identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
711487F6E80F7C6FFF3809FAFDDEEE17.text	711487F6E80F7C6FFF3809FAFDDEEE17.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cyanolicimex Carpintero, Di Iorio, Masello & Turienzo	<div><p>Cyanolicimex Carpintero, Di Iorio, Masello &amp; Turienzo gen. n.</p><p>Diagnosis. Cimicidae with the following combination of characteristics: rounded posterolateral angles of the pronotum (Figs. 3–4); absence of distinguishable Lb1 (Figs. 3–4); row of lateral bristles of the pronotum, prolonged towards the posterior margin (Figs. 3–4); A2 clearly longer than the anterior and posterior interocular space (Fig. 2, Table 1); longer forelegs; tibiae with long and wide bristles (Fig. 6); long and slightly curved left paramere, exceeding the margin of the genital segment (Fig. 7).</p><p>TABLE 1</p><p>Measurements in specimens of Acanthocrios furnarii (including Cimex passerinus), Ornithocoris toledoi, Psitticimex uritui and Cyanolicimex patagonicus . b, broken bristle. References: [1] Cordero &amp; Vogelsang (1928); [2] Moraes (1939); [3] Lent &amp; Abalos (1946); [4] Usinger (1966); [5] Di Iorio et al. (2008); [6] Turienzo &amp; Di Iorio (2010); [7] Present work.</p><p>Large species (5.7 mm length in slide-mounted specimens). Body suboval, dorsally smooth. Dorsal bristles long, more dense on head, antennal segments I and II (Fig. 2), sides of pronotum (continued towards the posterior margin) (Figs. 3–4), hemelytral pads, and at apical half of each abdominal segment; these intermixed with very short setae. Lb2 distinguishable by its greater length and its more internal base (Figs. 3– 4). Venter with more sparse and shorter bristles, with a long hair at the latero-apical angle of each ventrite. Legs with long and thick bristles (Fig. 6). Females with a very small and reduced apical tuft of hairs on front tibiae and absent in middle tibiae; males with apical tufts of hairs in front and middle tibiae.</p><p>Clypeus strongly widened, subquadrangular, more than 1/2 as wide as interocular space, with many long setae (Fig. 2). Head disk rugose, with a few bristles on each side near eyes and at middle. Eyes small, separated from the anterior margin of pronotum by a distance subequal to their width (Fig. 2). Antennae about equal to width of head; second segment longest, greater than interocular space (Table 1, Fig. 2), I and II thick, and III and IV slender, these ones slightly shorter than segment II and subequal among them. Rostrum reaching middle of front coxae; first and third segments subequal, second slightly shorter and wider.</p><p>Pronotum nearly 3 times as wide as long, and about 3/5 again as wide as head; sides extremely arcuate, rounded; posterolateral angles rounded; anterior margin concave; posterior margin slightly convex; sides with a series of marginal long bristles (Figs. 3–4).</p><p>Hemelytral pads short; twice as wide as long, contiguous only at base; broadly rounded at sides and convergent posteriorly; sides depressed before margins, with sparse long bristles (Figs. 3–4). Legs long and thin. All tibiae with long and wide bristles (Fig. 6).</p><p>Male genital segment slightly sloping to left; paramere thin and slightly curved, exceeding the margin of genital segment (Fig. 7). Female spermalege between fifth and sixth segments, nearly in median area; hind margin of fifth and sixth segments bisinuate and bent forward medially (Fig. 5).</p><p>Etimology. The generic name refers to the Psittacidae genus Cyanoliseus related to Cimex, the type-genus of the family. The gender is masculine.