Halobates pangantihoni, Zettel & Laciny, 2021
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13153794 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9B4487B9-AD49-BD0C-999E-1CE8FBAA3F74 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Halobates pangantihoni |
status |
sp. nov. |
Halobates pangantihoni nov.sp. ( Figs 1-11 View Figs 1-2 View Figs 3-4 View Figs 5-14 , 15 View Fig )
T y p e m a t e r i a l: Holotype (male; PNM) from the Philippines, Oriental Mindoro, Calapan City, Silonay , N 13°24’, E 121°14’, leg. C. V. Pangantihon. GoogleMaps Paratypes ( NHMW, PNM, UPLB, ZCW, ZMUC): 37 males, 41 females, collected with the holotype .
D i a g n o s i s: Blackish, small species (body length 3.5-4.0 mm; head width 1.16-1.29 mm). Base of antenna and profemur dark yellowish testaceous. First protarsomere shorter than half the length of second (ca. 0.4 times). – Male: Meso-metanotum without standing setae. Segment 8 subsymmetrical; spiracular processes on both sides angular; styliform processes boot-shaped, right one slightly longer than left one. Proctiger subsymmetrical; lateral processes strongly curved ventrad, short in dorsal aspect, slender in lateral aspect, right one hardly longer than left one. – Female: Meso-metanotum with erect setae anteromedially and posterolaterally. Mesopleuron lacking long white hairs.
D e s c r i p t i o n o f m a l e: Measurements (holotype; range of paratypes: n = 10): Body length 3.60 (3.55-3.73); maximum width (at mesacetabula) 1.50 (1.44-1.58). Head width 1.16 (1.16-1.20); eye distance at hind margin of head 0.67 (0.66-0.70). Lengths of antennomeres, I 1.16, II 0.45, III 0.39, IV 0.45. Pronotum length (median) 0.30 (0.26- 0.30), width 0.89 (0.89-0.94). Lengths of leg segments: profemur 1.50, protibia 1.13, protarsus 0.17 + 0.41, mesofemur 4.23, mesotibia 3.12, mesotarsus 1.40 + 0.44, metafemur 3.51, metatibia 1.66, metatarsus 0.50.
Colour: Body mainly black. Head ( Fig. 3 View Figs 3-4 ) posterodorsally with pair of wedge-shaped pruinose marks that are narrowly connected (rarely shortly interrupted) to the yellow antennal sockets along inner eye margins. Mediotergite 7 with narrow yellow hind margin. Ventrally head, prosternum, proacetabula, large triangular marks on mesacetabula, sterna, and most of segment 8 (except apices of styliform processes) yellow. Antenna black; antennomere 1 in dorsal view with yellowish testaceous to brownish base (ventrally lighter). Legs black; coxae and trochanters yellowish, dorsally more or less infuscated; profemur with yellowish-brown base.
Structural characteristics: Body slender, fusiform ( Figs 1 View Figs 1-2 , 3 View Figs 3-4 ). Head much broader than pronotum. Posterior eye distance clearly more than half of head width. Antennomere 1 shorter than 2-4 combined. Pronotum about half as long as head, with a pair of shallow impressions. All thoracic nota without long erect setae (semierect setae on mesonotum up to ca 0.03 mm long). Anterior width of meso-metanotum slightly shorter than head width. Foreleg ( Fig. 5 View Figs 5-14 ): Profemur slightly incrassate, bearing two rows of stout black setae. Protibia with moderately large distal process. Protarsus hardly longer than half of tibia length, tarsomere 2 ca. 2.4 times as long as 1. Meso- and metatrochanter, meso- and metafemur with numerous black spines; meso- and metatibia with numerous shorter spines. Metatarsomeres fused. Abdomen short; segment 8 protruding. Anterior mediotergites and laterotergites without erect setae.
Segment 8 ( Fig. 7 View Figs 5-14 ): Spiracular processes symmetrical, angular in ventral, slightly tuberculate in dorsal aspect; dorsoposterior margin evenly convex; styliform processes boot-shaped, only slightly asymmetrical, the right one slightly longer than the left one; both constricted at mid-length (in lateral aspect), then moderately widened, apices elongated, narrowly rounded; their bases close together, ventrally bearing long setae.
Pygophore ovate, apically slightly truncate. Proctiger ( Fig. 9-11 View Figs 5-14 ) short, rhomboidal, only slightly wider than long in dorsal aspect, because lateral processes strongly curved ventrally; both subequally long, almost straight and slender.
