Search results for "Parastrachiidae"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

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

2018

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 i…

0106 biological sciencesfood.ingredientDismegistus010607 zoologyZoologyLygaeoideaBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHemipteraHeteropterafoodGenusabdominal segment VIIIectodermal glandParastrachiidaemorphologyCydnidaeuradeniaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPentatomoideaCoreoideaHeteropterabiology.organism_classificationInsect ScienceDismegistusParastrachiaPentatomoideaParastrachiaActa Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
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New insight into the systematic position of the endemic Madagascan genus Amberiana (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Dinidoridae) using 12S rDNA sequences

2015

The systematic position of the endemic Madagascan genus Amberiana Dist. İs studied using DNA sequences (the mitochondrial 12S rDNA subunit) for the first time. The phylogenetic relationships within the superfamily Pentatomoidea were computed using neighbor-joining, maximum parsimony, minimum evolution, and maximum likelihood methods, as well as Bayesian estimation. All results based on the mtDNA analyses stand in contrast with previous morphological data. The mtDNA analysis showed close relationships of the genus Amberiana to the genus Sehirus (Cydnidae: Sehirinae) and to species of the family Parastrachiidae, whereas the morphology indicated that the genus was a typical representative of t…

Animal Science and ZoologyAmberianaAmberianini new tribeCydnidaeDinidoridaeMadagascarmitochondrial 12S ribosomal DNAParastrachiidaePentatomoideaSehirussystematic position
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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
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