</p><p>Taxonomic discussion. The most distinctive characters of Cyanolicimex were summarized in the generic diagnosis. In Cyanolicimex, A2&gt; pIS&gt; aIS is clearly longer than the A 2 in Psitticimex (Fig. 2 and Fig. 16 respectively). Affinities of Cyanolicimex are unclear, because some characters are shared with other South American genera: the absence of the apical tufts of hair in the middle tibia of the females ( Ornithocoris); A2&gt; aIS (Psitticimex); the maximum width of the pronotum in the middle of its length (Acanthocrios and Psitticimex); the shape of the spermalege, extended anteriorly (Psitticimex); and one species of Psittacidae as a host (Psitticimex). On the other hand, Cyanolicimex shows some similarities with Hesperocymex List, 1925 from the Nearctic Region. In this latter genus, the pronotum has very long bristles at the lateral margins, the posterolateral angles of the pronotum are rounded, and the apical tufts of hair are absent in the front and middle tibiae of the females (Usinger 1966). Hesperocymex was considered as a more derived genus in the Nearctic Region (Ueshima 1966), and Cyanolicimex seems to be its counterpart in the Neotropical Region.</p><p>The phylogeny of the Haematosiphoninae, first proposed by Usinger (1966), and later modified by Di Iorio et al. (2008) and Poggio et al. (2009), should be modified again with the tentative incorporation of Cyanolicimex as the sister genus of Psitticimex (Fig. 8). A further cytogenetic study of C. patagonicus will confirm if its chromosome number and sexual mechanism are similar to Psitticimex, as is suggested by its position in the phylogenetic tree (Fig. 8).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/711487F6E80F7C6FFF3809FAFDDEEE17	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	Iorio, Osvaldo Di;Turienzo, Paola;Masello, Juan;Carpintero, Diego L.	Iorio, Osvaldo Di, Turienzo, Paola, Masello, Juan, Carpintero, Diego L. (2010): Insects found in birds’ nests from Argentina. Cyanoliseus patagonus (Vieillot, 1818) [Aves: Psittacidae], with the description of Cyanolicimex patagonicus, gen. n., sp. n., and a key to the genera of Haematosiphoninae (Hemiptera: Cimicidae). Zootaxa 2728: 1-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200077
711487F6E8097C62FF380CDFFB4EE9D2.text	711487F6E8097C62FF380CDFFB4EE9D2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cyanolicimex patagonicus Carpintero, Di Iorio, Masello & Turienzo	<div><p>Cyanolicimex patagonicus Carpintero, Di Iorio, Masello &amp; Turienzo sp. n.</p><p>= Psitticimex uritui [non Lent &amp; Abalos, 1946]: Masello &amp; Quillfeldt 2004b: 451 [distr.; host]; Masello et al. 2006a: 522 [distr.: host]; Turienzo &amp; Di Iorio 2007: 34 [cat.; host; distr.; refs.], Fig. 2 [distr.; host]; Di Iorio et al. 2008: Table 7 [host; distr.; refs.], 20 [biol.]</p><p>Female Holotype: general coloration mostly brownish, with lateral margins of pronotum, hemelytral pads, legs, and antennae (excepting the apex of second segment), pale. Disks of head, pronotum, mesonotum, and hemelytral pads with long, sparse, and fine bristles.</p><p>Head 0.79 mm wide (= pIS), 0.81 mm long; posterior interocular space 4.47 times as wide as an eye (0.17 mm wide at the base). Antennae 2.13 mm long [A1, 0.198 mm; A2, 0.821; A3, 0.623 mm; A4, 0.495 mm]. Rostrum does not surpass posterior margin of fore coxae (slide-mounted).</p><p>Pronotum 1.65 mm wide, 0.57 mm long; PW / PL = 2.85; hind margins of pronotum rounded; bristles of sides regularly spaced, approximately of same length (0.35 mm) all along lateral margins; Lb2 longer (0.396 mm) than lateral bristles (Figs. 3–4); both anterior and posterior lateral bristles (respect to Lb2) 0.35 mm (Lb1 not distinguishable from remaining lateral bristles, although it will correspond to first anterior lateral bristle respect to Lb2) (Figs. 3–4). Mesonotum slightly raised along middle. Abdomen above with long bristles on basal end of each segment, extending well beyond edge. Legs long and slender; hind ones are the longest (2.18 mm). Front tibiae with a very small apical tuft of hair. All tarsi very long and slender.</p><p>Male Paratype: all tibiae with long, erect, and thick bristles; anterior ones slightly thinner. Small tuft of hair in apices of front (Fig. 27) and middle tibiae. Genital segment strongly asymmetrical (Fig. 7).</p><p>Material examined. ARGENTINA: Río Negro: El Cóndor, XII-2004, J.F. Masello leg., 1 female HOLOTYPE [MACN] (slide-mounted), from nest of Cyanoliseus patagonus; 3 km south of El Cóndor, 21- XII-1999, J.F. Masello leg., 1 male Allotype [ZMB] (slide-mounted), 3 female Paratypes [ZMB] (pinned), on Cyanoliseus patagonus, 1 nymph V Paratype [ZMB], # 931(58) (pinned), “ Psitticimex uritui (Lent &amp; Ab.), det. J. Deckert 2001”, 1 nymph IV Paratype [ZMB], # 927(17) (pinned); same locality, 27-XI-1999, 1 nymph II Paratype [ZMB] (pinned); same locality, 7-XII-1999, 1 nymph IV Paratype [ZMB] (pinned), “Bñg + Tlen”; El Cóndor, XII-2009, J.F. Masello leg., 5 nymphs IV Paratypes [ODI], one male Paratype [ODI], all slidemounted, from nests of Cyanoliseus patagonus .</p><p>Known distribution. ARGENTINA: Río Negro: Atlantic coast, easternmost kilometer of the colony (41º 3’ S, 62º 48’ W) (Masello &amp; Quillfeldt 2004b); 3 km west of the mouth of the Río Negro River, 30 km southeast of Viedma (41º 04’ S, 62º 50’ W) (Masello et al. 2006a). Further explorations are needed for determining if Cyanolicimex patagonicus is restricted to the type-locality and/or only to the subspecies Cyanoliseus patagonus patagonus . This is the southernmost known limit of the Haematosiphoninae in the Western Hemisphere (Fig. 1), and the third Haematosiphoninae with a Psittacidae bird as a host.</p><p>Etymology. Specific epithet refers to the Argentinean region where this species was found (Fig. 1).</p><p>Bionomics of the host and Cyanolicimex patagonicus . The cimicid bugs live inside crevices along the face of the sandstone cliff where the Burrowing Parrots dig their burrows. From there, they access the burrows of the parrots and their breeding chambers. During the first years of bug collection (1999, 2001, 2003, 2004), the numbers of bugs were not quantified, but they were very high around all nests of the study sector at the Burrowing Parrot colony (for details and precise location of the study sector see Masello &amp; Quillfeldt 2002, 2004a). In contrast, the cimicid bug was very scarce in the same parrot colony during December, 2009 (Masello pers. obs.). The summer 2009–2010 was very hot and dry, and the collected specimens died soon after they were extracted from the crevices and burrows.</p><p>The entire sequence of a breeding season of Cyanoliseus patagonus at El Cóndor (Masello &amp; Quillfeldt 2002, 2004a 2008, Masello et al. 2006) can be, on average, summarized as follows.</p><p>1) Return of the migrating birds to the colony: August-September. 2) Copulations: September–October.</p><p>3) Incubation of the eggs: October–November.</p><p>4) Hatching of the nestlings: end of October through the end of November. 5) Nestling period: end of October through the end of January. 6) Fledgling: end of December through the end of January. 7) Migration (partial): February–March.</p><p>Therefore, the feeding period of C. patagonicus is restricted when the burrows are occupied by the parrots, i.e., from August −September through the end of January (fledgling of the nestlings). As the breeding pairs spend the night inside the nests during the nestling period (Masello et al. 2006c), both nestlings and adults can be food sources for C. patagonicus . After this, the bugs are deprived of food for at least 6 months (from February through the end of July).</p><p>In this way, the bionomics of C. patagonicus are similar to other species of Cimicidae from the nests of swallows in the Northern Hemisphere [ Oeciacus vicarius Horvath, 1912 from North America, and Oeciacus hirundinis (Lamark, 1816) from Europe]. Where colonies are reoccupied each year, the three-month breeding period of the cliff swallow Petrochelidon pyrrhonota (Vieillot, 1817) [Aves: Hirundinidae] limits its specialized ectoparasite, O. vicarius, to a short feeding period before host migration, and a food resource deprivation that lasts nine months (Loye 1985).