Anaceratagallia (Anaceratagallia) seriphidii ( Emelyanov, 1964 )

Tishechkin, Dmitri Yu., 2020, Review of the leafhopper genus Anaceratagallia Zachvatkin, 1946 (Homoptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Cicadellidae: Megophthalminae: Agalliini) from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Central Asia, Zootaxa 4821 (2), pp. 250-276 : 271

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4821.2.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BC1CFF1D-5DB5-4E19-B4D0-0C106C169440

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4398476

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/76154D29-AE4A-CF29-FF79-FAEEFD61F802

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Anaceratagallia (Anaceratagallia) seriphidii ( Emelyanov, 1964 )
status

 

12. Anaceratagallia (Anaceratagallia) seriphidii ( Emelyanov, 1964) View in CoL

Figs. 239–240 View FIGURES 228–247

Description. Only the holotype, male, with the labels “ 40 km South of Zhana-Arka St.[Railway Station], Karaganda Obl[ast] [ Kazakhstan]. 16.IX.[19]60. Emelyanov” (handwritten, in Russian, our comments in square brackets) and “ Holotypus Agallia seriphidii Emelyanov ” (on red paper, first word printed, species name and author handwritten), deposited in Zoological Institute of Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg was investigated.

Penis in side view with serrated ventral crest in basal half and slightly concave dorsal margin ( Fig. 239 View FIGURES 228–247 ). Male anal collar appendage narrow, bent upwards, with pointed tip ( Fig. 240 View FIGURES 228–247 ).

The genital block was dissected into separate parts; the part that we consider to be male anal collar appendage is shown on Fig. 240 View FIGURES 228–247 . The shape of anal collar appendage on the drawing in the original description is different although the shape of the penis is exactly the same, as on Fig. 239 View FIGURES 228–247 . Drawings of this species by Mityaev (1971) do not clarify the situation, since they are reproduced from the original description.

Biology. On Artemisia (subg. Seriphidium). Hibernates at the egg stage and reaches 3 rd– 4 th instar by the end of June. In July–August, when host plants wither, the development of nymphs temporarily stops and resumes in the end of August. Adult specimens emerge in September (Emelyanov, pers. comm.).

Calling signal. Unknown.

Distribution. Central and Eastern Kazakhstan.

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