Leurolophus Tuthill, 1942

Burckhardt, D. & Basset, Y., 2000, The jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera, Psylloidea) associated with Schinus (Anacardiaceae): systematics, biogeography and host plant relationships, Journal of Natural History 34 (1), pp. 57-155 : 128

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/002229300299688

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:203D05D3-DED0-44D2-B749-1B877B2DEB05

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03ED87CC-FFB0-A670-FE6C-159DFF4DFA55

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Leurolophus Tuthill
status

 

Leurolophus Tuthill View in CoL

L eurolophus Tuthill, 1942: 92 . Type species: L eurolophus vittatus Tuthill View in CoL , by original designation and monotypy

When adding L. inopinatus to the previously monotypic genus L eurolophus, Burckhardt (1989) noted some important di erences (head shape, presence of costal break and absence of cellular pattern on membrane in the forewing) to L. vittatus View in CoL , the type species. Despite these di erences, L. inopinatus was assigned to L eurolophus mostly on the basis of the paramere shape, and the egg which lacks an apical ®lament. Burckhardt and Lauterer (1989) recorded two specimens from Dominican amber which they referred to Tainarys View in CoL . The present improved material base suggests that head and forewing structure in the adults, and the position of the anus in the larvae de®ne L eurolophus and Tainarys View in CoL (cf. keys). The paramere shape is only super®cially similar, and presence or absence of an apical pedicel in eggs occur in other groups in closely related species (e.g. Aphalara, Burckhardt and Lauterer, 1997 View in CoL ).

Here we transfer L. inopinatus to Tainarys (see below), and the fossil species from Dominican amber to L eurolophus . The latter resembles L. vittatus in the head shape, whereas the paramere is lamellar and the male proctiger indistinctly 2-segmented resembling L. oriformae . As L. vittatus and L. oriformae , the amber species lacks a costal break, bears a cellular pattern on the forewing mebrane, and has stout legs.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Aphalaridae

Loc

Leurolophus Tuthill

Burckhardt, D. & Basset, Y. 2000
2000
Loc

L eurolophus

TUTHILL, L. D. 1942: 92
1942
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