Tuponia hippophaes ( Fieber, 1861 )

Li, Xiao-Ming & Liu, Guo-Qing, 2016, The genus Tuponia Reuter, 1875 of China (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae: Exaeretini) with descriptions of three new species, Zootaxa 4114 (2), pp. 101-122 : 112-114

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4114.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:69011B46-1B29-4D8A-90D9-678356EA5FCB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5386150

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C0EF1D-207B-FFB1-5780-BBAC6E0FFE6D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tuponia hippophaes ( Fieber, 1861 )
status

 

Tuponia hippophaes ( Fieber, 1861) View in CoL

( Figs. 11–12 View FIGURES 1 – 12 , 49–52 View FIGURES 49 – 61 )

Oncotylus hippophaes Fieber, 1861: 299 View in CoL .

Tuponia unicolor: Hsiao and Meng, 1963: 447 View in CoL .

Tuponia (Chlorotuponia) hippophaes: Wagner, 1975: 448 View in CoL ; Linnavuori, 2010: 402 View Cited Treatment .

Diagnosis. Recognized by the small sized, total length 1.83 (male), 1.79 (female); general coloration greenish yellow; dorsum with sericeous setae; head almost vertical, conforming to anterior margin of pronotum; vertex slightly convex and posterior margin broad; length of antennal segment II almost equal to width of head; labium fulvous, black apically, reaching meta-coxa; anterior margin of hemelytron convex; legs yellow, meta-femur with inconspicuous spots, tibial spines black without dark bases, meta-tibia with several rows of black spinules; tarsal segment III and claws darkened, claws elongate, slender, smoothly curving, pulvillus absent; abdomen greenish yellow with golden pubescence. Similar in coloration and structure of male genitalia to T. gobica and T. oxiana , distinguished from them by the long and straight apical spine of endosoma.

Male genitalia ( Figs. 49–52 View FIGURES 49 – 61 ): Endosoma L-shaped, apical spine long and straight, secondary gonopore well sclerotized with membrane; left paramere boat-shaped, apex of anterior lobe heavily sclerotized; right paramere lanceolate; phallotheca strongly narrowing and attenuate apically, as in Fig. 52 View FIGURES 49 – 61 .

Host plants. Tamaris sp. ( Tamaricaceae ) ( Hoberlandt, 1956; Hsiao and Meng, 1963; Drapolyuk, 1982; Carapezza, 1997; Linnavuori, 2010), Anemone vitifolia ( Hsiao and Meng, 1963) , Myricaria germanica ( Tamanini, 1964) , Myricaria sp. ( Tamaricaceae ) ( Drapolyuk, 1982), and Reaumuria vermiculata ( Carapezza,1997) .

Distribution. China (Shandong), Switzerland and France ( Fieber, 1861), Spain and Morocco ( Wagner, 1951, 1971), Turkey ( Wagner, 1955a; Hoberlandt, 1956), Greece ( Beier and Wagner, 1956), Israel ( Linnavuori, 1961), Lebanon and Cyprus ( Wagner, 1962), Italy ( Tamanini, 1964), Algeria ( Eckerlein and Wagner, 1965), Mallorca ( Ribes, 1965), Corsica ( Pericart, 1965), Libya ( Eckerlein and Wagner, 1969), Tunisia ( Carapezza, 1997), Iran ( Linnavuori, 2010).

Specimens examined. CHINA: Shandong Province: 1 male, 1 female, Huimin County (37°22'N, 117°33'E), 6.VIII.1955, Xiang-Ling MENG.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Miridae

Genus

Tuponia

Loc

Tuponia hippophaes ( Fieber, 1861 )

Li, Xiao-Ming & Liu, Guo-Qing 2016
2016
Loc

Tuponia (Chlorotuponia) hippophaes:

Linnavuori 2010: 402
Wagner 1975: 448
1975
Loc

Tuponia unicolor:

Hsiao 1963: 447
1963
Loc

Oncotylus hippophaes

Fieber 1861: 299
1861
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