6533b827fe1ef96bd12870d8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Presence of uradenia in male adults of the genus Dismegistus (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Parastrachiidae)

Jerzy A. LisDominique Pluot-sigwalt

subject

0106 biological sciencesfood.ingredientDismegistus010607 zoologyZoologyLygaeoideaBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHemipteraHeteropterafoodGenusabdominal segment VIIIectodermal glandParastrachiidaemorphologyCydnidaeuradeniaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPentatomoideaCoreoideaHeteropterabiology.organism_classificationInsect ScienceDismegistusParastrachiaPentatomoideaParastrachia

description

Uradenia, often referred to as paragenital glands, are usually voluminous paired exocrine glands located ventrally in the abdomen mostly on the intersegmental membrane between abdominal segments (= urites) VII-VIII or VIII-IX, depending on sex or the taxon. They have been previously recorded from eight pentatomomorphan families belonging to Coreoidea, Lygaeoidea and Pyrrhocoroidea (Hemiptera: Heteroptera), found either in males, females or both sexes, and were thought to be absent in Pentatomoidea. We report here the first instance of uradenia in a pentatomoid genus, the African Dismegistus Amyot & Serville, 1843 (Parastrachiidae). Only the male adult possesses uradenia located on the intersegmental membrane of segments VIII-IX. The only other genus of the family, Parastrachia Distant, 1883, as well as other examined genera belonging to pentatomoid families possibly related to Parastrachiidae (Cydnidae, Thyreocoridae), do not possess uradenia. The uradenia of Dismegistus exhibit the same fundamental structure as in other trichophoran families but differ by their dorso-lateral position (instead of ventral), and also by the paired orifices (instead of unpaired and median). The implications of the presence of uradenia within member of a pentatomoid genus are briefly discussed.

10.2478/aemnp-2018-0016https://doi.org/10.2478/aemnp-2018-0016