Vizcayaptera, Heiss, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4500.3.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FFFE333C-E8EF-4D4A-8C2B-5A3A43676873 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5304527 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B0E52A-F63E-FFF0-FF28-F9360A81FCA8 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Vizcayaptera |
status |
gen. nov. |
Vizcayaptera gen.nov.
Type species: Vizcayaptera minuta sp.nov.
Etymology. Refers to the Philippine Province of Nueva Vizcaya in Central Luzon where this new taxon was found.
Diagnosis. Apterous, small sized; body egg-shaped, surface smooth and shiny, finely granulate along lateral margins of body, the median thoracic ridge and elevation of tergal disk; coloration piceous, legs and antennae yellowish brown; legs and antennal segment I beset with sparse short erect bristles.
Description. Head: Larger than wide, clypeus short reaching one quarter of antennal segment I; antenniferous lobes acute: antennae more than twice the width of head, segment I longest; rostrum short, arising from an open atrium reaching half-length of head.
Pronotum: Trapezoidal, lateral granulate margins converging anteriorly, disk with a longitudinal furrow and smooth ovate plates laterally; meso—and metanotum split at middle by a longitudinal bottle-shaped granulate ridge separated by deep furrows from lateral ovate plates, the lateral margins granulate; metanotum posteriorly fused to narrow granulate transverse mtg I, this fused to mtg II which is split medially by a ridge.
Abdomen: Tergal plate smooth, only slightly elevated along midline; deltg II+III fused, deltg III–VII separated by sutures, their surface with two round smooth callosities each and granulate margins; spiracles II–VII lateral on dorsally reflexed vltg II–VII and visible from above, VIII lateral on ptg VIII.
Venter: Prosternum with an inverted T-shaped carina, median part of meso- and metasternum smooth, fused to sterna II+III; IV–VI separated by deep transverse furrows; sternite VI with a concave posterior incision for the reception of the medially split sternite VII.
Legs: Unarmed, trochanters fused to femora but fusion line distinct.
Comparative notes and discussion. Only two apterous Carventinae are recorded so far from Philippine Islands: Ainocoris dybasi ( Drake, 1957) from Sulu Island and Trigonaptera pandani Kormilev, 1968 from Palawan. Vizcayaptera differs from both and all other apterous Aradidae genera described to date from Oriental and Indosaustralian Regions by a combination of characters such as small size, oval habitus, open rostral atrium, structure of head and thorax and position of spiracles.
Although only a single female specimen is available which is not resembling any other flatbug, these differences justify the erection and introduction of a new genus for it.
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.