Macrosteles

Yalin, Zhang, Lin, Lu & Kwon, Yong Jung, 2013, Review of the Leafhopper Genus Macrosteles Fieber (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Deltocephalinae) from China, Zootaxa 3700 (3), pp. 361-392 : 364-365

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3700.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:28E77AEB-00BD-4046-BE2A-E270FC06773D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151829

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F71D4A-BD2B-FFE5-FF17-1F2BFA59F96B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Macrosteles
status

 

Key to species of Macrosteles View in CoL from China (males)

1 Aedeagus in lateral view with terminal appendages abruptly curved caudad or ventrad............................... 2

- Aedeagus in lateral view with terminal appendages more or less continuing with curvature of shaft, extending dorsad or cephalad............................................................................................. 8

2 Aedeagal shaft short, with terminal appendages short and divergent in caudal view (Plate 7, figs. 7–10) (frontalis species- group)................................................................................... M. harperatus View in CoL

- Aedeagal shaft elongate, with terminal appendages parallel or crossing at base..................................... 3

3 Aedeagus with apical appendages short, less than half of shaft length; aedeagal shaft with pair of protuberances laterally sub- apically (Plate 8, figs. 3, 4) ( guttatus View in CoL species-group).................................................. M. guttatus View in CoL

- Aedeagus with apical appendages long, generally longer than half of shaft length; aedeagal shaft without protuberances later- ally subapically (Plates 12, 13) (variata species-group)........................................................ 4

4 Aedeagal shaft with pair of protuberances dorsally subapically (Plate 13, figs. 5, 6)......................... M. brochus View in CoL

- Aedeagal shaft without protuberances dorsally subapically..................................................... 5

5 2nd tergal apodeme with posterior lobes extending well beyond posterior margin of tergite (Plate 13, fig. 25)..... M. striifrons View in CoL

- 2nd tergal apodeme with posterior lobes not extending beyond posterior margin of tergite............................. 6

6 Aedeagal shaft with several teeth dorsally and baso-ventrally; 2nd sternal apodemes with posterior lobes twice as long as basal width (Plate 12, figs. 13, 14, 18)............................................................... M. albicostalis View in CoL

- Aedeagal shaft smooth; 2nd sternal apodemes with posterior lobes less than twice as long as basal width................. 7

7 Aedeagus with apical appendages long, twisted, lying distad of shaft; 1st sternal apodemes with anterior lobes well developed (Plate 12, figs. 5, 6, 8)......................................................................... M. abludens View in CoL

- Aedeagus with apical appendages comparatively short, lying near shaft; 1st sternal apodemes with anterior lobes reduced (Plate 13, figs. 13, 14, 16)....................................................................... M. parastriifrons View in CoL

8 Vertex with 4 black or brown spots (Plate 9) ( quadripunctulatus View in CoL species-group).................................... 9

- Vertex with 3 pairs of black or brown spots, sometimes spots merged irregularly................................... 11

9 Pygofer without caudo-ventral tubercle; aedeagal shaft with dorsal protuberance subapically (Plate 9, figs. 13, 14)............................................................................................... M. quadrimaculatus View in CoL

- Pygofer with caudo-ventral tubercle; aedeagal shaft without protuberance subapically.............................. 10

10 Apical aedeagal appendages branched (Plate 9, figs. 22–24).................................... M. quadripunctulatus View in CoL

- Apical aedeagal appendages unbranched (Plate 9, figs. 5, 6)........................................... M. brunneus View in CoL

11 Aedeagal appendages apically convergent or crossing........................................................ 12

- Aedeagal appendages apically divergent or parallel.......................................................... 18

12 Appendages of aedeagal shaft distinctly sinuate, conjoined bases above gonopore angled cephalad, processes above this directed dorsad (Plates 5, 6) ( fieberi View in CoL species group).......................................................... 13

- Appendages of aedeagal shaft evenly curved or straight in lateral aspect (Plates 10, 11) ( sordidipennis View in CoL species-group)..... 15

13 Aedeagus without lateral flanges, with stout teeth laterally and ventrally on shaft, 2nd acrotegite usually horizontal (Plate 5, figs. 15–19)................................................................................. M. spinosus View in CoL

- Aedeagus with lateral flanges, 2nd acrotegite usually V-shaped (Plate 5, fig. 8; Plate 6, fig. 6)........................ 14

14 2nd sternal apodeme with posterior lobes reduced, shorter than basal width (Plate 5, fig. 10).................... M. lividus View in CoL

- 2nd sternal apodeme with posterior lobes longer than basal width (Plate 6, fig. 9)........................ M. viridigriseus View in CoL

15 1st abdominal sternal apodemes with anterior lobes well-developed and long (Plate 10, figs. 8, 9)............... M. ehensis View in CoL

- 1st abdominal sternal apodemes with anterior lobes short and narrow............................................ 16

16 2nd acrotergite with trunk and neck generally thin (Plate 11, fig. 5)...................................... M. heitiacus View in CoL

- 2nd acrotergite with trunk and neck conspicuously thick and stout............................................... 17

17 2nd abdominal sternal apodemes with posterior lobes robust, length about 1.5 times basal width (Plate 10, fig. 20). M. gracilis View in CoL

- 2nd abdominal sternal apodemes with posterior lobes elongated strikingly, length about 2.5 times basal width (Plate 11, fig. 17)....................................................................................... M. sordidipennis View in CoL

18 Aedeagus with appendages short and slim, sickle-shaped in later aspect (Plate 4) ( falcatus View in CoL species-group)................ 19

- Aedeagal appendages simple, moderately long and broad (Plates 1–3) ( alpinus View in CoL species-group)........................ 20

19 Aedeagal shaft broad ventrally, with serrated flanges laterally (Plate 4, figs. 5, 6)............................. M. choui View in CoL

- Aedeagal shaft slender ventrally, with symmetric teeth arising directly from shaft laterally (Plate 4, figs. 15, 16).. M. falcatus View in CoL

20 Vertex unmarked; apical aedeagal appendages sinuate, with tips recurved posterad in lateral aspect (Plate 2, figs. 1, 3).................................................................................................. M. tibetensis View in CoL

- Vertex with 4-6 dark spots; apical aedeagal appendages not sinuate in lateral aspect................................ 21

21 Aedeagal shaft distinctly swollen in lateral view (Plate 1, figs. 11, 12)................................... M. cristatus View in CoL

- Aedeagal shaft evenly tapered in lateral view............................................................... 22

22 Aedeagal shaft smooth, with apical appendages strongly curved dorsally......................................... 23

- Aedeagal shaft not smooth, with apical appendages shallowly curved dorsally.................................... 24

23 2nd acrotergite with trunk widely V-shaped; 2nd tergal apodemes with posterior lobes apparently extending beyond posterior margin of tergite (Plate 2, fig. 13)................................................................... M. laevis View in CoL

- 2nd acrotergite with trunk comparatively small and nearly horizontal; 2nd tergal apodemes with posterior lobes not extending beyond posterior margin of tergite (Plate 3, figs. 14–16)................................................ M. nabiae View in CoL

24 Aedeagal shaft usually parallel-sided, with a row of teeth laterally; 2nd acrotergite with trunk horizontal (Plate 1, figs. 4, 5)............................................................................................... M. alpinus View in CoL

- Aedeagal shaft strikingly extended laterally, with lateral flanges broadly developed mesally; 2nd acrotergite with trunk widely V-shaped (Plate 3, figs. 4–6).................................................................... M. lindbergi View in CoL

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadellidae

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF