identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
4A3FBB30C6668F63C640DB7E4E3FFDCE.text	4A3FBB30C6668F63C640DB7E4E3FFDCE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Megalopsallus Knight 1927	<div><p>Megalopsallus Knight</p> <p>Megalopsallus Knight, 1927: 224 (n. gen.).</p> <p>Merinocapsus Knight, 1968: 34 (n. gen.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Ankylotylus Knight, 1968: 55 (n. gen.; syn. by Schuh, 1986: 217).</p> <p>TYPE SPECIES: Megalopsallus atriplicis Knight, 1927.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by weakly flattend, lanceolate, silvery or white setae generally distributed on dorsum and thoracic pleuron, intermixed with pale or dark, reclining, simple setae (figs. 1C, 17D), elongate nearly parallel­sided body form in males contrasted with ovate body form of females (figs. 7–12), broad, usually short head in males (figs. 7–12), and small, relatively simple vesica of male genitalia (figs. 13–16) with apex blunt or as a single or bifid, short apical projection, and gonopore sclerite (when present) lacking barbs. Coloration often largely red or green, a few species castaneous, but then appendages often partly to entirely red. Known species feeding on halophytes, primarily members of Ephedraceae, Chenopodiaceae, and Solanaceae.</p> <p>Megalopsallus was confounded by Knight (1968) with Europiella Reuter, but is easily distinguished by the more flattened body form in most species, the simpler, more delicate structure and much smaller size of the male genitalia, and the preference for halophytic hosts rather than members of the Asteraceae. Some dark­colored species, such as knowltoni and nigrofemoratus are similar in appearance to some Plagiognathus species, but are always separable by the form of the male genitalia; furthermore, most Plagiognathus spp. have only simple setae on the dorsum and elsewhere on the body. The pulvilli are sometimes large and cover most of the ventral claw surface in Megalopsallus (figs. 18C, 20D, but see fig. 17E), whereas in Plagiognathus the pulvilli are always small and cover only a small area near the base of the claw. As noted above, Knight’s (1927) characterization of pulvillar structure in Megalopsallus was in error.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Small to moderately large species, total length 2.31–5.20, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.73–3.31, width across pronotum 0.83–1.32; usually elongate and more or less parallel sided (figs. 7–12). COLORATION AND VESTITURE: Coloration, including all appendages, ranging from totally pale, white, to almost totally black, often greenish or reddish. Vestiture of dorsum comprising reclining or recumbent, pale to dark, simple setae intermixed with white, silvery, or rarely somewhat golden, weakly to moderately flattened, usually lanceolate, sometimes woolly, setae (figs. 7–12), latter type also occurring on thoracic pleuron and abdominal venter. Tibial spines pale or dark, with or without dark spots at bases. STRUCTURE: Body form generally somewhat flattened; head broad, short longitudinally and clypeus not visible from above. Eyes sometimes bulging and removed from pronotal margin, more commonly conforming to curvature of frons and to anterior pronotal margin. Antennal segment 2 cylindrical (figs. 5, 6) or more rarely spindleshaped, especially in females (fig. 23). Hemelytra often elongate to strongly elongate and nearly parallel­sided, abdomen often reaching only to cuneal fracture, less frequently hemelytra not so elongate and body form elongate ovoid. Metathoracic scent­gland evaporatory area as in figs. 1B, 3B, etc.; mesothoracic spiracle with an elongate, conspicuous area of ‘‘mushroom bodies’’ dorsad of spiracle (figs. 3B, 4B). Claws ranging from relatively short and curving only near apex (fig. 1D) to relatively long and slender, smoothly curving over entire length (fig. 17E); pulvilli ranging from minute (fig. 17E) to large and covering nearly entire ventral claw surface (fig. 18C). Abdomen in males flattened dorsoventrally, broad basally and broadly curving and narrowing toward relatively small genital capsule (fig. 17B). MALE GENITALIA: Genital capsule and genitalia small relative to size of animal (fig. 17B); vesica formed of a single strap usually twisted to form an S shape (figs. 13, atriplicis), more rarely forming a weak coil (fig. 13, brendae) or not twisted and in the shape of a J (figs. 16, punctatus); apex of vesica often sclerotized and attenuated, as either a single spine or bifid, sometimes membranous; (secondary) gonopore either apical or subapical, occasionally only weakly sclerotized; gonopore sclerite subtending gonopore often present and well sclerotized (figs. 13– 16, gs), never with barbs as in many Atractotomus species; paramere and phallotheca typical of Phylini, without distinctive characteristics (figs. 14–16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.28–3.98, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.74 –2.96, width across pronotum 0.96–1.42; often broadly oval to elongate ovoid and of more robust body form than males (figs. 7–12); antennal segment 2 of slightly smaller diameter than in males, sometimes spindle­shaped (fig. 23).</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Comparison of the 29 species here recognized within Megalopsallus indicates that the continued treatment of Merinocapsus as a separate group almost certainly renders the former group paraphyletic. Therefore, Merinocapsus is treated as a junior synonym of Megalopsallus.</p> <p>The affinities of Megalopsallus appear to be with Atractotomus Fieber, Knightomiroides Stonedahl and Schwartz, Phoenicocoris Reuter, Pinomiris Stonedahl and Schwartz, and possibly Chlamydatus Curtis, based particularly on the male genitalic structure, the genitalia being relatively small, the vesica being formed of a single strap, and the subapical secondary gonopore frequently being subtended by a gonopore sclerite (Kelton, 1965; Stonedahl, 1990; Stonedahl and Schwartz, 1996). Although several Megalopsallus species have the gonopore sclerite (figs. 13–16, gs) described by Stonedahl (1990), none have barbs on the sclerite. The apex of the vesica in Megalopsallus is usually attenuated, in the form of a single, short, simple spine, or is bifid. Atractotomus, Chlamydatus, and Phoenicocoris are Holarctic in distribution, whereas the other genera are restricted to the Nearctic.</p> <p>In addition to the above described morphological differences, the host associations in Megalopsallus are distinctive within this related group of genera. Megalopsallus spp. are restricted to halophytes in the genus Ephedra of the primitive seed­plant group Ephedrales and among the angiosperms pri­ marily to several genera in the Chenopodiaceae and to the solanaceous genus Lycium. Knightomiroides, Phoenicocoris, Pinomiris, and some Atractotomus spp. feed on the Coniferales with the remaining Atractotomus spp. breeding on a variety of angiosperms; none are known to feed on the Chenopodiaceae, Solanaceae, or Ephedraceae (Stonedahl, 1990; Stonedahl and Schwartz, 1996).</p> <p>A very few other Nearctic Phylini feed on halophytes. Among those that do is Tannerocoris sarcobati Knight, 1970, which is found only on Sarcobatus, but which shows no obvious relationship with Megalopsallus on the basis of habitus or male genitalic morphology.</p> <p>The Holarctic species Atomoscelis onustus (Fieber), 1861, belonging to an otherwise Palearctic group, apparently feeds exclusively on ruderal chenopods; most Nearctic records of this species are as Atomoscelis modestus (Van Duzee), 1914 [see Kerzhner and Schuh, 1998, for synonymy with Atomoscelis onustus (Fieber)]. The vesica of Atomoscelis appears always to be formed of a single strap basally, but is divided in two at the base of the secondary gonopore, a condition never seen in the species here assigned to Megalopsallus. Furthermore, Atomoscelis spp. are usually ovate and much less strongly sexually dimorphic than Megalopsallus spp.</p> <p>A few other Palearctic Phylini merit examination as possible Megalopsallus relatives on the basis of morphology and/or host preferences. They are discussed here with the objective of determining whether Megalopsallus as a monophyletic group extends beyond the Nearctic.</p> <p>Camptotylidea Wagner comprises 28 species (Konstantinov, 1999) occurring primarily in desert areas; many of them feed on chenopods. The vestiture of Camptotylidea is composed of only simple setae and the vesica is always extended apically well beyond the secondary gonopore, unlike the conditions found in all species here assigned to Megalopsallus.</p> <p>Nasocoris Reuter from the Mediterranean and adjacent areas appears to feed exclusively on Ephedra (Schuh, 1995), which might suggest a relationship with Megalopsallus. However, the clypeus is distinctively flattened and extended and antennal segment 1 is moderately to greatly elongate and clothed with long to very long more­or­less erect setae. The vesica appears to be formed of a single strap, as in Megalopsallus, and the genital capsule is relatively small. The general appearance and coloration of Nasocoris tesquorum Kerzhner are similar to those of Megalopsallus pallidus and the dorsal vestiture is also similar to that of Megalopsallus spp. (Wagner, 1973).</p> <p>Psallomimus Wagner, with one species in Egypt and the rest of its species further south in Africa (Schuh, 1995), has relatively small genitalia and the vesica is formed of a single strap as in Megalopsallus. However, the vestiture is always of simple setae, and the bugs are otherwise Plagiognathus ­like in appearance. The only known host record is from Solanum sp. (Linnavuori, 1993).</p> <p>Psallopsis Reuter has 15 described species from the Mediterranean, Middle East, and Central Asia; all breed on members of the Chenopodiaceae (Schuh, 1995). Although host preferences in Psallopsis might suggest a relationship with Megalopsallus, the male genitalia indicate otherwise, the vesica being formed of two chitinous straps, rather than one as is the case in Megalopsallus (Wagner, 1975).</p> <p>In conclusion, it appears that Megalopsallus as here diagnosed is restricted to the Nearctic, and within that region to halophytic plant groups. My conception of Megalopsallus is relatively broad, because when treated otherwise the result would be several more difficult to diagnose genera.</p> <p>Although Megalopsallus shows its greatest species diversity in saline environments in interior western North America, it also occurs in the eastern United States —primarily along the coastline—from Texas to Connecticut, and most recently has been recorded from coastal halophytes in the Dominican Republic. Unfortunately, eastern North American is relatively poorly collected and few host records are available, in stark contrast to the West where nearly all species have well­documented hosts.</p> <p>The following key to species is designed for use with male specimens. For most species the description of coloration will also pertain to females, although table 1 will have to be consulted for measurements. For a few species it will be necessary to dissect the male genitalia to be confident of the identification. Sometimes host information will allow accurate identification of species such as humeralis and nigrofemoratus, which on the basis of external morphology and coloration may be virtually indistinguishable.</p> <p>CHECKLIST OF SPECIES NAMES PROPOSED OR USED WITHIN MEGALOPSALLUS KNIGHT</p> <p>adustus Knight, 1927 (Megalopsallus)</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C6668F63C640DB7E4E3FFDCE	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C6638F63C500D8194E48F91A.text	4A3FBB30C6638F63C500D8194E48F91A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Megalopsallus albipubescens Knight	<div><p>albipubescens Knight (Europiella) [incertae</p> <p>sedis] arizonae Knight (Megalopsallus) atriplicis Knight, 1927 (Megalopsallus) atriplicis Knight, 1968 (Psallus) [preoccu­</p> <p>pied; see punctatus] balli Knight, 1968 (Europiella) brendae, new species brevicornis Knight, 1968 (Europiella) brittoni Knight, 1927 (Megalopsallus) californicus, new species diversipes Knight (Europiella) ephedrae Knight, 1968 (Merinocapsus) ephedrellus, new species femoralis Kelton, 1980 (Megalopsallus) flammeus, new species franseriae Knight, 1969 (Europiella) froeschneri Schuh, 1986 (Merinocapsus) grayiae Knight, 1968 (Europiella) humeralis Van Duzee, 1923 (Sthenarus) knowltoni Knight, 1970 (Europiella) latifrons Knight (Europiella) lycii Knight, 1968 (Europiella) marmoratus Knight, 1968 (Megalopsallus) montanae Knight, 1968 (Europiella) monticola Knight (Europiella) (see Euro­</p> <p>piella) multipunctipes Knight, 1970 (Europiella) nicholi Knight, 1968 (Europiella) nigricaput, new species nigrofemoratus Knight, 1968 (Europiella) nuperus Van Duzee, 1923 (Oncotylus) pallidus Knight, 1968 (Nevadocoris) pallipes Knight, 1968 (Ankylotylus) parapunctipes, new species pictipes Van Duzee, 1918 (Plagiognathus) punctatus, new name punctipes Knight, 1968 (Europiella) rubricornis Knight, 1968 (Europiella) rubropictipes Knight, 1927 (Megalopsallus) rufiventris Knight, 1968 (Europiella)</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C6638F63C500D8194E48F91A	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C6638F6DC7C0DAC74DB0F9E9.text	4A3FBB30C6638F6DC7C0DAC74DB0F9E9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tannerocoris sarcobati Knight 1969	<div><p>sarcobati Knight, 1969 (Europiella) schwartzi, new species</p> <p>sparsus Van Duzee, 1918 (Europiella)</p> <p>stitti Knight, 1968 (Europiella)</p> <p>suaedae Knight, 1925 (Psallus)</p> <p>teretis, new species</p> <p>viridiventris Knight, 1968 (Europiella)</p> <p>KEY TO MALES OF MEGALOPSALLUS KNIGHT</p> <p>1. Dorsum, including head, nearly unicolorous pale, usually greenish, sometimes almost white or yellowish or pinkish; dorsum sometimes with small reddish spots or oth­ er markings on head, pronotum, and scutellum, or light brown spots at bases of setae............................. 