</p><p>Semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows of C. patagonus are also used by other bird species for nesting. Nevertheless, there are only few records in the literature (Appendix II), probably because of the inaccessibility of the places chosen by the Burrowing Parrots. Observations by one of the authors (J.F.M.) permit the addition of new records (Appendix II). These other bird species may be potential hosts of C. patagonicus, especially if some of them use the burrows for roosting during autumn and winter.</p><p>Noteworthily, the geographically-distant species Rhynchopsitta pachyrhyncha (Swainson, 1827) [Aves: Psittacidae] from Mexico has a similar-associated ectoparasitic fauna (Table 2). The nests of R. pachyrhyncha are made inside natural cavities or by using old woodpecker holes, forming high-density clusters of nesting pairs sharing nest trees, with a maximum of three nesting pairs per tree. Clusters contained a mean of 11.5 breeding pairs [5 nests/ha]. Thirty-three (68%) from a total of 48 monitored nest trees were reused for at least 2 nesting seasons; a mean annual reuse was 62 ± 0.08% nest trees [range 56–71%] (Monterrubio-Rico et al. 2006).</p><p>In contrast, Myiopsitta monachus (Boddaert, 1873) [Aves: Psittacidae] is a nonmigratory Psittacidae, that uses its nest year-round for roosting and breeding (Navarro et al. 1992). In this way, the food sources of Psitticimex uritui (Lent &amp; Abalos, 1946) [ Hemiptera: Cimicidae] are available all the time. The nests of M. monachus from western and northern Argentina are also colonized by great numbers of Argas monachus Keirans, Radovsky, &amp; Clifford, 1973 [Acari: Argasidae], exclusively specific to this parrot (Turienzo &amp; Di Iorio pers. obs.).</p><p>Rhynchopsitta pachyrhyncha Cyanoliseus patagonus</p><p>MEXICO ARGENTINA SIPHONAPTERA Ceratophyllidae Pulicidae</p><p>Psyttopsylla mexicana [3] Hectopsylla psittaci [1]</p><p>Hectopsylla narium [4]</p><p>PHTHIRAPTERA Menoponidae Menoponidae</p><p>Heteromenopon sp. [3] Heteromenopon macrurum [2]</p><p>Psittacobrosus sp. [3] Philopteridae</p><p>Paragoniocotes meridionalis [2] HEMIPTERA Cimicidae Cimicidae</p><p>Ornithocoris sp. [3] Cyanolicimex patagonicus [5]</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/711487F6E8097C62FF380CDFFB4EE9D2	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	Iorio, Osvaldo Di;Turienzo, Paola;Masello, Juan;Carpintero, Diego L.	Iorio, Osvaldo Di, Turienzo, Paola, Masello, Juan, Carpintero, Diego L. (2010): Insects found in birds’ nests from Argentina. Cyanoliseus patagonus (Vieillot, 1818) [Aves: Psittacidae], with the description of Cyanolicimex patagonicus, gen. n., sp. n., and a key to the genera of Haematosiphoninae (Hemiptera: Cimicidae). Zootaxa 2728: 1-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200077
711487F6E8057C63FF3809FAFE08ED1C.text	711487F6E8057C63FF3809FAFE08ED1C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Ornithocoris Pinto 1927	<div><p>Ornithocoris Pinto, 1927</p><p>Type-species: Ornithocoris toledoi Pinto, 1927 [by monotipy]</p><p>Ornithocoris toledoi Pinto, 1927: Ringuelet 1948: 35 [map], 39 [distr.; host]; Jurberg &amp; Milward de Azevedo 1982: 25 – 262 [re-descr.; morphol.; distr.]</p><p>The genus and the species were described from Brazil: São Paulo (Limeira: Sorocaba) by Pinto (1927). Moraes (1939) made a re-description and illustrates the specimens found in Minas Gerais: Ponte Nóva by Carvalho (1939). Usinger (1966) states that the type of toledoi is in the IOC. Twenty-five specimens of O. toledoi, all of them with data according to the original description (probable syntypes), are apparently located in the IOC (see below Acanthocrios).