Alloeorhynchus (Alloeorhynchus) reinhardi Kerzhner & Guenther , 1999

Zhao, Ping, Mao, Runqian & Cao, Liangming, 2019, Two new and one little-known damsel bug of the subfamily Prostemmatinae Reuter (Hemiptera, Heteroptera, Nabidae) from China, ZooKeys 845, pp. 139-152 : 143-146

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.845.32893

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7EEE79D3-4EAD-410C-B636-7FEF8738CC61

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DAEB3DDF-477F-91B4-EDA9-F8D1D3C55E46

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Alloeorhynchus (Alloeorhynchus) reinhardi Kerzhner & Guenther , 1999
status

 

Alloeorhynchus (Alloeorhynchus) reinhardi Kerzhner & Guenther, 1999 Figs 5, 6-9, 21

Alloeorhynchus (Alloeorhynchus) reinhardi Kerzhner & Günther, 1999, 33: 221; Gapon and Konstantinov 2008: 24.

Material examined.

1 female, China, Guizhou, Kaili, 3-III-2011, 26°34'15.93"N, 107°58'34.53"E, Zhao Ping leg.

Diagnosis.

Body blackish brown with pale yellowish-brown markings; head, thorax, scutellum, fore wing (except basal part of corium), and lateral sides of abdominal sterna blackish brown to black; antennae, rostrum, and legs yellow.

Redescription.

Color. Body blackish brown to black (Figs 5, 21). Head, first rostral segment, thorax, scutellum, corium (except basal part), clavus, membrane, spines beneath femora and tibia, apical part and sides of abdominal sterna (Fig. 7), apical part of third to seventh connexival segments, eighth connexival segment blackish brown to black (Figs 5, 7, 21); second to fourth antennal segments, apical part of femora, apical and basal parts of tibiae, tarsi pale yellowish brown; first antennal segment, second to fourth rostral segments, coxae, trochanters, femora (except apical part), tibiae (except basal and apical parts), basal part of corium, middle part of abdominal sternum (third to sixth segments), second connexival segment, basal part of third to seventh connexival segments yellow.

Structure and vestiture. Macropterous. Body elongate oblong, posteriorly gradually widened (Fig. 5). Head, pronotum, ventral surface of abdomen, legs and antennae smooth and shiny (Fig. 21). Body sparsely clothed with white long setae; first antennal segment sparsely clothed with oblique setae, second to fourth segments densely clothed with oblique setae; tibiae and corium of fore wing clothed densely with setae (Fig. 5). Subapical part of first antennal segment curved outward. Anterior pronotal lobe somewhat bulged and twice as long as posterior pronotal lobe; scutellum sub-angular, apical part with small protuberance. Fore coxa strong, subequal to 2/5 of femur in length; fore and mid femora distinctly thickened, ventrally sub-basal 2/5 dilated in a protrusion, and apical half beneath with two lines of black dentate spines; fore tibia apically dilated with spongy fossula and underneath with two lines of black spines; mid tibia beneath with a line of distinct spines and a line of indistinct spines (Fig. 6). Abdomen in female widened posteriorly; fore wing extending to tip of abdomen (Figs 5, 7). Ostiolar peritreme of metathoracic scent gland shown in Fig. 9. Apical part of abdomen in female shown in Figs 7, 8.

Measurements. Female, n = 1. Body length 5.70; maximal width of abdomen 2.30. Length of head 0.93; length of anteocular part 0.83; length of postocular part 0.50; length of synthlipsis 0.40; interocellar space 0.15; length of antennal segments I–IV = 0.60, 1.07, 0.97, 1.40; length of rostral segments I–IV =0.33, 1.07, 0.76, 0.27; length of collar 0.20; length of anterior lobe of pronotum 0.90; length of posterior lobe of pronotum 0.50; maximal width of thorax 1.73; length of scutellum 0.87; length of hemelytron 3.93.

Distribution.

China (Guizhou, Sichuan).

Remarks.

Kerzhner and Günther (1999) described the species A. (A.) reinhardi in German based on two short-winged females collected from Sichuan Province in Southern China. We found a macropterous female in Guizhou Province, which is redescribed here in English to facilitate identification. We identified this species by comparing it with the description and the color illustration in the paper published by Kerzhner and Günther (1999) with the help of Dr Steffen Roth (University Museum of Bergen), but we were unable to examine the type specimens.