Andes migratorius (Distant)

Löcker, Birgit, Fletcher, Murray J., Holzinger, Werner E. & Gurr, And Geoff M., 2007, Revision of the Australian Andini (Hemiptera: Fulgoromorpha: Cixiidae) with a description of five new species, Zootaxa 1475, pp. 43-59 : 48-49

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.176765

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8539616C-E2F8-4116-AF8C-DDFF22DCF7B3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6252579

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3F5A6741-057A-220E-FF61-FB85FD43DAAB

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Andes migratorius (Distant)
status

 

Andes migratorius (Distant) View in CoL

( Figs 2 View FIGURE 2 D–F, 7)

Brixia migratoria Distant 1907: 279 View in CoL .

Leirioessa tortricomorpha Kirkaldy 1907: 112 View in CoL (Plate 8, Figs 19–21), synonymised by Jacobi 1928: 35. Andes tortricomorphus (Kirkaldy) View in CoL , Muir 1925: 222 (Plate 2, Fig. 28). Andes migratorius (Distant) View in CoL , Muir 1925: 223.

Leirioessa migratoria (Distant) View in CoL , Jacobi 1928: 35.

Andes migratorius (Distant) View in CoL , Holzinger et al. 2002: 124.

Types. Lectotype of Brixia migratoria here designated, ɗ, AUSTRALIA, Qld: F.P. Dodd (BMNH). Lectotype of Leirioessa tortricomorpha , here designated, ɗ, AUSTRALIA, Qld: Kuranda, viii.1904 (BPBM). Paralectotype: AUSTRALIA, Qld: 1 Ψ, Cairns, viii.1904 (BPBM).

Remarks. Distant’s (1907) original description of Brixia migratoria does not specify whether the type series consists of more than one specimen. Only one specimen has been found in the BMNH and it is here designated as lectotype in order to clarify the identity of the species. A lectotype and paralectotype for Leirioessa tortricomorpha are here designated to give a diagnostic reference for that name. Holzinger et al. (2002: 124) listed Leirioessa as a synonym of Andes without listing the included species.

Other material examined. AUSTRALIA, NSW: 1 ɗ, Lorien Refuge, 3km N Lansdowne nr Taree, rainforest margin, malaise trap, 23–30.iii.1987 (G. Williams) ( ASCU), 1 Ψ, same data, 9.–15.iii.1987 ( ASCU), AUSTRALIA, Qld: 5 ɗ, 3 Ψ, 1 ɗ or Ψ (abdomen missing), State Forest near Caloundra Turnoff, SE.Qld, 8.iii.1984 (I.D. Galloway) ( QDPC), 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ, Cairns ( CAS), 1 ɗ, 22 [miles] SW Ingham, 30.v.1961 (R. Straatman) ( ANIC), 1 ɗ, Camp Mountain, SE.Qld, malaise trap, open sclerophyll gully, 29.xii.1979 – 7.i.1980 (Marks) ( QDPC), 3 ɗ, 1 Ψ, 11 km W Caloundra, 11.xi.1989 (C.W. & L.B. O’Brien) ( LBOB), 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ, Mt Windsor Tableland Forestry Hut, 16.15.42S 145.02.25E, 1060m, pans, 16.–17.iv.1994 (D. Bickel) (AMS), 1 ɗ, Upper Cedar Creek, via Samford, 6.xii.1962 (G. Monteith) ( UQIC), 1 ɗ, Palm Island, N.Qld, 20.xii.1930 – 6.i.1931 (I.M. Mackerras) ( ANIC).

Colour. Vertex light or mid brown with two longitudinal, white stripes; frons mid or dark brown, lateral carinae paler, without dots; pronotum light brown; mesonotum light to mid brown; legs light brown; forewing hyaline, colourless, with transverse band (tb1) wide, mid to dark brown, extending to immediately basad of pterostigma, covering fork CuA1+CuA2 and terminating at CuP, forewing with transverse band (tb2) narrow, mid to dark brown, around basal cell reaching into clavus, forewing with mid or dark brown marks scattered across wing, apical half of wing with light brown patches; veins concolorous with cells, tubercles mid brown, pterostigma light brown; abdominal sternites light or mid brown.

Morphology. Body length: ɗ 5.6–6.6 mm, Ψ 6.1–7.1 mm.

Head: Vertex 0.8–1.0 x as long as wide. Junction of vertex and frons slightly angular and distinctly produced in lateral view. Frons 2.5–3.1 x longer than wide; median carina incomplete, covering 1/3 to 1/2 of length of frons; lateral carinae not extending laterally, not concealing base of antennae; median ocellus separated from frontoclypeal suture by less than its own diameter. Rostrum slightly or distinctly surpassing hind coxae.

Thorax: Forewing 2.4–2.7 x longer than wide; CuA1+CuA2 forking 1/5–1/6 away from apex of clavus; costa with 11–16 tubercles. Hind leg: tibia with 2–6 small to medium sized lateral spines; 1st tarsomere with 8–9 apical teeth; 2nd tarsomere with 7–8 apical teeth and 1–3 very fine setae underneath row of apical teeth.

Male genitalia: Anal tube as in Figs 7 D–E; genital styles and ventromedian process as in Figs 7 F–G. Aedeagus ( Figs 7 A–C): phallotheca with long, very slender cucullus, shaped as in Fig. 7 A, rim of cucullus smooth, in left lateral view convex ( Fig. 7 A); flagellum unarmed; virga elongated, sinuate.

Remarks. The structure of the male genitalia, in particular the shape of the cucullus, is shared with Andes brunneus Muir (1925) and A. indistinctus Muir (1925) from Borneo. In A. brunneus , however, the cucullus is smaller, covering only the apical third of the phallotheca, whereas in A. migratorius half to 3/4 of the phallotheca is covered by the cucullus. Andes indistinctus differs from A. migratorius in the shape of the anal tube, which bears a triangular process with an acute apex on its apical lobes.

Andes migratorius can be distinguished from all other Australian Andini by the unique combination of a long, very slender cucullus and an unspotted face.

NSW

Royal Botanic Gardens, National Herbarium of New South Wales

ASCU

Agricultural Scientific Collections Unit

QDPC

Queensland Primary Industries Insect Collection

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

ANIC

Australian National Insect Collection

UQIC

University of Queensland Insect Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cixiidae

Genus

Andes

Loc

Andes migratorius (Distant)

Löcker, Birgit, Fletcher, Murray J., Holzinger, Werner E. & Gurr, And Geoff M. 2007
2007
Loc

Andes migratorius

Holzinger 2002: 124
2002
Loc

Leirioessa migratoria

Jacobi 1928: 35
1928
Loc

Brixia migratoria

Distant 1907: 279
1907
Loc

Leirioessa tortricomorpha

Jacobi 1928: 35
Kirkaldy 1907: 112
1907
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