</p><p>According to Wygodzinsky (1951), the genus Ornithocoris can be recognized by the “very long” macroquetae in the posterolateral angles of the pronotum, the presence of two distinct bristles in the middle and hind tibiae, and the dorsal position of the spermalege (= organ of Ribaga). O. toledoi have long bristles on the posterolateral angles not longer than 1/3 of the pronotal length [Lb &lt;PL /3] (Fig. 10) (Wygodzinsky 1951). In Usinger’s key (1966), Ornithocoris can be recognized by the bristles at the sides of the pronotum being short and dense (Fig. 10), its larger size, and the pronotum being 1 mm or more wide. In the generic description, nothing is said about the bristles at the sides of the pronotum, and Ornithocoris is differentiated by the pronotum being 2.5 to 3 times as wide as long [PW = 2.5 PL to PW = 3.0 PL ⊣ PL = PW / 2.5 to PL = PW / 3.0].</p><p>The genus Ornithocoris can be recognized by the smaller and uniformly-spaced pilosity on the dorsum of the head and the pronotum (Figs. 9, 11); the pronotum trapezoid shape, with its greater width at the base (Fig. 9), wider and longer than in Acanthocrios [but PW / PL is similar to the smaller specimens of A. furnarii (Table 1)]; the two long bristles located at the posterolateral angles of the pronotum: Lb2, with its base near the margin (Fig. 10); and a second long bristle (Lb3), represented by the first posterior lateral bristle respect to Lb2 (Lb1 absent, and Lb2 longer than Lb3) (Fig. 10). In males in Ornithocoris, the front and middle tibiae have a well-developed apical tuft of hair (Fig. 26); the females have a tuft only in the front tibiae.</p><p>Ornithocoris pallidus Usinger, 1959 was described by Usinger (1959), and redescribed in 1966. The pronotum is nearly twice as wide as the head (PW / HW ≥ 1.8) in O. toledoi (female: HW 0 0.80 mm, PW = 1.45 mm), and about 1 2/3 as wide as the head (PW / HW = 1.6–1.7) in Ornithocoris pallidus (female: HW = 0.71, PW = 1.25) (Usinger 1966). With the respective measurements given by Moraes (1939) and the specimens examined of O. toledoi (Table 1), PW/HW ranges between 2.10 and 2.45. The other characteristics to separate both species of Ornithocoris seem to be the color, paler in O. pallidus and darker in O. toledoi; and the size, smaller in O. pallidus (Usinger 1966) . O. pallidus was described from Viçoza, Minas Gerais, distant only 37.8 km from Ponte Nóva, where dark brown specimens of O. toledoi were found (Moraes 1939). Specimens of O. toledoi were also collected from Ponte Nóva in 1957 by Usinger (Sakamoto et al. 2006).</p><p>The insects given by Otto et al. (2008) [= “ Ornithocoris sp.”] in figure 1 do not belong to Cimicidae . They are nymphs with pterothecae in the meso- and metathorax, and the rostrum reaches the posterior margin of the middle coxae. The identification was done by the shape of fecal spots in furniture using [only] the work of Schofield et al. (1986)!</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/711487F6E8057C63FF3809FAFE08ED1C	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	Iorio, Osvaldo Di;Turienzo, Paola;Masello, Juan;Carpintero, Diego L.	Iorio, Osvaldo Di, Turienzo, Paola, Masello, Juan, Carpintero, Diego L. (2010): Insects found in birds’ nests from Argentina. Cyanoliseus patagonus (Vieillot, 1818) [Aves: Psittacidae], with the description of Cyanolicimex patagonicus, gen. n., sp. n., and a key to the genera of Haematosiphoninae (Hemiptera: Cimicidae). Zootaxa 2728: 1-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200077
711487F6E8037C65FF380817FA35ED82.text	711487F6E8037C65FF380817FA35ED82.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Haematosiphoninae	<div><p>Key to the genera of Haematosiphoninae from the Western Hemisphere</p><p>The key given by Usinger (1966) needs to be partially modified by the above discussion of diagnostic characteristics and the incorporation of Alayocimex and Cyanolicimex. These partial modifications are mostly related to the South American genera, because specimens of the North American species were not available and are out of the scope of the present work. The item in the key corresponding to the genus Cimexopsis List, 1925 cannot be separated with certainty, and it is not included here. Lists of hosts, localities, and references were summarized by Di Iorio &amp; Turienzo (2008 2009), Di Iorio et al. (2008), and Turienzo &amp; Di Iorio (2007 2010).