D e s c r i p t i o n o f f e m a l e: Measurements (range of paratypes: n = 10): Body length 3.74-3.96; maximum width (at mesacetabula) 2.02-2.15. Head width 1.24-1.29; eye distance at hind margin of head 0.70-0.75. Lengths of antennomeres (of one randomly selected paratype), I 1.21, II 0.47, III 0.41, IV 0.50. Pronotum length (median) 0.29-0.32, width 0.95-1.02. Lengths of leg segments (of one randomly selected paratype): profemur 1.82, protibia 1.45, protarsus 0.22 + 0.54, mesofemur 4.81, mesotibia 3.70, mesotarsus 1.56 + 0.47, metafemur 3.87, metatibia 2.02, metatarsus 0.59.
Colour: Similar as in male, except mesosternum largely and metasternum entirely yellow.
Structural characteristics: Body much stouter than in male ( Figs 2 View Figs 1-2 , 4 View Figs 3-4 ). Structures of head, antenna, and pronotum similar as in male. Anterior width of meso-metanotum hardly smaller than head width, anteromedially and posterolaterally with areas of rather long (ca. 0.1 mm), erect, black setae; rarely black setae more extended. Metacetabula also with erect black setae. Foreleg ( Fig. 6 View Figs 5-14 ): Profemur slender. Protarsus slightly longer than half of tibia length, tarsomere 2 ca. 2.6 times as long as 1. Pilosity on flexor sides of profemur and protibia longer than in male, setae on extensor side of protarsus only apically. Spines of middle and hindlegs similar as in male. Metatrochanter with a group of long hairs. Abdomen short, apically pointed ( Fig. 4 View Figs 3-4 ). Anterior mediotergites medially with a pair of very shallow, elongate impressions separated by a narrow, very blunt median ridge. Hind margin of sternum 7 ( Fig. 8 View Figs 5-14 ) with wide, concave emargination, in middle hardly visibly protruded, laterally with numerous long whitish hairs.
C o m p a r a t i v e n o t e s: The natural relationships of the species of Halobates have been studied in detail by ANDERSEN (1991), ANDERSEN & WEIR (1994), ANDERSEN & CHENG (2004), CHENG (2008) and ROMÁN- PALACIOS et al. (2018). Following the character analyses by ANDERSEN & WEIR (1994), ANDERSEN & CHENG (2004) and CHENG (2008), H. pangantihoni nov.sp. belongs to the Halobates regalis group. Most members of this group are easily recognizable by boot-shaped styliform processes of the male’s segment 8, which are otherwise only present in H. robustus BARBER, 1925 , a species from the Galapagos Islands. Hitherto, the Halobates regalis group contained ten species; it has a centre of radiation along the coasts of Australia and New Guinea (for distributional data see ROMÁN- PALACIOS et al. 2018). Only two species were previously recorded from the Philippines, H. dianae ZETTEL, 2001 and H. liaoi ZETTEL, 2005 .
Among the species of the H. regalis group, only H. pangantihoni nov.sp., H. dianae and H. liaoi share a dimorphism in the pilosity of the meso-metanotum, by erect setae being present only in the females. This character may support a close relationship of the three
Philippine species. Present distributional data suggest that these three species have allopatric species ranges ( Fig. 15 View Fig ), but the data are still scarce, except for H. dianae .
Halobates pangantihoni nov.sp. and H. liaoi can be immediately differentiated by the shape of the proctiger, which possesses a long, laterally directed right process in H. liaoi ( Fig. 14 View Figs 5-14 ). In addition, in H. liaoi the right styliform process is much longer than the left one, antennomere 1 and profemur are entirely black in both sexes, and the black colour on the thoracic venter of the females is much more extended than in H. pangantihoni nov.sp.
The characters of segment 8 and proctiger of the males of H. pangantihoni nov.sp. and H. dianae are more similar, but in H. dianae the styliform processes are stouter (in lateral aspect) and the lateral processes of the proctiger thicker, especially at their bases ( Figs 12, 13 View Figs 5-14 ). Both sexes of H. dianae have bright yellow bases of antennomere 1. In the female of H. dianae the erect setae are widely distributed over the entire surface of the meso-metanotum, whereas they are often restricted to rather small anteromedial and posterolateral areas in H. pangantihoni nov.sp.; however, this character shows some variation in both species. Further, the female of H. dianae possesses long white, oblique hairs posteriorly on the mesopleuron that are lacking in both H. pangantihoni nov.sp. and H. liaoi .
D i s t r i b u t i o n: Philippines, north-eastern coast of Mindoro ( Fig. 15 View Fig ).
H a b i t a t s: The new species was collected from a river mouth bordered by mangroves (C. V. Pangantihon, pers. comm.). It seems that river estuaries and coasts with mangroves are the preferred habitats of all three Philippine species of the Halobates regalis group (comp. ZETTEL 2001, 2005).
E t y m o l o g y: This species is dedicated to its discoverer, Mr. Clister V. Pangantihon, an expert of Philippine aquatic Hemiptera and a skilled collector of marine Gerromorpha.
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