identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
0C788781FFE0FFD08CBCFB4CFCE7B0EC.text	0C788781FFE0FFD08CBCFB4CFCE7B0EC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Recaredus rex Distant 1909	<div><p>Recaredus rex Distant (Figs. 1–2)</p> <p>Recaredus rex Distant, 1909: 361.</p> <p>Redescription (based on three short-winged male specimens, all measurements are given in mm).</p> <p>Body length: 2.76–2.80; body width: 1.32–1.40; length of pronotum: 1.32–1.37, width of pronotum: 1.00–1.05; length of hemelytron: 1.74–1.80; length of discoidal area: 1.35–1.40; length of antennal segments I–IV: 0.13–0.14, 0.08, 0.55, 0.28.</p> <p>General body brown, abdomen castaneous, legs yellowish-brown.</p> <p>Head brown, sparsely covered with delicate silvery hairs; head distinctly elongated in front of eyes, apex of clypeus surpassing apex of first antennal segment. Head armed dorsally with two short frontal spines (spines placed closely one another); eyes brown, moderately large, frons 1.6 times broader than width of the eye. Antenniferous tubercles with lateral curved robust outgrowths. Antennal segments I and II brown, very short, bearing long, apically curved hairs.</p> <p>Bucculae opened anteriorly, their apices rounded, each buccula composed of three to four rows of areolae (bucculae slightly narrowing to apices); sternal laminae uniseriate, subparallel, opened distally; rostrum reaching the posterior margin of third visible abdominal sternite. Orifice indistinct.</p> <p>Pronotum brown, sparsely covered with delicate, curved brown hairs; pronotal disc flattened, shiny, punctate; triangular pronotal process areolated; pronotal laminae almost parallel, relatively high, uniseriate; anteromedian pronotal cyst small, subglobose, areolated, covering basal half of the head – anterior margin of the cyst reaching between the eyes; paranota slightly upcurved, their lateral margins rounded, each paranotum composed of two to three rows of areolae in its widest part.</p> <p>Hemelytra sparsely covered with long, curved brown hairs, areolated, its lateral margin slightly rounded; costal area slightly upcurved, composed of one to two rows of areolae, areolae relatively large; subcostal area almost vertical, composed of three rows of areolae; R+M-vein raised; discoidal area slants inwards, composed of four rows of areolae in its widest region; Cu-vein delimiting discoidal area from the sutural area, weakly developed; sutural area reduced, composed of four rows of areolae in its widest part. Hind wings absent.</p> <p>Legs moderately long, covered with short hairs. Aedeagus with ductus seminis bifurcate distally and apically sclerotized, its wall partially thickened; secondary gonopore and endosomal diverticula paired (Fig. 2).</p> <p>Type material. Pareshnath, West Bengal, 4,000–4,400ft, dt. 12.iv.1909; card mounted (partly destroyed, sex unknown; housed in the Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata).</p> <p>Material examined. 1 ex.: 14. VIII. 1910, Potato tuber, Mullyah, Bettiah, J. R. No: 927, l. no: 853; Recaredus, A. Hakk det., 1. 1. 63; 1 ex.: 17. VIII. 1910, Potato tuber, Mullyah, Bettiah, J. R. No: 927, l. no: 853; Recaredus, A. Hakk det., 1. 1. 63; 1 ex.: Bettiah, Behar &amp; Orissa, On stored potatos, H. L. Dutt, Recaredus, A. Hakk det., 1. 1. 63, coll. unknown (at present at the National Pusa Collection, New Delhi).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0C788781FFE0FFD08CBCFB4CFCE7B0EC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Lis, Barbara;Parveen, Shama;Ramamurthy, Vilayanoor Venkataraman	Lis, Barbara, Parveen, Shama, Ramamurthy, Vilayanoor Venkataraman (2013): Redescription of the Oriental lace-bug Recaredus rex Distant, 1909 (Hemiptera: Tingidae: Tinginae), and its new tribal assignment, with a key to Ypsotingini. Zootaxa 3702 (6): 597-600, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3702.6.7
0C788781FFE2FFD38CBCFCE1FA28B160.text	0C788781FFE2FFD38CBCFCE1FA28B160.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Ypsotingini	<div><p>Key to the world genera of the tribe Ypsotingini (modified from Froeschner 2001)</p> <p>1. Paranota broadly and strongly recurved, their free margins turned downwards above pronotal disc; each paranotum forming an elevated, inflated cyst................................................................................................................................ 2.</p> <p>-. Paranota not reflexed, not forming cysts.................................................................................................................... 3.</p> <p>2. Paranotum with free margin in contact with dorsum of pronotum, forming a separate, closed cyst. Subcostal area nearly horizontal, with four or five rows of cells at widest point................................................... Dictyotingis Drake</p> <p>-. Paranotum with free margin not in contact with dorsum of pronotum, the cyst not closed medially. Subcostal area nearly vertical, with only two rows of cells......................................................................................... Ypsotingis Drake</p> <p>3. Pronotum with a distinctly elevated, inflated anteromedian cyst projecting above basal half or more of head........ 4.</p> <p>-. Pronotum without or with a weakly inflated bulbous anteromedian cyst that does not extend more than a short angle above basal quarter of head......................................................................................................................................... 5.</p> <p>4. Subcostal area with single row of cells........................................................................................... Derephysia Spinola</p> <p>-. Subcostal area multiseratie, with three rows of cells....................................................................... Recaredus Distant</p> <p>5. Head with a distinct (sometimes decurved) mediocentral spine.................................................................................. 6.</p> <p>-. Head without a mediocentral spine.............................................................................................................................. 7.</p> <p>6. Venter of abdomen with mediolongitudinal groove deep, abruptly vertical-sided, reaching to or beyond apex of third visible segment..................................................................................................................................... Euaulana Drake</p> <p>-. Venter of abdomen without a groove or with a shallow, mediolongitudinal impression confined to basal two visible segments............................................................................................................................................ Chorotingis Drake</p> <p>7. Head without occipital spines................................................................................................................. Kalama Puton</p> <p>-. Head with occipital spines............................................................................................................... Dictyonota Curtis</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0C788781FFE2FFD38CBCFCE1FA28B160	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Lis, Barbara;Parveen, Shama;Ramamurthy, Vilayanoor Venkataraman	Lis, Barbara, Parveen, Shama, Ramamurthy, Vilayanoor Venkataraman (2013): Redescription of the Oriental lace-bug Recaredus rex Distant, 1909 (Hemiptera: Tingidae: Tinginae), and its new tribal assignment, with a key to Ypsotingini. Zootaxa 3702 (6): 597-600, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3702.6.7