</p><p>1. Ectospermalege “hat-shaped”, right ventral near lateral margin between sixth and seventh segments. Sides of pronotum with long bristles; posterlateral angles of pronotum rounded; females with apical tufts of hairs in front and middle tibiae. Western United States. Hosts: Hirundinidae (primary); Picidae, Strigidae (secondary) ........ Hesperocimex</p><p>1’. Ectospermalege dorsal either at middle or on right side on sixth or seventh segments .............................................. 2</p><p>2. Posterior margin of pronotum slightly concave or convex........................................................................................... 3</p><p>2’. Posterior margin of pronotum strongly convex (see fig. 1 in Hernandez Triana &amp; de la Cruz 1994). Cuba. Host: Apodidae ............................................................................................................................................................. Alayocimex</p><p>3. Posterolateral angles of pronotum more or less angulate, with two longer bristles (Lb1 + Lb2 or Lb2 + Lb3) (Figs. 11, 15, 18); row of bristles in lateral margins of pronotum does not continues to posterior margin .......................... 4</p><p>3’. Posterolateral angles of pronotum rounded; Lb2 distinguisable by its greater length and its more internal base (Figs. 5–6); row of bristles in lateral margins of pronotum continue to posterior margin (Fig. 6). Argentina (Río Negro). Host: Psittacidae ( Cyanoliseus patagonus) ............................................................................................... Cyanolicimex</p><p>4. Abdominal tergites in females strongly asymmetrical. United States. Host: Apodidae .......................... Synxenoderus</p><p>4’. Abdominal tergites not asymmetrical at right margin and not at all in males ............................................................. 5</p><p>5. Rostrum long (&gt; 1 mm), reaching beyond apices of middle coxae (pinned specimens); A2 subequal to IS; spermalege mid-dorsal. United States; Mexico. Hosts: raptor birds [ Accipitridae, Cathartidae, Falconidae, Strigidae, Tytonidae] (primary); Phasianidae (secondary) ............................................................................................... Haematosiphon</p><p>5’. Rostrum shorter (&lt;1 mm), reaching to or a little beyond apices of front coxae (in pinned and also on slide-mounted specimens); A2 &lt;pIS; spermalege opening on right side ......................................................................................... 6</p><p>6. Maximal width of pronotum at middle of pronotal length; lateral margins converging anteriorly and posteriorly (Figs. 14, 17); tuft of hairs in apices of front and middle tibiae in both sexes ............................................................ 7</p><p>6’. Pronotum widest at base; lateral margins converging anteriorly (Fig. 10); Lb1 indistinguisable (Fig. 11); with a first posterior long bristle (Lb3) respect to Lb2; both bristles nearly 9 times pronotal length; paramere not exceeding margin of genital segment (Fig. 13); females with apical tuft of hairs only in front tibiae. USA (introduced?); Mexico; Brazil; Argentina. Hosts: Hirundinidae (primary), Psittacidae (?); Phasianidae (secondary) .................. Ornithocoris</p><p>7. A2&gt; aIS (Fig. 17); ectospermalege on anterior margin of a long internal lobe produced forward from anterior margin of seventh tergite at middle (Fig. 20); paramere long, exceeding side of genital segment (Fig. 19). Argentina. Host: Psittacidae [ Myiopsitta monachus] (primary) ..................................................................................... Psitticimex</p><p>7’. A2 &lt;aIS (Fig. 14); ectospermalege not as above; paramere just beyond the margin of genital segment (Fig. 16). Argentina; Uruguay. Hosts: Passeriformes [ Emberizidae, Hirundinidae, Icteridae, Passeridae, Troglodytidae) .......... ...................................................................................................................................................................Acanthocrios</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/711487F6E8037C65FF380817FA35ED82	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	Iorio, Osvaldo Di;Turienzo, Paola;Masello, Juan;Carpintero, Diego L.	