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Zootaxa
Magnolia Press
Zootaxa

Magnolia Press

1175-5326

Zootaxa/Journal ZootaxaSCIISTPAHCI
正式出版
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    Morphology-based phylogenetic analysis of the treehopper tribe Smiliini (Hemiptera: Membracidae: Smiliinae), with reinstatement of the tribe Telamonini

    MATTHEW S. WALLACE
    42页
    查看更多>>摘要:Members of the Smiliini, the nominotypical tribe of the large New World subfamily Smiliinae, are predominately Nearctic in distribution. This tribe included 169 mostly tree-feeding species in 23 genera. A parsimony-based phylogenetic analysis of an original dataset comprising 89 traditional and newly discovered morphological characters for 69 species, including representatives of 22 of the 23 described genera of Smiliini and five other previously recognized tribes of the subfamily, resulted in a single most parsimonious tree with three major clades. The broad recent concept of Smiliini (including Tela-monini as a junior synonym) was not recovered as monophyletic by the analysis. Instead, the analysis supported narrower definitions of both Telamonini, here reinstated from synonymy, and Smiliini. A key and diagnoses are given to define these tribes, along with discussions of their phylogeny, biogeography, and host plant associations. The genera Antianthe Fowler, Hemicardiacus Plummer, Smilirhexia McKamey, and Tropidarnis Fowler are placed as Smiliinae, incertae sedis. Based on the phylogeny, several genera from both tribes including Atymna Stal, Cyrtolobus Goding, Heliria Stal, and Te-lamona Fitch are not monophyletic. Diagnostic characters emphasizing the morphological differences between the Smiliini and Telamonini include the dorsal margin of the head, the shape of the pronotum, the size of the pronotal humeral angles, the presence or absence of pronotal longitudinal rugae, the size of forewingcells, variations in the fusion of veins R and M apically in both the fore-and hind wing, and the shape of the apex of the female second valvulae. Mapping geographic distribution onto the phylogeny suggests that the common ancestor of the ingroup (all three clades) occurred in Central America and Mexico, with multiple dispersals to temperate North America. Many Smiliini and Telamonini feed on various species of oak (Quercus) and the close evolutionary association between these insects and their hosts isdiscussed.

    Three new species of Leptohyphidae (Insecta: Ephemeroptera) from Central Amazon, Brazil

    ENIDE LUCIANA L. BELMONTFREDERICO F. SALLESNEUSA HAMADA
    11页
    查看更多>>摘要:Three new species of Leptohyphidae are described based on adults and/or nymphs collected in Manaus (Reserva Florestal Adolpho Ducke) and Presidente Figueiredo municipality: Tricorythodes faeculopsis sp. nov., Tricorythopsis acara sp. nov. and T. intercalatus sp. nov. With this work, the number of Leptohyphidae in Brazil increases from 35 to 38 species.

    A new species of Tephritis Latreille (Diptera: Tephritidae) with an unusual wing pattern from Iran and its taxonomic implications

    SAMAD KHAGHANINIAEBRAHIM ZARGHANISAEED MOHAMADZADE NAMINVALERY A. KORNEYEV...
    9页
    查看更多>>摘要:Tephritis sahandi new species from Iran (type locality: Sahand chain mountains, East Azerbaijan Province) with an uncommon banded wing pattern is described and shown to be related to Pangasella volkovitshi Richter from Tadjikistan. Both species fit the diagnosis of the genus Tephritis Latreille 1804, and possess its key characters; as the result^ Pangasella Richter 1995 (type species: Pangasella volkovitshi Richter 1995) is shown to be a new junior synonym of Tephritis, and its type species is transferred to the genus as Tephritis volkovitshi (Richter 1995) new combination. A key to the Palaearctic species of banded-winged Tephritis is provided.

    A new species of the genus Golsinda Pascoe, 1857 (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Lamiinae, Mesosini) from the Malay Peninsula, with a nomenclatural note of the genus

    JUNSUKE YAMASAKOHIROSHIMAKIHARA
    6页
    查看更多>>摘要:Golsinda malaysiaca sp. nov. is described from the Malay Peninsula. The authorship ofthe genus Golsinda and G coral-lina is attributed to Thomson (1860), but should be credited to Pascoe (1857) (ICZN 1999, Art. 11.5 and 12). Akey to the species of thegenus Golsinda is given.