Search results for "Cydnidae"

showing 4 items of 34 documents

Macroscytus raunoi, a new burrower bug species from Papua New Guinea (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae: Cydninae)

2016

Abstract Macroscytus raunoi, a new species of the genus Macroscytus Fieber, 1860, is described from the Morobe Province on the northern coast of Papua New Guinea. The new species is similar in its morphological characters to Australian M. arnhemicus J. A. Lis, 1999. Differences in morphology and male genitalia which enable separation of both species are provided.

new species0106 biological sciencesMacroscytusbiologyCydninaeMale genitaliaHeteroptera010607 zoologyNew guineaMorphology (biology)biology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHemipteraAustralian RegionMacroscytusGenusInsect ScienceBotanyCydnidaeEntomologica Americana
researchProduct

Geotomus granulosus, a peculiar sehirine-like new species of the subfamily Cydninae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) from Burundi

2022

Geotomus granulosus sp. n. is described from Burundi, and is the third burrower bug species recorded hitherto from this country. This burrower bug resembles species of two Sehirinae genera, i.e. Ochetostethus Fieber, 1860 and Ochetostethomorpha Schumacher, 1913, in its dorsal body habitus. However, all its crucial diagnostic characters (the body chaetotaxy, the shape of evaporatoria and the peritreme, the meso- and metathoracic wings venation, and the shape of spermatheca) demonstrate it represents the genus Geotomus Mulsant et Rey, 1866 (subfamily Cydninae, tribe Geotomini sensu lato).
  

new speciesGeotomini sensu latoburrower bugsBurundiHemipteraHeteropterataxonomyAfrotropical RegionGeotomusAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyCydnidaeAnimal DistributionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZootaxa
researchProduct

Non-monophyly of the “cydnoid” complex within Pentatomoidea (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) revealed by Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of nuclear rDNA seque…

2017

The “cydnoid” complex of pentatomoid families, including Cydnidae, Parastrachiidae, Thaumastellidae, and Thyreocoridae, is morphologically defined by the presence of an array of more or less flattened stout setae (called coxal combs), situated on the distal margin of coxae. These structures, suggested to prevent the coxal-trochanteral articulation from injuries caused by particles of soil, sand or dust, by their nature and function are unknown elsewhere in the Heteroptera. As such, coxal combs were regarded as a synapomorphy of this group of families, and enabled the definition of it as a monophylum. In this study, the monophyly of the “cydnoid” complex of families is tested for the first t…

ribosomal DNAThaumastellidaeCydnidae sensu latoThyreocoridaeParastrachiidaecoxal combsBayesian estimationmolecular phylogenyArthropod Systematics & Phylogeny
researchProduct

Partially disarticulated new Miocene burrower bug (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) from Cerová (Slovakia) documents occasional preservation of terr…

2015

The state of preservation of the bug Sehirus carpathiensis J.A. Lis, Vršanský & Schlögl, sp. n. (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) from the Lakšárska Nová Ves Formation at Cerová (Slovakia) supports extremely rapid sinking and burial in upper bathyal Early Miocene sediments. The specimen originated from land at most a few kilometers away, but transport via a river can be excluded as the head and wings are still attached. Its most likely source based on fossil flora and the habitat of several living representatives of the genus is a riparian habitat in an adjacent area of land. Phylogenetically the new species is closely related to both Oligocene and living representatives of the genus, thus…

slovakiaBathyal zoneHemipteraPaleontologyGenuscerováCydnidaekey words. hemipteraheteropteracenozoicnew speciesbiologyEcologyHeteropterabathyalbiology.organism_classificationHemipterafossil insectcydnidaeQL1-991confocal profileInsect SciencesehirusPaleogeneCenozoicZoologySehirusEuropean Journal of Entomology
researchProduct