2</p> <p>– At least head, and often much of dorsum, darkened, ranging from pale reddish to nearly black..................... 15</p> <p>2. Membrane marmorate; entire dorsum, venter, and appendages pale green (fig. 7); legs with some small brown spots; male genitalia as in figure 13 (San Joaquin Valley, California; host unknown).. californicus</p> <p>– Membrane not marmorate; coloration of dorsum pale, sometimes greenish or pinkish................................ 3</p> <p>3. Antennal segment 1 almost entirely dark; dorsum pale green (see fig. 7, brendae)... 4</p> <p>– Antennal segment 1 entirely pale; dorsum greenish or otherwise pale, although sometimes with reddish or brownish on pronotum and scutellum (see fig. 10, pallidus)................................ 5</p> <p>4. Femora pale green with some distinct black spots (fig. 7); vertex and calli sometimes weakly infuscate; frons often with a dark transverse line at level of base of clypeus; genitalia as in figure 13 (Mojave Desert; ex Lycium, Chenopodiaceae sp.).. brendae</p> <p>– Femora castaneous, usually appearing somewhat mottled (fig. 11); head and pronotum with some small red spots; genitalia as in figure 16 (Mojave Desert and south; ex Allenrolfea, Salsola, Suaeda)..... pictipes</p> <p>5. Body and appendages entirely pale (see fig. 10, pallidus)...................... 6</p> <p>– At least some areas not pale, e.g., medial areas of pronotum and scutellum, thoracic sternum, spots on femora, and dark bases of tibial spines (see fig. 12, sparsus).. 7</p> <p>6. Eyes white (fig. 10); larger species, total length 4.01–4.35, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.61–2.83, width across pronotum 1.09–1.19; genitalia as in figure 15 (Nevada; ex Atriplex, Grayia)................................... pallidus</p> <p>– Eyes red (fig. 12); smaller species, total length 3.46–3.70, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.26–2.37, width across pronotum 0.96–1.03; genitalia as in figure 16 (Great Basin; ex Sarcobatus) schwartzi</p> <p>7. Eyes red or reddish, distinctly protuberant, especially in males (fig. 12, rubropictipes); femora often with some reddish spots or markings........................ 8</p> <p>– Eyes pale (fig. 12, sarcobati), grayish, or blackish (fig. 12, sparsus), never bright red or strongly protruding; femora spotted, but never with red................... 11</p> <p>8. Dorsum largely pale, cream colored, pronotum (except humeral angles) and scutellum contrastingly reddish or brownish (fig. 10); genitalia as in figure 15 (southern Nevada and Utah; ex Ephedra)........ pallipes</p> <p>– Dorsum unicolorous or nearly so, at most with some small red spots on head and pronotum........................ 9</p> <p>9. Relatively small, slender species (fig. 7), total length 3.25–3.77, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.20–2.48, head relatively narrow, width across eyes 0.77–0.84; genitalia as in figure 13 (Interior western North America, western Great Plains south to southern Texas; ex Atriplex, Sarcobatus).......................... atriplicis</p> <p>– Larger, more robust species, total length at least 3.10, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture at least 2.27, width across eyes 0.85– 0.94........................... 10</p> <p>10. Femora usually distinctly reddish, in contrast to greenish coloration of dorsum (fig. 12); males elongate, females sometimes weakly to strongly brachypterous; genitalia as in figure 16 (Saskatchewan south to New Mexico and west to Oregon; ex Atriplex, Salicornia, Suaeda)...... rubropictipes</p> <p>– Femora, if reddish, usually not noticeably contrasting with remaining coloration (fig. 10); sexual dimorphism weak to nearly absent (fig. 10); genitalia as in figure 15 (Texas Gulf coast north to Colorado and Utah, coastal Sinaloa, Mexico, Dominican Republic; ex Atriplex, Batis, Salicornia, Suaeda)........................ nuperus</p> <p>11. Eyes black or blackish (fig. 12); thoracic pleuron and venter and abdominal venter obviously infuscate; at least head often with dark markings, sometimes also anterior pronotal lobe and scutellum (fig. 12); genitalia as in figure 16 (Saskatchewan south to Texas and west to southern California; ex Atriplex)........... sparsus</p> <p>– Eyes pale, usually white or pale gray (fig. 12, sarcobati); head never with dark markings; at most thoracic sternum darkened, thoracic pleuron and abdomen pale; setae on dorsum sometimes with brown bases.... 12</p> <p>12. Dorsum pale, nearly white, more or less uniformly covered with tiny brown spots at bases of setae on a lighter background (fig. 11); large broad­bodied, total length 3.78– 4.15, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.47–2.70, width across pronotum 1.16– 1.27; genitalia as in figure 16 (extreme western Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, southern Nevada; ex Atriplex)........ punctatus</p> <p>– Dorsum, although uniformly pale, never with brown spots at bases of setae; size variable............................... 13</p> <p>13. Elongate slender species, total length 3.28– 4.12, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.93–3.16, width of head 0.65–0.74, width across pronotum 0.91–1.00; coloration pale; ex Atriplex................. 14</p> <p>– Shorter, more robust species, total length 3.04–3.26, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.05–2.22, width of head 0.84– 0.87, width across pronotum 1.01–1.08; coloration always at least weakly greenish (fig. 12); genitalia as in figure 16 (Great Basin; ex Sarcobatus)....... sarcobati</p> <p>14. Thoracic sternum infuscate; genitalia as in figure 15; total length 3.28–3.72, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.12–2.42, width of head 0.65–0.73, width across pronotum 0.91–1.00 (fig. 10) (SW Great Basin; ex Atriplex confertifolia)........................... parapunctipes</p> <p>– Thoracic sternum never dark; genitalia as in figure 16; total length 2.91–4.12, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.93–3.16, width of head 0.73–0.74, width across pronotum 0.92–0.99 (fig. 11) (Great Basin and southern Rocky Mountains; ex Atripex)......................... punctipes</p> <p>15. Membrane marmorate; dorsum usually tan with a greater or lesser amount of reddish to brown spotting; all femora strongly reddish brown (fig. 9); genitalia as in figure 15 (Arizona and adjacent areas; ex Allenrolfea, Salicornia).......... marmoratus</p> <p>– Membrane not marmorate; dorsum sometimes variably reddish brown with brown spots at bases of setae on lighter background and femora reddish (fig. 7, brittoni, femoralis)....................... 16</p> <p>16. General coloration, including legs and veins of membrane, intensely and completely red or reddish (fig. 7, 8).............. 17</p> <p>– General coloration variable, but never completely reddish................... 18</p> <p>17. Pronotum and scutellum sometimes darker than remainder of dorsum (fig. 7); genitalia as in figure 14 (central Nevada; ex Sarcobatus baileyi)............... flammeus</p> <p>– Pronotum and scutellum of same shade as remainder of dorsum (fig. 8); genitalia as in figure 14 (southern Utah to northern Baja California; ex Ephedra)....... ephedrae</p> <p>18. Coloration of dorsum entirely dark, ranging from brown to black (figs. 9, 10, 12, 21, 23)............................ 19</p> <p>– Coloration of dorsum never completely dark, ranging from completely pale to partly dark............................... 22</p> <p>19. Relatively large species, total length 4.51– 5.20, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.79–3.31, width across pronotum 1.15– 1.32; antennal segment 2 slender, of uniform diameter, never spindle­shaped (fig. 9); genitalia as in figure 14 (northern Great Basin; ex Sarcobatus vermiculatus).............................. knowltoni</p> <p>– Smaller species, total length in males 2.57– 3.88, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.74–2.46, width across pronotum 0.94– 1.16; shape of antennal segment 2 straight or spindle­shaped................. 20</p> <p>20. Antennal segment 2 in males enlarged, cylindrical, but diameter at most slightly greater than diameter of segment 1 (figs. 12, 22); antennal segment 2 in females moderately to strongly spindle­shaped (figs. 12, 23); antennae and legs conspicuously reddish in most specimens; genitalia as in figure 16 (southern Nevada to Zacatecas, Mexico; ex Lycium)..................... teretis</p> <p>– Antennal segment 2 cylindrical in both sexes, never spindle­shaped, diameter slightly less than that of segment 1; vesica not as in figure 16; coloration of legs and antennae sometimes reddish................ 21</p> <p>21. Genitalia as in figure 15; antennal segments 1 and 2 varying from pale to reddish (fig. 10) (Canada to central Mexico; ex Atriplex, Grayia,)............. nigrofemoratus</p> <p>– Genitalia as in figure 14; antennal segments 1 and 2 varying from pale to dark (fig. 9) (southern Nevada and California, Arizona, Baja California; ex Lycium).. humeralis</p> <p>22. Head and eyes castaneous, strongly contrasting with pale green to nearly white remain­ der of dorsum (figs. 6, 9); antennal segment 1, thoracic venter (including coxae), and much of femora also castaneous; genitalia as in figure 15 (Arizona, Mojave Desert; ex Lycium).................. nigricaput</p> <p>– If head and eyes castaneous, then remainder of dorsum never entirely pale....... 23</p> <p>23. Head, pronotum, mesoscutum, sometimes part or all of scutellum, and extreme base of hemelyta ranging from pale red to castaneous, in contrast to white or pale green remainder of dorsum.............. 24</p> <p>– Coloration variable, but never exactly as above, and if hemelytra mostly pale then abdomen mostly dark, or at most partially pale with at least some reddish or infuscate areas........................... 25</p> <p>24. Coloration as in figure 11; abdomen pale green, strongly contrasting with castaneous thoracic pleuron and venter; genitalia as in figure 16 (Great Basin; ex Sarcobatus)........................ rubricornis</p> <p>– Coloration as in figure 8; abdomen pale green, thoracic pleuron and venter pale orange; genitalia as in figure 13 (west Texas; ex Ephedra).............. ephedrellus</p> <p>25. Head, pronotum, and usually scutellum entirely castaneous to nearly black, or if not entirely so, then only posterior humeral angles of pronotum and sometimes apex of scutellum pale................... 26</p> <p>– Head, pronotum, and scutellum not entirely castaneous, often largely pale....... 30</p> <p>26. Dark coloration of pronotum contrasting with that of hemelytra, the latter ranging from largely pale to distinctly orange or reddish............................... 27</p> <p>– Dark coloration of pronotum usually not strongly contrasting with coloration of hemelytra; if hemelytra pale, then cuneus never reddish.................... 29</p> <p>27. Head, pronotum, entire venter, and all femora deep reddish to castaneous, contrasting with pale (but not white) coloration of hemelytra (figs. 5, 9); cuneus always weakly reddish; genitalia as in figure 15 (southern Arizona, Mexico; ex Lycium)................................. nicholi</p> <p>– Head, pronotum, and scutellum nearly black; hemelytra, including cuneus, deep orange to red orange.................... 28</p> <p>28. Head, pronotum, and scutellum dull; femora unicolorous dark (fig. 8); tibiae infuscate; genitalia as in figure 14 (southern Nevada and Utah south to central Baja California; ex Ephedra)................ ephedrae</p> <p>– Head, pronotum, and scutellum polished and moderately to strongly shining (fig. 8); femora pale at least on distal one­half; tibiae pale (southern Nevada, Utah, and California; ex Ephedra)....... froeschneri</p> <p>29. Genitalia as in figure 15; antennal segments 1 and 2 usually pale, although sometimes reddish (fig. 10) (Canada to central Mexico; ex Atriplex, Grayia, and Sarcobatus)..................... nigrofemoratus – Genitalia as in figure 14; antennal segments 1 and 2 usually dark, less commonly reddish or pale (fig. 9) (southern Nevada and California, Arizona, Baja California; ex Lycium).................... humeralis</p> <p>30. Hemelytra most frequently entirely pale, usually weakly greenish or grayish; head, anterior lobe of pronotum, mesoscutum, and more rarely hemelytra broadly dark (fig. 12); genitalia as in figure 16 (Texas to southern California; ex Atriplex)................................ sparsus</p> <p>– Coloration of dorsum reddish, often spotted or mottled, never greenish or grayish 31</p> <p>31. Larger species, total length 3.57–3.82, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.58–2.71, width across pronotum 1.18–1.29 (fig. 7); antennal segment 2 relatively long, length 1.04–1.16; genitalia as in figure 13 (coastal Connecticut south to Florida and east to Texas); host unknown......... brittoni</p> <p>– Smaller species, total length 3.09–3.24, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.16– 2.29, width across pronotum 0.99–1.07 (fig. 7); antennal segment 2 relatively short, length 0.83–0.92; genitalia as in figure 13 (northern Rockies; ex Salicornia)............................. femoralis</p> <p>Megalopsallus atriplicis Knight</p> <p>Figures 7, 13</p> <p>Megalopsallus atriplicis Knight, 1927: 224 (n. sp.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by relatively small size, protuberant red eyes, and distinctly red spots on the head, pronotum, and femora (fig. 7). Possibly most easily confused with schwartzi and nuperus. Former species also occurring on Sarcobatus at same localities, but lacking red spots and protuberant eyes; latter species more robust, without red spots and distinctive sexual dimorphism of atriplicis. Megalopsallus femoralis, marmoratus, and pictipes frequently with red spots, but without distinctly red eyes and strong sexual dimorphism.</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Small, elongate, total length 3.25–3.77, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.20–2.48, width across pronotum 0.95–1.04. COLORATION: General coloration cream to faded orange; vertex, anterior margin of pronotum, and all femora with some reddish spots (fig. 7); eyes red; thoracic pleuron and venter, all coxae, and much of abdomen in females heavily infus­ cate; tibiae pale with dark spots at bases of pale spines. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, weakly shining, clothed with recumbent, pale, simple setae intermixed with silvery, weakly flattened setae. STRUCTURE: Hemelytra moderately elongate, nearly parallel sided; eyes in males large, protuberant (fig. 7); labium reaching posterior margin of middle trochanters; claws relatively long and slender, smoothly curving; pulvilli minute. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica weakly sigmoid, slender (fig. 13), attenuated apically; gonopore small, subapical, not subtended by a gonopore sclerite (fig. 13).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.97–3.19, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.14 –2.33, width across pronotum 0.99–1.08; relatively stout, ovoid (fig. 7).</p> <p>HOSTS: Atriplex matamorensis, Atriplex texana, Atriplex sp., Sarcobatus vermiculatus, S. baileyi (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior of western North America east to the western plains south to southern Texas.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: In the present paper atriplicis is conceived as widespread and not strongly host specific. This approach might be revised under more critical analysis. My treatment is influenced by the fact that genitalia cannot be used to readily recognize this species, or to distinguish it from nuperus and rubropictipes, in particular. Also, nearly all material from the eastern part of the range, including the type locality, was from older collections, which made comparisons of coloration difficult. Finally, a vast section of the western plains and Rocky Mountains was virtually unrepresented in the available sample of material.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — Arizona: Coconino Co.: 1 mi E of Tuba City on Rt. 163, 5000 ft, June 16, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 3♀ (AMNH). California: Inyo Co.: 2 mi E of Big Pine, June 10, 1976 – June 22, 1978, J. D. Pinto, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 23, 5♀ (UCR). Mono Co.: 8 mi W of Nevada state line on Rt. 359, 6700 ft, July 2, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 63, 12♀ (AMNH). Colorado: Mineral Co.: Creede, June 21, 1990, J. T. and D. A. Polhemus, 13, 2♀ (JTP). Moffat Co.: Gates of Lodore, June 28, 1979, D. A. Polhemus, 13, 1♀ (JTP). Rio Blanco Co.: W Evacuation Creek, 4 mi SE of state line on Rt. 45, 6400 ft, July 9, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Montana: Carbon Co.: Bear Creek between Red Lodge and Belfry, 5000 ft, August 12, 1986, Schwartz and Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 23, 13♀ (AMNH). Nevada: Elko Co.: Elko, July 12, 1965, H. H. Knight, 23, 17♀ (USNM). Utah state line on Utah Rt. 30, 4760 ft, June 25, 1983, Schuh and Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 27♀ (AMNH). Esmeralda Co.: 13 mi W of Lida on Rt. 3, 1938 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 1♀ (AMNH). Lander Co.: 11 mi S of Rt. 50 on Rt. 376, T17N R44E, 5800 ft, June 28, 1983, Schuh and Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 14♀ (AMNH). 7.5 mi S of Rt 50 on Rt 376, T17N R44E, 5900 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Lincoln Co.: Cathedral Gorge State Park, June 17, 1986, J. B. Knight and K. R. Helms, 83, 1♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: 2.5 mi NE of Gabbs off Rt. 844, 4800 ft, July 2, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, 83 (AMNH). 30 mi S of Rt. 50 on Rt 376, T13N R14E, 6000 ft, June 30, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 13 (AMNH). 35 mi N of Tonapah, Coyote Hole Spring/Sevier Reservoir, T8 R42E S11 &amp; 23, 6000 ft, June 29, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, 833 (AMNH). 35 mi N of Tonapah, Coyote Hole Spring/Sevier Reservoir, T8 R42E S11 &amp; 23, 6000 ft, June 30, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 10♀ (AMNH). Washoe Co.: 2 mi E of Vya on Rt. 8A, 1750 m, July 2, 1979, R. T. Schuh and B. M. Massie, 23, 26♀ (AMNH). New Mexico: Eddy Co.: April 24, 1979, Burke, Dolorme, Schaffner, 53 (TAMU). Taos Co.: Ojo Caliente, June 6, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 23 (JTP). Oregon: Harney Co.: T41S R36E S8, July 16, 1979, M. J. Smith, N. Cobb, 1♀ (OSU). T41S R35E S5, July 6, 1979, M. J. Smith, N. Cobb, 13 (OSU). T36S R35E S8, June 26, 1979 – September 4, 1979, M. J. Smith and N. Cobb, 53, 1♀ (OSU). T34S R35E S10 NE, July 12, 1979, Neil Cobb, 1♀ (OSU). Texas: Calhoun Co.: Port Lavaca, August 19, 1925 – September 10, 1925, 73, 4♀ (USNM). Cameron Co.: Brownsville, April 17, 1925, Div. Cotton Insects, Atriplex texana (Chenopodiaceae), 23 (USNM). Brownsville, April 25, 1926, T. C. Barber, Atriplex matamorensis (Chenopodiaceae), Paratypes: 73, 14♀ (CNC, USNM); holotype: male (USNM). Brownsville, February 1, 1926, T. C. Barber, Atriplex matamorensis (Chenopodiaceae), Paratypes: 73, 10♀ (USNM). Brownsville, February 15, 1925, T. C. Barber, Atriplex matamorensis (Chenopodiaceae), Paratypes: 13 (USNM). Brownsville, June 23, 1908, 13, 3♀ (USNM); Paratypes: 63, (USNM). Brownsville, May 1, 1925, Div. Cotton Insect, Atriplex matamorensis (Chenopodiaceae), 153, 15♀ (USNM). Utah: Box Elder Co.: S. Valed Site, August 24, 1972, W. J. Hanson, 13 (USU). Cache Co.: Logan, July 22, 1938, G. F. Knowlton, D. E. Hardy, 1♀ (USU). Emery Co.: Green River, May 21, 1963, G. F. Knowlton, 13 (USU). Garfield Co.: 14.3 S of Rt. 95 on Rt. 276 (3.4 mi N of Starr Spring turnoff), 5000 ft, June 19, 1983, Schuh and Schwartz, 103, 15♀ (AMNH). Grand Co.: E of Moab, Colorado River bridge, May 26, 1979, J. T. and D. A. Polhemus, 53, 7♀ (JTP). San Juan Co.: 25 mi N of Monticello on Rt. 191, 5700 ft, July 18, 1986, R. T. Schuh, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 2♀ (AMNH). Sevier Co.: Richfield, July 15, 1929, E. W. Davis, 73, 3♀ (USNM). Salina, July 2, 1943, G. F. Knowlton, 23 (KU). Uintah Co.: 5–10 mi SE of Bonanza, 5000–5600 ft, May 14, 1982 – September 6, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 113, 16♀ (AMNH). Bonanza,at White River Shale Project Trailers, T9S R24E Sec 23, 5800 ft, May 6, 1982 – July 7, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 73, 64♀ (AMNH). Weber Co.: Slaterville, July 12, 1967, G. F. Knowlton and L. E. Frank, 13 (OSU). Washington: Yakima Co.: Yakima, August 15, 1931, A. R. Rolfs, 113, 10♀ (USNM). Yakima, June 30, 1932, A. R. Rolfs, 103, 8♀ (USNM). Wyoming: Sheridan Co.: Arvada, July 31, 1927, H. H. Knight, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 2♀ (USNM).</p> <p>Megalopsallus brendae, new species</p> <p>Figures 1, 7, 13</p> <p>HOLOTYPE: Male, California: San Bernardino Co.: 1.3 mi. S of Goffs, 845 meters, May 16, 1978, R. T. Schuh, ex? Chenopodium sp. (Chenopodiaceae). Deposited in the American Museum of Natural History.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by generally pale greenish coloration of dorsum contrasting with dark antennal segment 1; possibly most easily confused with sarcobati on basis of pale green coloration; differing from that species in having antennal segment 1 dark and venter darkened in males. Vesica in male somewhat heavier and more nearly forming a coil than in most other Megalopsallus species (fig. 13).</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Relatively small, total length 2.74–3.16, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.74–3.16, width across pronotum 0.90–1.01. COLORATION: Generally pale with a greenish tinge (fig. 7); eyes, transverse line on frons at level of base of clypeus, maxillary plate, antennal segment 1 (except base and apex), thoracic pleuron and venter, and abdomen including genital capsule brownish black; femora with dark spots, tibial spines black with dark bases. SUR­ FACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum weakly polished and moderately shining, covered with dark, recumbent, simple setae intermixed with silvery, weakly flattened setae (fig. 1C); tibial spines black with black bases. STRUCTURE: Moderately elongate and par­ allel­sided; head strongly declivent (fig. 1A); labium relatively short, reaching about midway between fore and middle trochanters; claws broad basally, curving near apex, pulvilli small (fig. 1D). MALE GENITALIA: Vesica rather strongly coiled and stout (fig. 13), not attenuated apically; gonopore well developed, weakly subapical; gonopore sclerite long, distinctly sclerotized (fig. 13).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.53–2.90, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2/53–2.90, width across pronotum 0.91–1.03; more strongly ovoid than male (fig. 7).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: Named for my wife Brenda Massie, who accompanied me in the field while collecting specimens of this and many other species of Megalopsallus.</p> <p>HOSTS: Chenopodium (?) sp. (Chenopodiaceae); Lycium cooperi (Solanaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Mojave Desert of Arizona, southern California, and southern Nevada.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Of the species I am placing in Megalopsallus, brendae probably fits most uncomfortably. The facies are not what might be called typical and neither are the genitalia. Nonetheless, the general structure and host preferences agree more closely with other Megalopsallus species than they do with species in any group of North American Phylini.</p> <p>PARATYPES: USA. — Arizona: Maricopa Co.: Phoenix, Arizona Canal at McDowell Rd, April 19, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, 43, 8♀ (JTP). California: Riverside Co.: Thousand Palms, November 24, 1955, W. R. Richards, 13, (CNC). San Bernardino Co.: 1.3 mi S of Goffs, 845 m, May 16, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Chenopodium sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 653, 49♀ (AMNH, USNM). 26.7 mi S of Barstow, St. Rt. 247, 1000 m, May 2, 1985, R. T. Schuh and B. M. Massie, Lycium cooperi (Solanaceae), 103, 1♀ (AMNH). Nevada: Clark Co.: Valley of Fire State Park, west entrance, 845 m, May 17, 1978, R. T. Schuh, 93, 21♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus brittoni Knight</p> <p>Figures 7, 13</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C6638F6DC7C0DAC74DB0F9E9	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C66D8F73C500DC534DA2FB74.text	4A3FBB30C66D8F73C500DC534DA2FB74.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Megalopsallus brittoni Knight 1927	<div><p>Megalopsallus brittoni Knight, 1927: 227 (n. sp.) Megalopsallus adustus Knight, 1927: 227 (n. sp.).</p> <p>NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Most similar to femoralis in</p> <p>reddish brown coloration and spots at bases of setae on dorsum in most specimens, but femoralis more strongly sexually dimorphic. Similar in appearance to nuperus in near absence of sexual dimorphism and protuberant eyes, but that species lacking brown spots at the bases of setae on dorsum. Further distinguished from nuperus by differences in structure of male genitalia (compare figs. 13 and 15).</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized, total length 3.57–3.82, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.58–2.71, width across pronotum 1.18–1.29. COLORATION: General coloration, including legs, reddish brown, with some more strongly reddish spots or markings, particularly on head and anterior half of pronotum; eyes distinctly reddish; bases of setae on dorsum often with darkened spots at bases; tibial spines pale with brown bases not strongly contrasting with remainder of tibia. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Entire body surface dull, matte; dorsum with dark simple setae intermixed with woolly, silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Relatively broad, hemelytra not conspicuously elongate; eyes protuberant; labium long, reaching posterior margin of hind trochanters; tarsal claws elongate, slender, curving, pulvilli very small. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica S­shaped; gonopore subapical; gonopore sclerite not developed (fig. 13).</p> <p>Female: Total length 3.85–4.16, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.86–3.10, width across pronotum 1.33–1.42; sexual dimorphism weak, females slightly more robust than males (fig. 7).</p> <p>HOST: Unknown.</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Known from Connecticut and Texas, primarily from coastal localities.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Knight (1927) described brittoni and adustus on the same page, separating them primarily on the length of the second antennal segment. Although this measurement was frequently used by Knight to discriminate species, I have found it to be less reliable than was believed by Knight, owing to variability within species. I have seen only two specimens of brittoni, and have compared them with large numbers of specimens from Texas, including the holotype of adustus from Anahuac, that agree closely with Knight’s concept of adustus. I am treating adustus as a junior synonym of brittoni because both nominal taxa have brown spots at the bases of many of the setae on the dorsum, an attribute found elsewhere in Megalopsallus only in punctatus, the last species otherwise showing little similarity to brittoni.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — Connecticut: Stratford, July 9, 1920, B. H. Walden, 1♀ (USNM). Westville, July 4, 1904, W. E. Britton, holotype: male of brittoni (USNM). Texas: Brazos Co.: Bryan, April 8, 1965, J. C. Schaffner, 1♀ (TAMU). Cameron Co.: 4 mi ESE of Brownsville, October 20, 1997, W. F. Chamberlain, 13, 1♀ (TAMU). Brownsville, Boca Chica, December 27, 1945, R. H. Beamer, 33, 2♀ (KU). Chambers Co.: Anahuac, October 8, 1918, H. S. Barber, 3♀ (USNM); holotype: male of adustus (USNM). Galveston Co.: Galveston, February 2, 1932, L. D. Tuthill, 23, 1♀ (KU). Nueces Co.: Corpus Christi, January 1, 1946, R. H. Beamer, 143, 35♀ (KU, AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus californicus, new species</p> <p>Figures 7, 13</p> <p>HOLOTYPE: Male, Schafter, Calif., IX­24­ 1940, G. L. Smith Coll. Deposited in the California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by pale green coloration and marmorate membrane, the latter characteristic occurring elsewhere in Megalopsallus only in the heavily reddish brown M. marmoratus Knight.</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Relatively small, total length 2.78–3.10, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.88–2.12, width across pronotum 0.94–1.03. COLORATION: Pale, weakly greenish; eyes red; membrane of hemelytra generally pale, marmorate posterior to cells (fig. 7); femora with some brown spots; tibial spines pale, with at most medium brown bases. SURFACE AND VESTITU­ RE: Dorsum with brown, recumbent, simple setae intermixed with woolly, silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Elongate ovoid; labium long, surpassing posterior margin of hind trochanters; claws elongate, curving, pulvilli small. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica S­shaped, attenuated apically; gonopore relatively small, subapical; gonopore sclerite not developed (fig. 13).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.72–2.90, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.98–2.26, width across pronotum 1.01–1.13; more broadly ovoid than male (fig. 7).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: Named for its occurrence in California.</p> <p>HOST: Unknown.</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Southern San Joaquin Valley, California.</p> <p>PARATYPES: USA. — California: Kern Co.: Schafter, September 24, 1940, G. L. Smith, 233, 18♀ (UCB, AMNH). Schafter, September 15, 1942, G. L. Smith, 23, 2♀ (USNM).</p> <p>Megalopsallus ephedrae (Knight), new combination Figures 8, 14</p> <p>Merinocapsus ephedrae Knight, 1968: 34 (n. sp.); Schuh, 1986: 218 (diag., distr., figs.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by dull, orange or nearly black head, pronotum, and scutellum and pale to red hemelytra with orange cuneus and smoky membrane; femora always unicolorous orange or dark. Coloration of dorsum often similar to froeschneri, but femora in that species always paler distally than proximally, whereas in ephedrae femora unicolorous over entire length. Head, pronotum, and scutellum in froeschneri usually more strongly polished and shining than in ephedrae.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized, total length 3.41–4.32, length apex clypeus– cuneal fracture 2.24–2.81, width across pronotum 0.95–1.14. COLORATION: Head, pronotum, and scutellum dull, usually castaneous to nearly black, sometimes orange; hemelytra ranging from pale to intensely red orange or red, cuneus always orange to red, membrane smoky, veins orange (fig. 8); eyes dark, often mostly black; underside of body usually dark, castaneous; antennae dark; legs of similar coloration to underside of body, tibiae sometimes lighter and tibial spines with visible small dark bases; appendages and underside of body orange in specimens with completely orange dorsum. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Head, pronotum, and scutellum smooth, dull, clothed with recum­ bent, dark, simple setae intermixed with woolly, silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Elongate, parallel­sided; specimens in some populations relatively longer than those in others; head strongly declivent (fig. 3); labium reaching to about apex of middle coxae; claws moderately elongate, smoothly curving; pulvilli small. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica elongate, twisted, with bifid apex, secondary gonopore subapical with a weakly sclerotized gonopore sclerite (fig. 14).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.98–3.22, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.16–2.34, width across pronotum 1.04–1.12; similar in coloration to males, body not so elongate and more strongly ovoid (fig. 9).</p> <p>HOSTS: Ephedra apsera, E. nevadensis, E. viridis (Ephedraceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Northern Baja California, and Mojave Desert of southern California, southern Nevada, and southern Utah.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: This is the most variable of the Ephedra ­feeding species. The bifid apex of the vesica suggests a close relationship with the Ephedra ­feeding species froeschneri and pallipes.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: MEXICO. — Baja California Norte: 6 mi E of Ojos Negros, June 9, 1980, Brown and Faulkner, 1♀ (SDNH). 12 mi E of El Rosario, March 25, 1979, J. D. Pinto, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 73, 5♀ (AMNH, UCR). USA. — California: Inyo Co.: 2 mi E of Westgard Pass summit, White Mountains, 2125 m, July 2, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 6♀ (AMNH). Inyo Mts, May 25, 1937, D. Little, 1♀ (LACM). Rt 95 at North edge of Mono Lake, 2188 m, July 11, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 33, 7♀ (AMNH). Tuttle Creek, 2 mi SW of Lone Pine, May 9, 1969, P.A. Opler, 13 (UCB). Mono Co.: 2 airline mi S of Inyo, 8500 ft, June 27, 1961, J. Powell, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 43, 2♀ (UCB). Riverside Co.: ca. 0.8 mi N of jct. Deep Creek and Horsethief Creek, T7S R6E Sec 6, 2960 ft, J. D. Pinto, 13 (UCR). San Bernardino Co.: Victorville, April 21, 1935, C.E. Norland, 2♀ (LACM). Providence Mountains State Recreation Area, 4300 ft, May 18, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra aspera (Ephedraceae), 23, 6♀ (AMNH). 10 mi W of Lucerne Val­ ley, 905 m, May 13, 1978, J. D. Pinto and R. T. Schuh, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 63, 28♀ (AMNH). 23 mi S of Amboy, April 7, 1966, C. W. O’Brien, 5♀ (UCB). San Diego Co.: Anza­Borrego Desert State Park, Grapevine Canyon, mp 74 on county Rt 52, April 22, 1980, Russell and Schwartz, 13 (AMNH). Nevada: Lincoln Co.: 5 mi NE of jct. of Rts 38 and 93, 2500 ft, May 19, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 263, 18♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: Northumberland Canyon Rd, Toquima Mts, 15 mi E of Rt 376, T31N R45E Secs 3, 4, 10, 7000 ft, June 29, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 173, 27♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 17 M, June 12, 1965, H. Knight and J. Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 33, 6♀ (CNC, USNM). 1 mi NE of Belmont on Rt. 82, 2281 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 73, 16♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 19 M, June 23, 1965, H. Knight, J. Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 3♀ (USNM). Mercury, TM, June 14, 1965, Beck, Knight, Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 9♀ (USNM); holotype: male (USNM). Utah: Garfield Co.: 14.3 mi S of Rt. 95 on Rt. 276 (2.4 mi N of Star Springs turnoff), 5000 ft, June 19, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, 13 (AMNH). Capitol Reef Natl. Park, Grand Wash­Cohab Canyon Trail, 5350­6640 ft, June 21, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra viridis (Ephedraceae), 23, 4♀ (AMNH). Washington Co.: Rt 15 about 10 mi W of I­15 toward Zion Natl. Park, 1095 m, May 18, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 3♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus ephedrellus, new species</p> <p>Figures 8, 13</p> <p>HOLOTYPE: Male, Texas: Crockett Co.: 16.7 mi west Ozona, May 9, 1997, Gillogly &amp; Schaffner. Deposited in the American Museum of Natural History.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by pale orange coloration of head, thorax, and hemelytra anterior to apex of scutellum, and dirty greenish coloration posterior to that point; abdomen bright pale green. Size and form of sexual dimorphism similar to nuperus, but that species never with greenish on the hemelytra. Breeds on Ephedra.</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately small, total length 2.97–3.25, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.05–2.24, width across pronotum 0.98–1.07. COLORATION: Head, thorax, appendages, and hemelytra anterior to apex of scutellum pale orange, remainder of hemelytra dirty pale green (fig. 8); abdomen bright pale green; eyes red. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, dull, or very weakly shining, clothed with dark, recumbent, simple setae intermixed with silvery, weakly flattend, somewhat woolly setae. STRUCTURE: Relatively stout­bodied, corial margins nearly straight (fig. 8); labium short, just surpassing posterior margin of fore trochanters; claws elongate, smoothly curving, pulvilli minute. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica relatively large, forming a weak coil, apex relatively strongly attenuated and extending well past secondary gonopore, gonopore subtended by a well­developed gonopore sclerite (fig. 13).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.64–2.78, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.94 –2.04, width across pronotum 0.96–1.01; more strongly ovoid than male, hemelytra nearly conforming to outline of abdomen (fig. 8).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: Named for the host genus Ephedra.</p> <p>HOST: Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality near Ozona in western Texas.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: This is one of four species currently placed in Megalopsallus that is recorded as feeding on Ephedra. The bifid apex of the vesica suggests that the other three species are more closely related to one another than any one of them is to ephedrellus.</p> <p>PARATYPES: Same data as holotype: 6 males, 52 females (AMNH; TAMU; USNM).</p> <p>Megalopsallus femoralis Kelton</p> <p>Figures 7, 13</p> <p>Megalopsallus femoralis Kelton, 1980: 285 (n. sp.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by somber coloration and relatively small size. Similar in size and general appearance to marmoratus, but lacking marmorate membrane. Similar in coloration to brittoni but smaller.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately small, total length 3.09–3.24, length apex clypeus– cuneal fracture 2.16–2.29, width across pronotum 0.99–1.07. COLORATION: General coloration somber, head, pronotum, scutellum, eyes, legs, and most of undersurface of body brown or reddish brown, remainder of dorsum and most of antennae tan, head and pronotum sometimes with some red spots (fig. 7). SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Body surface dull, never shining; dorsum with brown, recumbent, simple setae intermixed with subappressed, shining, weakly flattened setae. STRUCTURE: Moderately elongate; labium reaching posterior margin of hind trochanters; claws noticeably elongate, curving, pulvilli small. MALE GENI­ TALIA: Vesica S­shaped with a short apical attenuation; gonopore subapical; gonopore sclerite not developed (fig. 13).</p> <p>Female: Total length 3.05–3.34, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.24 –2.36, width across pronotum 1.01–1.09; more broadly ovoid, frons conspicuously more protuberant and clypeus more obviously visible from above than in male (fig. 7).</p> <p>HOST: Salicornia rubra (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Western Great Plains from Alberta south to Colorado.