identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
FC3CFD2D3D6DFF80FF0DFB75FEC3F80A.text	FC3CFD2D3D6DFF80FF0DFB75FEC3F80A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cimex furnarii Cordero & Vogelsang 1928	<div><p>Acanthocrios furnarii (Cordero &amp; Vogelsang, 1928) comb. nov.</p><p>Cimex furnarii Cordero &amp; Vogelsang 1928: 671 –673 [descr.; distr.; figs.]; Del Ponte &amp; Riesel 1945: 473 [distr.; hosts]; Lent &amp; Ábalos 1946: 347 [anat.].</p><p>Cimex passerinus Cordero &amp; Vogelsang 1928: 674 –676 [descr.; distr.; figs.]; Usinger 1966: 468 –469 [refs.], 471 [syn.].</p><p>Ornithocoris furnarii: Romaña &amp; Ábalos 1947: 80 [distr.; hosts]; Wygodzinsky 1951: 187 [key nymphs I], 195–196 [distr.; biol.], figs. 7–9, 47–50; Wygodzinsky 1959a: 529 [distr.]; Wygodzinsky 1959b: 485 –486 [hosts]; Hicks 1959: 248 [refs.; host], 447–448 [host; refs.]; Ronderos 1961: 33 [map], 34–35 [distr.]; Sakamoto et al. 2006: 3162 [table], 3166 [table].</p><p>Caminicimex furnarii: Usinger 1966: 468 –471 [comb. nov.; descr.; distr.; hosts]; Hicks 1971: 167 [refs.; host], 255 [host; refs.]; Andrade Figueiredo 1995: 23 [distr.; host]; Aramburú &amp; Carpintero 2006: 85 [distr.; hosts]; Turienzo &amp; Di Iorio 2007 [distr.; refs.; hosts]; Carpintero &amp; Aramburú 2007: 153 –156 [distr.; hosts].</p><p>Acanthocrios furnarii has always been associated with the “hornero” [ Furnarius rufus (Gmelin, 1788)] in Argentina and Uruguay (Turienzo &amp; Di Iorio 2007), but recently the bug was found in nests of Hirundo rustica [erythrogaster Boddaert, 1789], Progne chalybea [domestica (Vieillot, 1817)] (Aramburú &amp; Carpintero 2006) and also Progne elegans Baird, 1865 [Aves: Hirundinidae] from Buenos Aires (Carpintero &amp; Aramburú 2007). Swallows are probably the primary hosts of Acanthocrios furnarii, and the bugs’ presence in such other nests as those of Furnarius rufus and A. annumbi, is probably due to nest parasitism by bird species (Turienzo &amp; Di Iorio 2007). Cimicidae are known to remain for a long time in swallows´nests, and can go without feeding for prolonged periods when swallows abandon some nesting sites; sometimes during these times engorged bugs have been found with other animals that used the cliff swallow nests (Loye 1985). It is not known if A. furnarii can survive and form large colonies in the nests of birds other than swallows (Table 1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FC3CFD2D3D6DFF80FF0DFB75FEC3F80A	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	Di, Osvaldo R.;Turienzo, Paola N.	Di, Osvaldo R., Turienzo, Paola N. (2008): A nomenclatural note in Cimicidae (Hemiptera) from South America. Zootaxa 1730: 65-68, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.181295
