudinal body axis, slightly narrower than thorax. Vertex ( Fig. 173 View FIGURES 167–185 ) subpentagonal, 0.5 – 0.6 times as long as broad, covered in distinct microsculpture along the margins and indistinct microsculpture on disc, with short setae and 2 moderately long setae apically; coronal suture fully developed. Genal processes ( Fig. 173 View FIGURES 167–185 ) 0.4 – 0.6 times as long as vertex, broadly triangular, slightly converging, covered with long setae. Antenna ( Fig. 174 View FIGURES 167–185 ) 2.0 – 2.3 times as long as head width; segment 3 2.7 – 3.0 times as long as segment 4; with a single rhinarium on each of segments 4, 6, 8 and 9; antennal segment 10 ( Fig. 175 View FIGURES 167–185 ) with 1 terminal seta as long as segment and the other 2.8–3.0 times as long as segment. Meracanthus of metacoxa well developed, triangular with apex rounded. Metatibia as long as head width, with several genual spines of different sizes ( Fig. 176 View FIGURES 167–185 ), with 2+1, occasionally 3+1 apical spurs, and a row of moderately long, densely spaced bristles apically. Forewing ( Fig. 177 View FIGURES 167–185 ) elongate oval, 4.0 – 4.3 times as long as head width, 2.4 – 2.8 times as long as wide; with narrowly rounded apex; vein Rs almost straight; bifurcation of vein M more-or-less on line joining apices of veins Rs and Cu 1a; vein M curved; m 1 cell value 1.3 – 1.4; vein cu 1a longer than cu; vein cu 1b short and straight; cu 1 cell value 1.0 – 1.1; surface spinules absent from cells c+sc and r 1, fine in the other cells, evenly spaced forming irregular squares, restricted to small areas along wing margin except in cell cu 2, where the spinules cover most of the cell; radular areas elongate, triangular in cells m 1, m 2 and cu 1; wing margin with very short setae. Male terminalia as in Figs 70, 71 View FIGURES 67–75 , 178 View FIGURES 167–185 . Proctiger 0.4 times times as long as head width, 1.1 times as long as paramere, with anterior margin slightly rounded and posterior margin sinuate, covered with moderately long setae in apical two thirds, mainly in apical part and near posterior margin. Parameres lamellar, gradually tapering in apical third, with sclerotised apex, outer face with sparse moderately long setae near posterior margin, inner face covered with short setae in apical half, dense short setae in basal half, with moderately long setae near anterior margin and long setae along posterior margin, 2 – 3 times longer than the others; in posterior view, medial outline of parameres pear-shaped. Apical segment of aedeagus with posterior margin with right angle basally, a long, slender apical forward-directed projection and a posterior rounded bulge; sclerotised end tube of ductus ejaculatorius sinuate. Subgenital plate, in lateral view, subtriangular, as long as high, covered with long setae dorsally and sparse short setae mainly ventrally. Female terminalia cuneate ( Fig. 72 View FIGURES 67–75 ). Proctiger subtriangular, 0.8 – 0.9 times as long as head width, longer than subgenital plate, apex blunt, with dorsal margin concave, densely covered with long pointed setae in apical two thirds, moderately long and short setae close to the apex; circumanal ring 0.3 times as long as proctiger, with 2 unequal rows of pores, surrounded by short pointed setae. Subgenital plate moderately long, subtriangular, apex angular, densely covered with short setae in apical part.

Measurements (in mm) (1 ♂, 7 ♀). Head width ♂ 0.45, ♀ 044 – 0.48; vertex length ♂ 0.16, ♀ 0.14 – 0.16; vertex width ♂ 0.27, ♀ 0.27 – 0.29; antenna length ♂ 1.02, ♀ 0.90 – 1.0; metatibia length ♂ 0.44, ♀ 0.43 – 0.48; forewing length ♂ 1.78, ♀ 1.86 – 2.08; forewing width ♂ 0.71, ♀ 0.71 – 0.86; male proctiger length 0.18; paramere length 0.16; distal segment of aedeagus length 0.12; female proctiger length 0.38 – 0.40; female anal ring length 0.26‒0.27.

Fifth-instar immature. Colouration. General body colour green yellowish and dark brown. Head green yellowish with orange and dark brown spots. Thorax brown yellowish, dark brown laterally and basally. Wing pads dark brown. Abdomen green yellowish with orange edge, with 2 dark brown stripes apically.

Structure. Body ( Fig. 206 View FIGURES 202–211 ) 1.8 times as long as wide. Antenna 0.6 times as long as forewing pad. Caudal plate 0.9 times as long as wide. Tarsal arolium circular, without claws. Marginal sectasetae ( Fig. 207 View FIGURES 202–211 ) relatively short, slender and truncate, present in following numbers: forewing pad 28–33, hindwing pad 5–6 and caudal plate 36–40 (one side only). Caudal plate marginally with 2–4 pointed lanceolate setae, a little shorter than marginal sectasetae, dorsally bearing small lanceolate setae. Anus ventral, outer circumanal ring small, reduced anteriorly.

Measurements (in mm) (2 individuals). Body length 1.3; length of forewing pad 0.52–0.56.

Etymology. Named after its host plant Convolvulus fruticulosus .

Host plant CI. Convolvulus fruticulosus (Convulvulaceae) is listed in the Red List of Spanish Vascular Flora as a species threatened with extinction, categorized as vulnerable ( Moreno 2008).

Distribution CI. Tenerife.

Biology. The immatures induce leaf galls ( Fig. 287–292 View FIGURES 281–296 ) similar to those of Drepanoza canariensis (see description above). The immatures are parasitized by encyrtid wasps ( Hymenoptera : Encyrtidae ).

Comments. Morphologically, Drepanoza fruticulosi is most similar to D. canariensis , a species also developing on Convolvulus . It differs in having shorter and thicker genal processes, and shorter female terminalia ( D. canariensis > 0.45 mm, D. fruticulosi <0.40 mm). Apart from the host plant differences (cf. under D. canariensis ), it differs from its other congeners in having broadly triangular genal processes and longer female terminalia, also from D. fernandezi , D. lienhardi and D. pittospori in having an apically more rounded forewing. From D. molinai and D. montanetana , it can be separated by having a more slender (rather than bulbous) male proctiger.

NHMB

Natural History Museum Bucharest

MUSA

Universidad Nacional de San Agustin, Museo de Historia Natural (Peru)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Triozidae

Genus

Drepanoza

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