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: This species is similar to brittoni, especially in coloration and the weak sexual dimorphism. However, available specimens of femoralis are all smaller than those of brittoni, with no size overlap between the two taxa. The male genitalia, although similar, appear to show consistent differences. Also, as here construed, the distributions of the two taxa are nonoverlapping.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: CANADA. — Alberta: Brooks, August 20, 1957, A. R. and J. E. Brooks, Paratypes: 13 (CNC). Lethbridge, June 18, 1939, R. W. Salt, 1♀ (CNC). Manitoba: Red Deer River, August 3, 1937, C. L. Johnston, 13 (KU). Saskatchewan: Dana, July 25, 1959, A. R. Brooks, Paratypes: 53, (CNC). Elbow, June 3–June 26, 1960, A. R. Brooks, Paratypes: 113 (CNC). Elstow, July 11, 1951 – August 29, 1953, A. R. Brooks, L. A. Konotopetz, Salicornia rubra (Chenopodiaceae), Holotype and Paratypes: 173, 14♀ (CNC). USA. — Colorado: Jackson Co.: 7 mi NE of Rand, August 16, 1969, J. C. Schaffner, 13 (TAMU). South Dakota: Campbell Co.: Mound City, July 16, 1938, H. C. Severin, 13, 4♀ (USNM). Wyoming: Carbon Co.: 8 mi W of Rawlins, September 26, 1966, C. W. O’Brien, 13, 2♀ (UCB). Lincoln Co.: 4 mi NW of Frontier, June 26, 1966, W. Gagne, J. Haddock, 13 (UCB).</p> <p>Megalopsallus flammeus, new species</p> <p>Figures 2, 7, 14</p> <p>HOLOTYPE: Male, Nevada: Nye Co., 5 mi. W of Berlin Ichthyosaur St. Monument on Rt. 844, el. 6350 feet, July 1, 1983, R. T. Schuh, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Hook.) Torr. var. baileyi (Cov.) Jeps. (Chenopodiaceae). Deposited in the American Museum of Natural History.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized unequivocally by bright red coloration of the body and appendages; sexual dimorphism strong (fig. 8).</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately small, total length 3.08–3.34, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.02–2.08, width across pronotum 0.96–1.01. COLORATION: General coloration bright red (fig. 7), including legs (except tarsi); pronotum, scutellum, and underside often tending toward black; eyes blackish; membrane smoky with red veins; tibial spines black but without contrasting dark bases. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Body surface smooth, weakly shining; dorsum with recumbent, brown, simple setae in­ termixed with silvery woolly setae. STRUC­ TURE: Conspicuously elongate, nearly parallel­sided (figs. 2, 7); labium reaching to hind trochanters; claws relatively short and stout, curving only near apex, pulvilli large, extending to apex of claw, apparently adnate to claw over entire length. MALE GENI­ TALIA: Vesica strongly bent at about midpoint; gonopore large, nearly apical; gonopore sclerite long, well sclerotized (fig. 14).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.33–2.59, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.73–1.90, width across pronotum 0.90–0.98; short, broad, ovoid, in distinct contrast to male (fig. 7).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: Named for its distinctive redorange coloration; from the Latin flammeus, flame colored.</p> <p>HOSTS: Sarcobatus baileyi, S. vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Central Nevada.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: I have collected large numbers of specimens of this species on hosts identified as Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi. Although specimens collected by O’Brien are labeled as occurring on S. vermiculatus, I have never encountered specimens on ‘‘true’’ vermiculatus, and conversely, most records of vermiculatus ­feeding species are not known from var. baileyi. Therefore, host data for the bugs suggest that baileyi represents a distinct plant species.</p> <p>This species was collected at more than one locality on specimens of Sarcobatus baileyi also inhabited by a mite belonging to the genus Balaustium (Erythraeidae), which was very similar in appearance and coloration to the females of flammeus. Adults of Balaustium spp. are free­living predators of small arthropods, whereas the larvae are ectoparasites of the same. The relationship, if any, of the mites and the bugs in this particular cases is not known. On the occasion of first collecting this brightly colored bug species my field companions and I dubbed it ‘‘the mite mimic’’ in recognition of the rather strong similarity of appearance of the two taxa.</p> <p>PARATYPES: USA. — Nevada: Lyon Co.: Weeks, May 29, 1967, C. W. O’Brien, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 33, 6♀ (UCB). Nye Co.: 2 mi E of Tonapah, June 7, 1966, W. Gagne, 13, (UCB). 35 mi N of Tonapah, Coyote Hole Spring/Sevier Reservoir, T8 R42E S11 &amp; 23, 6000 ft, June 30, 1983, Schuh and Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 353, 142♀ (AMNH, USNM). 5 mi W of Berlin Ichthyosaur State Monument on Rt. 844, 6350 ft, July 1, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 353, 83♀ (AMNH, USNM). Northumberland Canyon Rd, Toquima Mts, T14N R44E Sec. 31, 6400 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 73, 28♀ (AMNH). Washoe Co.: Verdi, July 9, 1967, Gagne, 1♀ (UCB).</p> <p>Megalopsallus froeschneri (Schuh), new combination Figures 8, 14</p> <p>Merinocapsus froeschneri Schuh, 1986: 220 (n. sp.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by nearly black, weakly to strongly shining head, pronotum, and scutellum, these always contrasting with hemelytra, the latter being either pale with red­orange cuneus or entirely red orange. Coloration of dorsum similar to ephedrae, but femora in that species always entirely dark, whereas in froeschneri femora orange at least on distal one­half. The head, pronotum, and scutellum in froeschneri usually more strongly polished and shining than in ephedrae.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized, total length 3.09–3.37, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.16–2.31, width across pronotum 1.02–1.08. COLORATION: Head, pronotum, and scutellum castaneous to nearly black; hemelytra ranging from orange to intensely red­orange, cuneus always orange, membrane, including most of veins, smoky (fig. 8); eyes black; underside of body castaneous; antennae dark; coxae dark, femora dark proximally, orange distally; tibiae pale, tibial spines dark without dark bases. SUR­ FACE AND VESTITURE: Head, pronotum, and scutellum smooth, polished and shining, clothed with recumbent, dark, simple setae intermixed with woolly, silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Relatively broad­bodied, parallel­sided (fig. 8); labium reaching to near apex of middle coxae; claws elongate, smoothly curving, pulvilli small. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica of moderate length, Sshaped, apex bifid with short projections, secondary gonopore removed from apex by distance equal to length of gonopore, gonopore sclerite very small (fig. 14).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.98–3.20, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.10 –2.35, width across pronotum 1.05–1.09; very similar in appearance and coloration to males, nearly parallel­sided (fig. 9).</p> <p>HOSTS: Ephedra cutleri, E. nevadensis, E. torreyana, E. viridis (Ephedraceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Mojave Desert in southern California, Nevada, and Utah; New Mexico.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Based on the bifid apex of the vesica, froschneri would appear to be most closely related to ephedrae and pallipes, and on coloration most closely related to ephedrae.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — California: Inyo Co.: 2 mi E of Westgard Pass summit, White Mountains, 2125 m, July 2, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Paratypes: 73, 12♀ (AMNH); holotype: male (AMNH). Kern Co.: 20 mi NW of Mojave on Hiway 58, June 13, 1983, G. M. Stonedahl, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 13, 4♀ (AMNH). Los Angeles Co.: Tehachapi Pass, June 6, 1929, R. L. Usinger, 5♀ (UCB). Little Rock, Mojave Desert, May 20, 1937, E. P. Van Duzee, Paratypes: 13 (CAS). Mint Canyon, May 17, 1937, E. P. Van Duzee, Astragalus sp. 1 ♀ (CAS). Mono Co.: Benton Hot Springs, June 8, 1966, W. Gagne, 3♀ (UCB). San Bernardino Co.: Yucca Valley, 6.3 mi N on Old Woman Springs Rd, May 13, 1978, J. D. Pinto, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 13, 1♀ (UCR). 10 mi N of Yucca Valley, May 28, 1975, J. D. Pinto, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 1♀ (UCR). Providence Mountains State Recreation Area, 4300 ft, May 18, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra viridis (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 33 (AMNH). Nevada: Lincoln Co.: 5 mi NE of jct. Rts 38 and 93, 2500 ft, May 19, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 33, (AMNH). Nye Co.: Atomic Test Site, Mercury Hiway at Angle Road (A3), 3800 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Stonedahl, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 113, 28♀ (AMNH). Atomic Test Site, 1mi S of Cane Springs Road at GS 250 (A5), 4100 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Stonedahl, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 13, 1♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 18 M, June 7, 1965, E. Beck, J. Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 1♀ (USNM). Mercury, 40M, June 20, 1965, H. Knight, J. Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 3♀ (USNM). Mercury, 6M, June 15, 1965, H. Knight, J. Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 2♀ (USNM). Mercury, CM, June 13, 1965, E. Beck, H. Knight, J. Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 2♀ (CNC, USNM). Mercury, CU, June 13, 1965, Beck, Knight, Merino, 4♀ (USNM). Mercury, TM, June 14, 1965, E. Beck, H. Knight, J. Merino, Ephedra nevadensis (Ephedraceae), 3♀ (USNM). Northumberland Canyon Rd, Toquima Mts, T14N R44E Sec. 31, 6400 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 43, 6♀ (AMNH). 5 mi E of Gabbs off Rt. 844, 5800 ft, July 1, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 13, 6♀ (AMNH). New Mexico: San Juan Co.: Angel Peak Campground, June 4, 1977, Hanson and Knowlton, 13, 2♀ (CNC). Utah: Emery Co.: 2.4 mi W of Rt. 24 on Goblin Valley Rd, 5500 ft, June 19, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra cutleri (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 13 (AMNH). Grand Co.: 11 mi SE of jct. Rts 313 &amp; 163 toward Dead Horse Point, 5200 ft, June 11, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra viridis (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 133, 35♀ (AMNH). San Juan Co.: Goosenecks Overlook, 5000 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra torreyana (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 43, 1♀ (AMNH). Rt. 63 at Arizona bor­ der, Monument Valley, 5200 ft, June 16, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra cutleri (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 133, 53♀ (AMNH). Grand Flat near Collins Canyon, 5600 ft, May 28, 1978, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Paratypes: 43, 5♀ (JTP). Glen Canyon Recreation Area, 12 mi S of Rt. 263, T40S R14E, 4300 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Paratypes: 13 (AMNH). 7.7 mi N of Mexican Hat on Rt 261, T41S R18E, 5000 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 1♀ (AMNH). 2.7 mi W of Rt. 95 on Rt. 263, T37S R17E, 6000 ft, June 18, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra torreyana (Ephedraceae), Paratypes: 23 (AMNH). Head of Lake Canyon near Nokai Dome Road, 4200 ft, May 29, 1978, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Paratypes: 13, 1♀ (JTP). Washington Co.: 2 mi NW of Toquerville on Rt 17, 3800 ft, May 25, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra viridis (Ephedraceae), 1♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus humeralis (Van Duzee)</p> <p>Figures 3, 9, 14</p> <p>Sthenarus humeralis Van Duzee, 1923: 162 (n. sp.).</p> <p>Europiella humeralis: Knight, 1968: 41 (n. comb., host).</p> <p>Megalopsallus humeralis: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>Megalopsallus arizonae Knight, 1968: 45 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Europiella balli Knight, 1968: 44 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus balli: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>Europiella brevicornis Knight, 1968: 45 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus brevicornis: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>Europiella lycii Knight, 1968: 40 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus lycii: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>Europiella rufiventris Knight, 1968: 42 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus rufiventris: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>Europiella viridiventris Knight, 1968: 42 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus viridiventris: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by frequently dark coloration of most of dorsum and femora, or at least dark coloration of head, pronotum, scutellum, and femora, with pale hemelytra. Most easily confused with nigrofemoratus on basis of size, coloration, and type of sexual dimorphism; separated most easily by differences in structure of male genitalia, vesica being more elongate and slender in nigrofemoratus than in humeralis, and fact that nigrofemoratus feeds on Atriplex and Grayia (Chenopodiaceae) rather than Lycium (Sola­ naceae), the latter appearing as exclusive host of humeralis. Pale specimens separated from Lycium ­feeding nicholi by cuneus being unicolorous with corium, rather than of at least moderately contrasting coloration as in nicholi.