Cassida imparata Gressitt & Kimoto, 1963
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4084.1.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E0CD195C-19E5-4A41-BAEF-9F6195640E8A |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6057075 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CC1D3851-FFC6-FFB9-02F0-F0D0D19A8AF6 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Cassida imparata Gressitt & Kimoto, 1963 |
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Cassida imparata Gressitt & Kimoto, 1963 View in CoL
( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 4 – 11. 4 )
Cassida (Taiwania) imitatrix Gressitt, 1952: 493 View in CoL (primary junior homonym of C. imitatrix Spaeth, 1916 View in CoL ). Cassida imparata Gressitt & Kimoto, 1963: 971 View in CoL (new substitute name).
Type locality. China, Guangxi prov., Longzhou Co., 5 mi S of Longzhou.
Original type series. Described only from the holotype ( LMNH).
Type material examined. Holotype, pinned: ‘Kwangsi,South China | Mts. 5 mi S.of Lung- | chow, Lung-chau Dist. | August 8, 1934. | Ernest R. Tinkham [w, p, cb] || 603 [w, t, cb] || HO[hw]LOTYPE | CASSIDA [hw] | ( TAIWANIA ) [hw] | IMITATRIX [hw] | J.L.Gressitt [r, p, cb] || [vernacular name in Chinese, hw] | Taiwania imparata [hw] | (Gressitt) [hw] | det. Li-Zhong Hua [in Chinese, p] 1987 [hw] [w, p, cb] || En-289773 | [Data Matrix barcode] SYS [w. p, cb]’.
Current status. Valid species.
Remarks. Gressitt (1952) named this species as C. imitatrix however, the name was already proposed earlier by Spaeth (1916) thus Gressitt & Kimoto (1963) proposed a new substitute name C. imparata . Medvedev & Eroshkina (1988) synonymized C. imparata with C. gentilis Spaeth, 1926 without any comments. However, Borowiec (1999) followed Chen et al. (1986) and considered the species as valid.
Gressitt (1952) compared the species to C. circumdata Herbst, 1799 and C. obtusata Boheman, 1854 however, both species are very different from C. imparata and the reason why Gressitt compared it to these two is inapprehensible. Cassida imparata is characterized by apparently appendiculate tarsal claws, uniformly yellow ventrites, semicircular pronotum, the base of elytra only slightly wider than the base of pronotum, elytra with raised postscutellar relief and diffuse pattern formed by black spots dispersed on yellow disc. Chen et al. (1986) separated C. imparata from other similar species by subangulate lateral sides of the pronotum (see Fig. 8–36 View FIGURES 4 – 11. 4 View FIGURES 12 – 19. 12 View FIGURES 20 – 25. 20 View FIGURES 26 – 31. 26 View FIGURES 32 – 36. 32 in Chen et al. (1986)), however, the holotype has them rounded. The shape of lateral sides of the pronotum is usually a constant character and diagnostic for several taxa and subangulate shape is not particularly very frequent among Asiatic species of Cassida Linnaeus, 1758 . We assume that Chen et al. (1986) misidentified C. imparata as the characters and figures given by them match to another species— C. pseudosyrtica Medvedev & Eroshkina, 1988 . However, comparison of Chenʼs specimens with types of the latter species would be desirable to confirm this.
Cassida pseudosyrtica View in CoL is the most similar species as it has also apparently appendiculate claws. The paratype specimen (deposited at DBET) distinctly differs by subangulate pronotal sides and more circular body outline. Other similar species are C. gentilis Spaeth, 1926 View in CoL , C. perplexa (Chen & Zia, 1961) View in CoL , and C. simanica (Chen & Zia, 1961) View in CoL but these have appendiculate tarsal claws while C. imparata View in CoL has them apparently appendiculate due to projecting flanks of ultimate tarsomere. Cassida gentilis View in CoL also differs in regularly circular body with pronotum strongly expanded forwards thus lateral corners are situated distinctly in basal 1/4 length thus appearing more semicircular while C. imparata View in CoL has less circular body with pronotum rather elliptical not expanded strongly forwards thus lateral corners are situated around midlength. In addition C. gentilis View in CoL has antennomeres III and IV subequal in length and about 1.5 times as long as II while C. imparata View in CoL has antennomere III distinctly longer than IV and twice as long as II. Cassida perplexa View in CoL differs in subangulate humeral angles of elytra (obtuse in C. imparata View in CoL ) and black elytral disc with yellow spots (yellow with several black spots in C. imparata View in CoL ). Cassida simanica View in CoL also differs in ventrites partly black (uniformly yellow in C. imparata View in CoL ). Cassida varians Herbst, 1799 View in CoL is also similar, particularly its pale forms and moreover it has apparently appendiculate tarsal claws as C. imparata View in CoL but differs in ventrites mostly black (uniformly yellow in C. imparata View in CoL ) and clypeus almost as wide as long (distinctly longer than wide in C. imparata View in CoL ). Other species with similar pattern such as C. praensis Borowiec, 2001 View in CoL and C. thailandica Borowiec, 2001 View in CoL differ in simple tarsal claws.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Cassidinae |
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Callispini |
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Cassida imparata Gressitt & Kimoto, 1963
Sekerka, Lukáš, Jia, Fenglong, Pang, Hong & Borowiec, Lech 2016 |
Cassida (Taiwania) imitatrix
Gressitt, J. L. & Kimoto S. 1963: 971 |
Gressitt, J. L. 1952: 493 |