首页期刊导航|Zootaxa
期刊信息/Journal information
Zootaxa
Magnolia Press
Zootaxa

Magnolia Press

1175-5326

Zootaxa/Journal ZootaxaSCIISTPAHCI
正式出版
收录年代

    Oriental Teratomyzidae (Diptera: Schizophora)

    Papp, Laszlo .
    34页
    查看更多>>摘要:The Oriental Teratomyzidae (Diptera) are reviewed. Teratomyza formosana sp. nov. is described and compared to T. chinica Yang. Poecilovitila gen. nov. (type species: P. elegans sp. nov.), a genus related to Vitila McAlpine & Keyzer is described, and includes eleven new species P. barbata sp. nov., P. brevicornis sp. nov., P. bulbiscapus sp. nov., P. defecta sp. nov., P. elegans sp. nov., P. erugata sp. nov., P. hindustanica sp. nov., P. japonica sp. nov., P. taiwanica sp. nov., P. thaii sp. nov., P. variegata sp. nov.).

    A revision of the subgenus Parasphingonotus Benediktov & Husemann, 2009 (Orthoptera: Oedipodinae: Sphingonotini)

    Husemann, MartinRay, JesseHochkirch, Axel .
    11页
    查看更多>>摘要:The recently erected subgenus Parasphingonotus is revised. The diagnostic characters are given and the species Sphingonotus (Parasphingonotus) radioserratus comb. n., Sphingonotus (Parasphingonotus) femoralis comb. n. and Sphingonotus (Parasphingonotus) turkanae comb. n. are assigned to the subgenus. Sphingonotus (Parasphingonotus) airensis is synonymized with S. (P.) femoralis, making the latter species the new type species of Parasphingonotus. Keys to the subgenera (Sphingonotus, Neosphingonotus, and Parasphingonotus) of the genus Sphingonotus and to the species of Parasphingonotus are presented. All Parasphingonotus species are re-described and further information on the distribution of the species are given.

    Description of the last instar larva of Neoneura kiautai Machado (Odonata: Protoneuridae)

    DANIELLE ANJOS-SANTOSPABLO PESSACQJANIRA MARTINS COSTA
    4页
    查看更多>>摘要:The Neotropical genus Neoneura Selys, with 29 described species (Garrison et al, 2010) is the largest one within Protoneuridae. Its species are distributed from southern North America to northern Argentina, but the region of the Amazonas River shows the highest diversity (Machado, 2005). The immature stages of the genus are poorly known, with only the larvae of N. carnatica Selys, 1886, N. fulvicollis Selys, 1886, N. joana Williamson, 1917, and N. maria (Scudder, 1866) described (Needham, 1939; De Marmels, 2007; Geijskes, 1954; Westfall, 1964), representing 14% of the known species. The larva of N. aaroni Calvert, 1903 is included in the key of Westfall and May (2006), but it was not formally described. The larva of N. ethela Williamson, 1917 is currently being described (Souza & Pepinelli, pers. comm.). All known Neoneura larvae possess one pair of premental setae and a well marked nodus on the caudal lamellae.