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Small to medium sized, total length 2.57–3.63, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.74 –2.31, width across pronotum 0.94–1.11. COLORATION: Dorsum varying from largely deep brown to nearly entirely pale brown, often with head, pronotum, and scutellum dark, hemelytra somewhat lighter to much lighter (fig. 9); eyes blackish; underside mostly dark in dark specimens, abdomen often pale green in lighter specimens; antennae usually reddish, sometimes almost entirely pale, or brownish; femora dark or darkened, tibiae pale, tibial spines dark with dark bases. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, very weakly shining, clothed with recumbent, dark, simple setae intermixed with woolly, silvery setae (figs. 3, 9). STRUCTURE: Weakly to strongly elongate, parallel­sided; specimens in some populations longer than those in others (fig. 9); head strongly declivent (fig. 3); labium reaching onto, but not beyond, hind trochanters; claws relatively short and straight, curving sharply near apex; pulvilli large, adnate to nearly entire ventral surface of claw. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica forming a weak coil, apex not attenuated, gonopore apical; gonopore sclerite well developed (fig. 14).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.48–3.30, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.83–2.19, width across pronotum 0.97–1.16; ovoid; not showing the nonoverlapping size variation seen in males (fig. 9).</p> <p>HOSTS: Lycium andersonii, L. berlandieri, L. b. parviflorus, L. cooperi, L. fremontii, L. parishii, L. sp. (Solanaceae). Probable sitting records: Ambrosia dumosa (Asteraceae); Larrea divaricata (Zygophyllaceae); Prosopis juliflora (Fabaceae); Rhamnus sp. (Rhamnaceae). Frequently collected when the plants are in fruit.</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Sonora and Baja California, Mexico north as far as southern Utah in interior western North America.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Knight (1968) described the new species arizonae, balli, brevicornis, lycii, rufiventris, and viridiventris from the southwestern United States. Comparison of the types and other specimens examined by Knight with holotype of Megalopsallus humeralis (Van Duzee) [‘‘Loreto, Baja California, May 20, 1921, EP Van Duzee Collec­ tor,’’ male (CAS)], including dissections of the male genitalia of most of these nominal species, indicates that even though there is substantial variation in color and size, the male genitalia are very similar for all of them and distinct from all other species of Megalopsallus. I am therefore treating all of these nominal taxa as synonymous, humeralis having priority. The holotype and paratypes of humeralis are faded, like many other Van Duzee specimens, appearing somewhat lighter in color than would be expected of fresh material.</p> <p>Megalopsallus humeralis shows substantial size variation. The structure of the male genitalia is relatively constant across the range of other forms of variation. Table 1 presents the measurements for this species in two nonoverlapping groupings of ‘‘small’’ and ‘‘large’’ specimens, reflecting the fact that in most populations the specimens are either relatively large or relatively small.</p> <p>A massive amount of material with carefully documented hosts indicates that humeralis invariably feeds on Lycium spp. The records of specimens from other plant groups offer little evidence for them as alternative hosts. I have collected extensively on all of the plant taxa listed above under ‘‘hosts,’’ and never recorded Megalopsallus breeding on any other than Lycium.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: MEXICO. — Baja California Norte: 36 mi SE of El Rosario, Rancho El Progresso, March 25, 1979, J. D. Pinto, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 13, 4♀ (UCR). Baja California Sur: Loreto, May 20, 1921, E. P. Van Duzee, Paratypes: 23, 6♀ (CAS). Sonora: 40 mi W of Moctezuma, April 27, 1981, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Rhamnus sp. (Rhamnaceae), 1♀ (JTP). USA. — Arizona: Aztec, February 3, 1941 – April 4, 1942, L. L. Stitt, 4♀ (USNM). Cochise Co.: Apache Trail, March 27, 1951, B. P. Bliven, 13, 4♀ (CAS). Gila Co.: 5.5 mi W of Roosevelt Dam at Apache Lake, 1750 ft, May 27, 1983, Schuh, Stonedahl, and Massie, 2♀ (AMNH). Salt River Mts, 1300 ft, May 9, 1926, A. A. Nichol, 13 (USNM). Maricopa Co.: Gila Bend, 260 m, May 7, 1978, R. T. Schuh, 13 (AMNH). Usery Mtn. Park, January 17, 1983, J. T. Polhemus, 153, 15♀ (JTP). Tempe, April 8, 1940, L. L. Stitt, Paratypes: 13, 2♀ (USNM). 10 mi S of Sun­ flower, April 18, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, 23, 1♀ (JTP). Sand Tank Mountains, SE of Gila Bend, 935 m, May 8, 1978, R. T. Schuh and A. F. Guenther, Larrea divaricata (Zygophyllaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Sand Tank Mountains, SE of Gila Bend, 900–1000 m, March 24, 1981, R. T. Schuh, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 23, 7♀ (AMNH). Sand Tank Mountains, SE of Gila Bend, 900–1000 m, March 24, 1981, R. T. Schuh, Lycium parishii (Solanaceae), 273, 54♀ (AMNH). Salt River Canyon at Apache Lake, 2000 ft, April 28, 1981, J. T. Polhemus, 13 (JTP). Phoenix, Arizona Canal at McDowell Rd, April 19, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, 13, 7♀ (JTP). Gila Bend, February 3, 1941 – June 1, 1941, L. L. Stitt, Paratypes: 63, 7♀ (USNM). Woolsey Wash near Painted Rock Dam, 205 m, April 3, 1981, R. T. Schuh, Lycium fremontii (Solanaceae), 83, 12♀ (AMNH). 14 mi S of Wickenburg on Vulture Mine Road, 600–700 m, April 1, 1981, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium andersonii berlandieri (Solanaceae), 693, 68♀ (AMNH). 5 mi S of Freeman SE of Gila Bend, 625 m, May 8, 1978, R. T. Schuh and A. F. Guenther, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 313, 75♀ (AMNH). 14 mi S of Wickenburg on Vulture Mine Road, 600–700 m, April 1, 1981, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium sp. nr. parishii (Solanaceae), 213, 11♀ (AMNH). 14 mi S of Wickenburg on Vulture Mine Road, 600–700 m, April 1, 1981, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 63, 6♀ (AMNH). 16 mi E of milepost 22 on Rt. 85, Sauceda Mts, 565 m, April 2, 1981, R. T. Schuh, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 233, 30♀ (AMNH). 24 mi E of Gila Bend, Freeman, 530 m, May 8, 1978, R. T. Schuh and A. F. Guenther, 13, 3♀ (AMNH). 4 mi S of Wickenburg on Vulture Mine Road, 700 m, April 1, 1981, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium sp. nr. parishii (Solanaceae), 93, 22♀ (AMNH). 5 mi N of Wickenburg on Rt 93, April 29, 1981, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, 1♀ (JTP). 5 mi S of Freeman SE of Gila Bend, 575 m, March 24, 1981, R. T. Schuh, Lycium parishii (Solanaceae), 133, 32♀ (AMNH). 1.8 mi W of Roosevelt on Rt. 88, May 10, 1980, J. D. Pinto, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 53, 9♀ (UCR). Mojave Co.: 9 mi W of Beaver Creek and Virgin River on US 15, Cedar Pocket Rest Stop, 2600 ft, May 12, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Ambrosia dumosa (Asteraceae), 3♀ (AMNH). Pima Co.: Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Quitobaquito, April 3, 1966, C. W. O’Brien, 23, 4♀ (UCB). Rillito, March 8, 1988, W. A. Jones, Lycium fremontii (Solanaceae), 33, 5♀ (USNM). Tucson, Santa Catalina Mts, Bear Creek near Saddleback Dr., February 24, 1995, M. D. Schwartz, Lycium berlandieri (Solanaceae), 103, 11♀ (AMNH). Tucson, April 19, 1926, A. A. Nichol, Paratypes: 23, 4♀ (USNM). Tortolito Mts, 2500–3000 ft, April 22, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Prosopis juliflora (Fabaceae), 13 (AMNH). Santa Catalina Mts, Finger Rock Canyon Trail, 3000–3500 ft, April 5, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 73, 19♀ (AMNH). Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Alamo Wash, 700–800 m, March 26, 1981, R. T. Schuh, M. D. Schwartz, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 453, 59♀ (AMNH). Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Alamo Wash, 700– 800 m, March 26, 1981, R. T. Schuh, M. D. Schwartz, Lycium parishii (Solanaceae), 343, 80♀ (AMNH). Marana, March 9, 1988, W. A. Jones, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 53, 2♀ (USNM). 7 mi W of Tucson, March 9, 1988, W. A. Jones, 23, 4♀ (USNM). 14 mi S of Ajo, April 2, 1966, L. &amp; C. W. O’Brien, 13 (UCB). Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Alamo Wash, 700–800 m, R. T. Schuh, M. D. Schwartz, Lycium berlandieri parviflorus (Solanaceae), 713, 94♀ (AMNH). Pinal Co.: Sacaton, January 22, 1936, L. L. Stitt, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), Paratype: 13, (USNM). Yavapai Co.: Coldwater, April 6, 1940, L. L. Stitt, Paratypes: 53, 6♀ (USNM). Castle Wash N of Phoenix, March 21, 1980, J. T. Polhemus, 6♀ (JTP). Yuma Co.: December 20, 1939, L. L. Stitt, Paratypes: 13, 1♀ (USNM). California: Imperial Co.: 1 mi E of Coyote Wells, April 23, 1980, Schwartz and Russell, 1♀ (AMNH). Kern Co.: 7 mi N of Mojave, April 23, 1966, C. W. O’Brien, 23, 4♀ (UCB). Kings Co.: 8 mi SE of Avenal, April 16, 1966, C. W. O’Brien, 13 (UCB). Los Angeles Co.: Palmdale, April 14, 1932, E. P. Van Duzee, 143, 6♀ (CAS). Riverside Co.: Andreas Canyon, Palm Springs, March 11, 1955, W. R. M. Mason, 13 (CNC). San Bernardino Co.: 1.3 mi S of Goffs, 845 m, May 16, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 563, 64♀ (AMNH). 10 mi W of Lucerne Valley, 905 m, May 13, 1978, R. T. Schuh and J. D. Pinto, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 103, 16♀ (AMNH). 26.7 mi S of Barstow on Rt. 247, 1000 m, May 2, 1985, R. T. Schuh and B. M. Massie, Lycium cooperi (Solanaceae), 33 (AMNH). Nevada: Clark Co.: 5.8 mi W of Valley of Fire State Park, 845 m, May 17, 1978, R. T. Schuh, 83, 8♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: Atomic Test Site, Jackass Flats Road, 3300 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae), 383, 36♀ (AMNH). Mercury, CM, June 12, 1965 – June 13, 1965, Knight and Merino, 3♀ (USNM). Atomic Test Site, 2.6 mi W of Mercury Hwy on Cane Springs Road, 3400 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae), 43, 5♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 6M, June 15, 1965, Knight and Merino, 33 (USNM). Atomic Test Site, Tweezer Rd at Orange Blossom Rd, 4750 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Utah: San Juan Co.: 7.7 mi N of Mexican Hat on Rt. 261, 5000 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae), 13, 1♀ (AMNH). The Goosenecks Overlook, 5000 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae), 13, 1♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus knowltoni (Knight)</p> <p>Figures 4, 9, 14</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C66D8F73C500DC534DA2FB74	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C6738F42C500DEBD48BCF91A.text	4A3FBB30C6738F42C500DEBD48BCF91A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Europiella knowltoni Knight 1970	<div><p>Europiella knowltoni Knight, 1970: 228 (n. sp.). Megalopsallus knowltoni: Schuh et al., 1995: 389</p> <p>(n. comb.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by large size and totally black coloration (fig. 9). Similar in size, general appearance, coloration, and strong sexual dimorphism to Dakota hesperia Uhler, but readily separated by male genitalic structure and hosts, hesperia breeding on Potentilla (Rosaceae) rather than Sarcobatus (Chenopodiaceae). Within Megalopsallus, most similar in coloration to dark specimens of humeralis, nigrofemoratus, and teretis, but easily distinguished by much larger size.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Large, total length 4.51–5.20, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.79–3.31, width across pronotum 1.15– 1.32. COLORATION: Black or nearly so, including eyes (fig. 9); antennal segments 2, 3, and 4 and tibiae lighter, but always at least weakly infuscate; tibial spines black with obscure dark bases. SURFACE AND VESTI­ TURE: Dorsum very faintly rugose, pronotum and scutellum weakly shining, hemelytra appearing dull; dorsum with long, dark, reclining simple setae intermixed with silvery, woolly setae (fig. 4B, C). STRUCTURE: Hemelytra extremely elongate, nearly parallel­sided (fig. 9), apex of abdomen reaching only to cuneal fracture; labium just reaching middle trochanters; claws sharply curving near apex, pulvilli about one­half the length of claw, free except at base (fig. 4D). MALE GENITALIA: Vesica S­shaped, attenuated apically; gonopore subapical, very weakly sclerotized; gonopore sclerite absent (fig. 14).</p> <p>Female: Total length 3.62–3.98, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.75–2.96, width across pronotum 1.25–1.32; elongate ovoid (fig. 9).</p> <p>HOST: Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Northern Great Basin.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: The majority of specimens of M. knowltoni are labeled as having been taken on Sarcobatus vermiculatus.