Iorio, Osvaldo Di, Turienzo, Paola, Masello, Juan, Carpintero, Diego L. (2010): Insects found in birds’ nests from Argentina. Cyanoliseus patagonus (Vieillot, 1818) [Aves: Psittacidae], with the description of Cyanolicimex patagonicus, gen. n., sp. n., and a key to the genera of Haematosiphoninae (Hemiptera: Cimicidae). Zootaxa 2728: 1-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200077
711487F6E8197C7FFF38098FFEA5EAF2.text	711487F6E8197C7FFF38098FFEA5EAF2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cyanoliseus patagonus subsp. andinus	<div><p>Cyanoliseus patagonus andinus</p><p>CATHARTIDAE</p><p>Coragyps atratus (Bechstein, 1793)</p><p>= Coragyps atratus brasiliensis (Bonaparte): Castellanos 1932.</p><p>ARGENTINA: Córdoba: Valle de Los Reartes, Barranca de Las Lagunas, in abandoned nest burrows (Castellanos 1932).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/711487F6E8197C7FFF38098FFEA5EAF2	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	Iorio, Osvaldo Di;Turienzo, Paola;Masello, Juan;Carpintero, Diego L.	Iorio, Osvaldo Di, Turienzo, Paola, Masello, Juan, Carpintero, Diego L. (2010): Insects found in birds’ nests from Argentina. Cyanoliseus patagonus (Vieillot, 1818) [Aves: Psittacidae], with the description of Cyanolicimex patagonicus, gen. n., sp. n., and a key to the genera of Haematosiphoninae (Hemiptera: Cimicidae). Zootaxa 2728: 1-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200077
711487F6E8197C7FFF380B6FFBADEF92.text	711487F6E8197C7FFF380B6FFBADEF92.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cyanoliseus patagonus subsp. patagonus	<div><p>Cyanoliseus patagonus patagonus</p><p>ACCIPITRIDAE</p><p>Geranoaetus melanoleucus melanoleucus (Vieillot, 1819)</p><p>ARGENTINA: Río Negro: El Cóndor, in semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows.</p><p>CATHARTIDAE</p><p>Cathartes aura jota (Molina, 1782)</p><p>ARGENTINA: Río Negro: El Cóndor, in semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows.</p><p>FALCONIDAE</p><p>Falco peregrinus cassini Sharpe, 1875</p><p>ARGENTINA: Río Negro: El Cóndor, in semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows.</p><p>Milvago chimango (Vieillot, 1816)</p><p>ARGENTINA: Río Negro: El Cóndor, in semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows.</p><p>HIRUNDINIDAE</p><p>Progne modesta (Baird, 1865)</p><p>ARGENTINA: without locality (Sclater &amp; Hudson 1887, Hudson 1920); Buenos Aires: Carmen de Patagones (Fraga &amp; Narosky 1985); Río Negro: El Cóndor, in semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows.</p><p>PICIDAE</p><p>Colaptes campestris (Vieillot, 1818)</p><p>ARGENTINA: Río Negro: El Cóndor, in semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows.</p><p>TYTONIDAE</p><p>Tyto alba tuidara (Gray, 1878)</p><p>ARGENTINA: Río Negro: El Cóndor, in semi-collapsed and abandoned burrows.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/711487F6E8197C7FFF380B6FFBADEF92	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	Iorio, Osvaldo Di;Turienzo, Paola;Masello, Juan;Carpintero, Diego L.	Iorio, Osvaldo Di, Turienzo, Paola, Masello, Juan, Carpintero, Diego L. (2010): Insects found in birds’ nests from Argentina. Cyanoliseus patagonus (Vieillot, 1818) [Aves: Psittacidae], with the description of Cyanolicimex patagonicus, gen. n., sp. n., and a key to the genera of Haematosiphoninae (Hemiptera: Cimicidae). Zootaxa 2728: 1-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200077