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — California: Modoc Co.: 5 mi SE of Fort Bidwell, Surprize Valley Dunes, June 9, 1970, P. Opler, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 213 (UCB). Mono Co.: 8 mi W of Nevada state line on Rt. 359, 6700 ft, July 2, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 8♀ (AMNH). Idaho: Oneida Co.: Curlew Reservoir, June 6, 1969, G. F. Knowlton, 1♀ (USNM); 1♀ (USNM). Black Pine, March 31, 1969, G. F. Knowlton, 73 (USNM, USU); Paratypes: 13, 1♀ (CNC). Nevada: Elko Co.: Utah state line on Utah Rt. 30, 4760 ft, June 25, 1983, Schuh and Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 13 (AMNH). Nye Co.: 28 mi N of Belmont on Rt. 82, 2013 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 23 (AMNH). Washoe Co.: 2 mi E of Vya on Rt. 8A, 1750 m, July 2, 1979, Schuh and Massie, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 83, 12♀ (AMNH). Oregon: Harney Co.: Alvord Basin, T37S R33E S26, April 29, 1979, Cobb and Lightfood, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), (OSU). Utah: Box Elder Co.: Kelton Pass, May 27, 1969, G. F. Knowlton, 13 (USNM).</p> <p>Megalopsallus marmoratus Knight</p> <p>Figures 9, 15</p> <p>Megalopsallus marmoratus Knight, 1968: 27 (n. sp.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by brownish coloration and marmorate membrane (fig. 9). Most similar in overall coloration to brittoni and femoralis, but those species both lacking marmorate membrane. Marmorate membrane known to occur elsewhere in Megalopsallus only in californicus, that species otherwise being pale green.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately small, total length 3.00–3.26, length apex clypeus– cuneal fracture 1.99–2.20, width across pronotum 0.94–1.04. COLORATION: Generally tan, much of body and femora with darker brown or reddish spots; eyes brown; entire membrane marmorate (fig. 9); tibial spines pale with reddish or brownish bases. SUR­ FACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, dull, rather sparsely clothed with recumbent, brown, simple setae intermixed with silvery, weakly flattened setae. STRUCTURE: Weakly elongate, nearly parallel­sided (fig. 9); labium reaching well onto hind trochanters; claws elongate, curving; pulvilli minute. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica relatively short, S­shaped, with a short decurved apex; gonopore subapical; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 14).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.57–3.01, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.84 –2.16, width across pronotum 0.96–1.13; ovoid (fig. 14); body form elongate ovoid (fig. 9).</p> <p>HOSTS: Allenrolfea occidentalis, Salicornia sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Arizona, southern California, and Baja California Norte.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: MEXICO. — Baja California Norte: 1 mi S of Bahia de los Angeles, March 26, 1979, J. D. Pinto, Salicornia sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 1♀ (UCR). USA. — Arizona: Maricopa Co.: just S of Buckeye, Palo Verde Rd at Rt. 85, 335 m, April 1, 1981, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Allenrolfea occidentalis (Chenopodiaceae), 163, 113♀ (AMNH, USNM). Yuma Co.: Yuma, April 27, 1939, L. L. Stitt, Paratypes: 23, (USNM). Yuma, May 5, 1942, L. L. Stitt, Paratypes: 33 (CNC, USNM). California: Imperial Co.: Holtville, March 13, 1945, Weed, 13 (USNM). Inyo Co.: Death Valley, Saratoga Springs, March 23, 1957, C. L. Hogue, 13 (LACM). Death Valley, Triangle Spa, April 16, 1943, G. Willett, 13 (LACM). Riverside Co.: Salton Sea, Salt Creek, April 14, 1974, M. Wasbauer, Salicornia sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 14♀ (CAFA). Salton Sea, Mecca, April 9, 1955, W. R. Richards, picklebush, 63, 6♀ (CNC).</p> <p>Megalopsallus nicholi (Knight)</p> <p>Figures 5, 9, 15</p> <p>Europiella nicholi Knight, 1968: 42 (n. sp.). Megalopsallus nicholi: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n.</p> <p>comb.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by castaneous head, pronotum, and scutellum contrasting with pale corium, clavus, and membrane, and cuneus always at least weakly darkened and reddish (figs. 5, 9). Most easily confused with pale specimens of humeralis (fig. 9), the latter also breeding on Lycium spp.; distinguished from humeralis by darkened cuneus contrasting with remain­ der of hemelytra. Genitalia also absolutely distinctive from those of humeralis. Also similar in general appearance to Sarcoba­ tus ­feeding rubricornis (fig. 11), but that species always with cuneus unicolorous with remainder of pale hemelytra and head, with pronotum and scutellum often more strongly reddish.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately small, total length 3.02–3.48, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.95–2.24, width across pronotum 0.98–1.06. COLORATION: Head, pronotum, and undersurface castaneous or chocolate brown, scutellum partly or entirely, and sometimes femora also, brown; hemelytra and often much of scutellum cream colored, cuneus weakly to strongly reddish brown (fig. 9); eyes dark brown; antennae and tibiae pale; tibial spines dark with faintly darkened bases. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, weakly shining, clothed with pale to brown recumbent simple setae intermixed with golden, shining recumbent setae and some patches of woolly silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Moderately elongate, nearly parallel­sided (fig. 9); labium reaching to about posterior margin of middle trochanters; claws nearly straight and sharply curving at apex, pulvilli large and covering nearly entire ventral claw surface. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica elongate, S­shaped, apex in the form of a fingerlike projection adorned with tiny spicules; gonopore subapical, well developed; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 15).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.37–2.59, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.79 –1.95, width across pronotum 0.88–1.02; very broadly ovoid, rotund, membrane short (fig. 9).</p> <p>HOSTS: Lycium andersonii, L. sp. (Solanaceae). Other reported hosts with limited confirmation: Shepherdia argentea (Eleagnaceae); Condalia globosa (Rhamnaceae); Solanum eleagnifolium. Probable sitting records: Quercus arizonica.</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Arizona and Nevada south to Zacatecas, Mexico.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Knight (1968) described this species on the basis of specimens collected on Lycium torreyi. The majority of subsequent records are from Lycium spp., although the records from Condalia and Shepherdia may indicate that those plants are occasionally used as hosts as well.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: MEXICO. — Zacatecas: 13 mi SE of Concepcion del Oro, July 9, 1983, Schaffner, Kovarik, Harrison, 153, 18♀ (TAMU). 6 mi S of Concepcion del Oro, July 9, 1983, Kovarik, Harrison, and Schaffner, 463, 62♀ (TAMU). USA. — Arizona: Cochise Co.: July 29, 1927, R. H. Beamer, 1♀ (KU). Gila Co.: 5.5 mi W of Roosevelt Dam on Rt. 188, 2000 ft, May 27, 1983, Schuh, Stonedahl, and Massie, 12♀ (AMNH). Maricopa Co.: 5 mi S of Freeman SE of Gila Bend, 625 m, May 8, 1978, R. T. Schuh, A. F. Guenther, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 13 (AMNH). 1.8 mi W of Roosevelt on Rt. 88, May 19, 1980, J. D. Pinto, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 123, 12♀ (UCR). Pima Co.: Tucson, 2400 ft, April 19, 1926, A. A. Nichol, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), Paratypes: 13, 3♀ (USNM, CNC). Rincon Mts, 3300 ft, September 2, 1928, A. A. Nichol, 4♀ (USNM). Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Quitobaquito, April 3, 1966, C. W. O’Brien, 13 (UCB). Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Alamo Wash, 700 –800 m, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium sp. (Solanaceae), 203, 13♀ (AMNH). Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Ajo Valley, April 10, 1981, D. A. Polhemus, Condalia globosa (Rhamnaceae), 163, 7♀ (JTP). Baboquivari Mts, Sabino Canyon, April 20, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Quercus arizonica (Fagaceae), 13 (JTP). Madera Canyon, May 4, 1988, W. A. Jones, Solanum eleagnifolium (Solanaceae), Nevada: Nye Co.: 2.5 mi NE of Gabbs off Rt. 844, Gabbs Rifle Range, 4800 ft, July 1, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae), 23, 6♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus nigricaput, new species</p> <p>Figures 6, 9, 15</p> <p>HOLOTYPE: Male, ARIZONA: Graham County, Stockton Pass, Pinaleno Mts., elev. 5200­5500 ft., June 1–2, 1983, colls. R. T. Schuh, G. M. Stonedahl, Lycium pallidum Miers (Solanaceae). Deposited in the American Museum of Natural History.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized unequivocally by the dark head, first antennal segment, coxae, femora, and thoracic sternum in contrast to otherwise almost white to weakly greenish coloration (figs. 6, 9). Probably most easily confused with rubricornis (fig. 11), but in that species pronotum and scutellum always red to castaneous.</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized, total length 3.35–3.44, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.23–2.33, width across pronotum 1.02–1.10. COLORATION: Generally white with a faint greenish cast; head includ­ ing eyes, antennal segment 1, coxae, trochanters, femora, and apex of labium castaneous and strongly contrasting with remain­ der of body and appendages (fig. 9). SUR­ FACE AND VESTITURE: Head weakly shining, remainder of dorsum smooth and dull; dorsum clothed with pale recumbent, simple setae intermixed with scattered, silvery, weakly flattened setae. STRUCTURE: Elongate ovoid (fig. 9); labium reaching to middle trochanters; claws long, slender, smoothly curving, pulvilli minute. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica elongate, S­shaped, apex membranous; gonopore subapical, sclerotized; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 15).</p> <p>Female: Total length 3.11–3.24, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.19 –2.36, width across pronotum 1.04 –1.06; just slightly more ovoid than male (fig. 9).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: Named for the contrasting dark coloration of the head relative to the remainder of the body; from the Latin niger, black, and caput, head.</p> <p>HOSTS: Lycium pallidum (Solanaceae); Shepherdia argentea (Eleagnaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Arizona, Nevada, and Utah.</p> <p>PARATYPES: USA. — Arizona: Graham Co.: Stockton Pass, Pinaleno Mts, 5200– 5500 ft, June 1, 1983, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Lycium pallidum (Solanaceae), 1143, 110♀ (AMNH). Yavapai Co.: 22.7 mi S of Ash Fork on Rt. 89, June 4, 1983, G. M. Stonedahl, Shepherdia argentea (Elaeagnaceae), 273, 26♀ (AMNH). 5 mi N of Prescott on Rt 89, 1800 m, June 20, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Lycium pallidum (Solanaceae), 183, 64♀ (AMNH). Nevada: Nye Co.: Atomic Test Site, 4.5 mi S GS500 on Jackass Flats Rd, 3300 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Stonedahl, Lycium pallidum (Solanaceae), 13 (AMNH). Utah: San Juan Co.: Grand Flat near Collins Canyon, 5600 ft, May 28, 1978, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, 203, 20♀ (JTP).</p> <p>Megalopsallus nigrofemoratus (Knight)</p> <p>Figures 10, 15</p> <p>Europiella nigrofemoratus Knight, 1968: 39 (n. sp.).</p> <p>Megalopsallus nigrofemoratus: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>Europiella grayiae Knight, 1968: 41 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus grayiae: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>Europiella montanae Knight, 1968: 45 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus montanae: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by frequently dark coloration of most of dorsum and femora, or at least head, pronotum, scutellum, and femora dark and contrasting with pale hemelytra (fig. 10). Most easily confused with humeralis (fig. 10) on basis of size, coloration, and type of sexual dimorphism; readily recognized by structure of male genitalia, vesica in nigrofemoratus being more elongate and slender than that of humeralis, and its association with Atriplex and Grayia, whereas humeralis feeding only on Lycium. Pale specimens separated from the Lycium ­feeding nicholi by having the cuneus unicolorous with corium.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Small to medium sized, total length 3.13–3.88, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.00–2.46, width across pronotum 0.97–1.16. COLORA­ TION: Dorsum varying from largely deep blackish­brown to having the hemelytra somewhat lighter to much lighter (fig. 10); eyes blackish; antennae usually reddish, sometimes almost entirely pale; femora varying from dark or darkened to pale with a reddish cast and sometimes red spots, tibiae pale, tibial spines dark with dark bases; underside of body dark. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, very weakly shining, clothed with recumbent, dark, simple setae intermixed with woolly, silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Weakly to strongly elongate, parallel­sided, specimens in some populations relatively more elongate than those in others; labium reaching posterior margin of middle trochanters; claws relatively short and straight, curving sharply near apex, pulvilli of moderate size, attached to claw only at base of pulvillus. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica elongate, strongly curving, apex membranous, gonopore subapical, gonopore sclerite well developed (fig. 15).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.33–2.85, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.65–2.08, width across pronotum 0.90–1.06; ovoid, often much shorter and more robust than male (fig. 10).</p> <p>HOSTS: Atriplex canescens, A. confertifolia, A. sp., Grayia spinosa, Sarcobatus baileyi, S. vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae). Probable sitting records: Artemisia cana, A. nova, rabbit bush [Chrysothamnus] (Asteraceae); Condalia globosa, Rhamnus sp. (Rhamnaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior of western North America from Alberta, Canada, south to Zacatecas, Mexico.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Knight (1968) described the species grayiae and montanae on the basis of material from a single locality or area, comprising relatively homogeneous samples with limited host data. After having examined a very large number of specimens from many localities, most with associated host information, I conclude that grayiae and montanae fall within the range of variation of</p> <p>nigrofemoratus and therefore treat the three nominal species as synonymous.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: CANADA. — Alberta: Mayberries, July 8, 1952, L. A. Konotopetz, Sarcobatus sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 83, 10♀ (CNC). Saskatchewan: Wood Mountain, August 8, 1955, A. R. Brooks, 2♀ (CNC). MEXICO. — Baja California Norte: 12 mi E of El Rosario, March 25, 1979, J. D. Pinto, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13 (UCR). Nuevo Leon: Santa Ana, Sep­</p> <p>tember 8, 1969, L. A. Kelton, 43, 4♀ (CNC). San Luis Potosi: 19.6 mi S of Huizache, July 25, 1976, Schaffner et al., 43, 4♀ (TAMU). 28.5 mi S of Huizache, July 4, 1985, Jones, Schaffner, 73, 12♀ (TAMU). Sonora: 40 mi W of Moctezuma, April 27, 1981, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Rhamnus sp. (Rhamnaceae), 13, 10♀ (JTP). Zacatecas: 13 mi SW of Concepcion del Oro, July 9, 1983, Kovarik, Harrison, and Schaffner, 173, 14♀ (TAMU). Concepcion del Oro, July 8, 1983, Kovarik, Harrison, Schaffner, 23 (TAMU). 30 mi SW of Concepcion del Oro, July 9, 1983, Kovarik, Harrison, and Schaffner, 353, 21♀ (TAMU). 6 mi S of Concepcion del Oro, July 9, 1983, Kovarik, Harrison, Schaffner, 13, 3♀ (TAMU). USA. — Arizona: Eager, Apache Natl. Forest, 7500 ft, July 12, 1968, L. A. Kelton, (Asteraceae), 3♀ (CNC). Coconino Co.: 1 mi E of Tuba City on Rt. 163, 5000 ft, June 16, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 6♀ (AMNH). Marble Canyon Monument, T7E R39N, 3603 ft, April 18, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 203, 6♀ (AMNH). Red Lake on Rt. 160, June 26, 1980, K. &amp; R. Schmidt, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 3♀ (AMNH). Rt. 64 just SE of Grand Canyon Natl. Park, June 26, 1980, K.&amp;R. Schmidt, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Maricopa Co.: Palo Verde Rd at Rt. 85 just S of Buckeye, 335 m, April 1, 1981, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 23 (AMNH). Pima Co.: 10 mi S of Robles jct., April 20, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13 (JTP). Tucson, April 16, 1939, B. P. Bliven, 23 (CAS). Santa Catalina Mts, Finger Rock Canyon Trail, 3000– 3500 ft, April 5, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Artemisia cana (Asteraceae), 13, 2♀ (AMNH). Organ Pipe Cactus Natl. Mon., Ajo Valley, April 10, 1981, D. A. Polhemus, Condalia globosa (Rhamnaceae), 63, 5♀ (JTP). 7 mi SE of Continental on rd to Madeira Canyon, 3700 ft, September 28, 1988, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 2♀ (AMNH). Yavapai Co.: Caslte Wash north of Phoenix, March 21, 1980, J. T. Polhemus, 13, 3♀ (JTP). California: Inyo Co.: Mono Lake, Tioga Lodge, June 22, 1929, R. L. Usinger, 2♀ (CAS). Saline Valley, May 25, 1975 – June 5, 1976, D. Guiliani, 33 (LACM). Darwin, May 12, 1969, P. A. Opler, 1♀ (UCB). 9 mi NE of Big Pine, 6300 ft, June 9, 1966, W. Gagne, 13 (UCB). 8 mi NE of Independence, Mazourka Canyon, May 11, 1969, J. T. Doyen, 53, 18♀ (UCB). 7 mi NE of Panamint Springs, May 16, 1969, P. Rude and J. Doyen, 123, 2♀ (UCB). 2 mi E of Westgard Pass Summit, White Mts, 2125 m, July 2, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 63, 11♀ (AMNH). Surprise Canyon, Panamint Mts, April 24, 1957, J. Powell, 13 (UCB). San Bernardino Co.: 1.5 mi W of Kramer Junction, April 24, 1980, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 73, 13♀ (AMNH). 3 mi S of Kramer Junction, April 15, 1965, D. Veirs, 53, 3♀ (UCB). 3 mi W of Lucerne Valley, May 5, 1975, J. D. Pinto, 53, 1♀ (UCR). 6 mi SE of Kramer Junction, April 8, 1966, L. and C. W. O’Brien, 153, 13♀ (UCB). Goldstone Lake, April 26, 1953, R.O Schuster, 2♀ (UCB). Colorado: Eagle Co.: N of Eagle, June 24, 1979, J. T. Polhemus, 2♀ (JTP). Mesa Co.: Rabbit Valley, June 7, 1981, J. T. Polhemus, 13 (JTP). E of Palisade, Plateau Creek, June 6, 1981, J. T. Polhemus, 43 (JTP). Mineral Co.: Creede, June 21, 1990, J. T. and D. A. Polhemus, 63, 10♀ (JTP). Moffat Co.: 5 mi S of Baggs, Wyoming, 6350 ft, August 14, 1986, R. T. Schuh, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 153, 20♀ (AMNH). Gates of Lodore, June 28, 1979, D. A. Polhemus, 23, 3♀ (JTP). Montezuma Co.: 4 mi E of Cortez, August 16, 1973, J. C. Schaffner, 8♀ (TAMU). Cortez, July 19, 1968, L. A. Kelton, Salicornia sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 63, 14♀ (CNC). Mesa Verde Natl. Park, June 10, 1968, J. E. Slansky, 2♀ (UCD). Montrose Co.: 6 mi E of Montrose, August 13, 1987, T.J. Henry, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 53, 10♀ (USNM). Pueblo Co.: Pueblo, June 15, 1900, 43 (USNM). Rio Blanco Co.: W Evacuation Creek, 4 mi SE of state line on Rt. 45, 6400 ft, July 9, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 33, 1♀ (AMNH). Montana: Carbon Co.: Bear Creek between Red Lodge and Belfry, 5000 ft, August 12, 1986, M. D. Schwartz and G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 213, 45♀ (AMNH). Gallatin Co.: Bozeman, July 17, 1926, W. Downes, 1♀ (USNM). Yellowstone Co.: Billings, August 4, 1927, H. H. Knight, 3♀ (USNM). Nevada: Clark Co.: 1 mi E of Searchlight, 1095 m, May 17, 1978, R. T. Schuh, 33, 5♀ (AMNH). Elko Co.: 2.2 mi NE of Cobre on state Rt. 233, 5900 ft, June 25, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 6♀ (AMNH). 2.2 mi NE of Cobre on state Rt. 233, 5900 ft, June 25, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 183, 19♀ (AMNH). 23.7 mi S of jct. Rt. 229 on Rt. 93, July 19, 1980, G. M. Stonedahl, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 4♀ (AMNH). Utah state line on Utah Rt. 30, 4760 ft, June 25, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 223, 25♀ (AMNH). Eureka Co.: Garden Summit on Rt. 278, 23.5 mi N of Rt. 50, 6500 ft, June 27, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 73, 18♀ (AMNH). Humboldt Co.: 27 mi W of Denio, June 23, 1971, P. Oman, 13 (OSU). Sheldon Natl. Antelope Range. 0.5 mi S of jct. 8A and 343A, 1950 m, July 2, 1979, R. T. Schuh and B. M. Massie, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 133, 26♀ (AMNH). Lander Co.: 1.5 mi S of Rt 50 on Rt 376, T18N R45E, 6000 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 183, 60♀ (AMNH). Lincoln Co.: 5 mi NE of jct. Rts 38 &amp; 93, 2500 ft, May 19, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 133, 27♀ (AMNH). Lyon Co.: Weeks, May 29, 1967, C. W. O’Brien, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 23 (UCB). Mineral Co.: 27 mi SW of Hawthorne on Rt 359, 1 mi NE of Anchorite Summit, 7400 ft, July 2, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 183, 14♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: Mercury, 18 M, June 11, 1965, H. Knight and J. Merino, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 173, 13♀ (USNM). Test Site, 6.8 mi SE Mercury Hwy on Orange Blossom Rd, 4000 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, 13 (AMNH). Mercury, 40M, June 14, 1965, H. Knight and J. Merino, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 73, 8♀ (USNM). Berlin Ichthyosaur State Mon. on Rt. 844, 6350 ft, July 1, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Atomic Test Site, Mercury Hwy at Angle Rd, 3800 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 63, 5♀ (AMNH). Atomic Test Site, Mercury Hwy at Angle Rd, 3800 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 63, 2♀ (AMNH). Atomic Test Site, Jackass Flats Road, 3300 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, 23 (AMNH). 5.5 mi S of Belmont on Rt. 82, 2031 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 13♀ (AMNH). 35 mi N of Tonapah, Coyote Hole Spring/Sevier Reservoir, T8 R42E S11 &amp; 23, 6000 ft, June 30, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 5♀ (AMNH). Northumberland Canyon Rd, Toquima Mts, 6400 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 23, 2♀ (AMNH). Washoe Co.: Verdi, July 9, 1967, W. Gagne, 1♀ (UCB). New Mexico: Taos Co.: Ojo Caliente, June 6, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 5♀ (JTP). Oregon: Harney Co.: Alvord Basin, T37S R33E S26, April 26, 1979, Cobb and Lightfoot, Atriplex spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 1♀ (OSU). T37S R33E, Lightfoot and Cobb, Atriplex spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 4♀ (OSU). Utah: Duchesne Co.: 23.7 mi S of Myton, Well’s Draw, T10S R15E, 6000 ft, M. D. Schwartz, 1♀ (AMNH). Garfield Co.: Capitol Reef Natl. Park, Grand Wash, Cohab Canyon Trail, 5350–6640 ft, June 21, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 563, 33♀ (AMNH). Grand Co.: East of Moab, Utah, Colorado River Bridge, May 26, 1979, J. T. and D. A. Polhemus, 103, 14♀ (JTP). 11 mi SE of Rt 163 toward Dead Horse Point on Rt. 313, 5200 ft, June 11, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 113, 12♀ (AMNH). Millard Co.: Longridge Reservoir Cutoff on Rt. 50/6, 4500 ft, May 19, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 203, 14♀ (AMNH). San Juan Co.: 25 mi N of Monticello on Rt. 191, 5700 ft, July 18, 1986, R. T. Schuh, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 343, 63♀ (AMNH). Sevier Co.: 32 mi N of Hiway 24 on Hiway 72, 7560 ft, July 17, 1980, G. M. Stonedahl, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Uintah Co.: 5–10 mi SW of Bonanza, T10S R24E, 5000–5600 ft, June 6, 1981 – June 8, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 823, 92♀ (AMNH). Wyoming: Big Horn Co.: 1 mi W of Shell Creek Falls Scenic Overlook on Rt. 14, 5600 ft, August 13, 1986, Schuh, Schwartz, and</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C6738F42C500DEBD48BCF91A	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C64F8F4CC500D8C24EF3F919.text	4A3FBB30C64F8F4CC500D8C24EF3F919.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Nevadocoris pallidus Knight 1968	<div><p>Nevadocoris pallidus Knight, 1968: 60 (n. sp.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by relatively large size and entirely pale yellowish coloration (fig. 10). Possibly most easily confused with schwartzi (fig. 12), but lacking red eyes, and occurring exclusively on Atriplex, rather than Sarcobatus.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately large, total length 4.01–4.34, length apex clypeus– cuneal fracture 2.61–2.83, width across pronotum 1.09 –1.19. COLORATION: Entire body and appendages pale, yellowish white, including eyes. SURFACE AND VESTI­ TURE: Dorsum smooth, dull, clothed with pale, shining, recumbent, simple setae intermixed with shining, silvery, slightly flattened setae (fig. 18B). STRUCTURE: Hemelytra elongate, nearly parallel­sided, apex of abdomen only slightly surpassing cuneal fracture; labium reaching to posterior margin of hind trochanters; claws nearly straight, curving only near apex; pulvilli large, extending nearly entire length of claw (fig. 18C). MALE GENITALIA: Vesica S­shaped, apex membranous; gonopore subapical, not heavily sclerotized; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 15).</p> <p>Female: Total length 3.24–3.76, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.34 –2.68, width across pronotum 1.08–1.28; body form ovoid, robust (fig. 10).</p> <p>HOSTS: Grayia spinosa, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Central and southern Nevada.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Knight (1968) placed pallidus in Nevadocoris on the basis of pulvillar structure, coloration, and antennal structure. Examination of the male genitalia indicates that pallidus is a Megalopsallus species, a placement corroborated by its known occurrence only on species of Atriplex and Grayia (Chenopodiaceae). Nevadocoris becki, the type of the genus in which pallidus was originally placed, has male genitalia dissimilar in structure to those of species here placed in Megalopsallus and breeds on members of the Asteraceae, including Tetradymia and Chrysothamnus.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — Nevada: Clark Co.: 2.5 mi E of Searchlight, 935 m, May 17, 1978, R. T. Schuh, 13 (AMNH). Elko Co.: State line on Utah Rt. 30, 4760 ft, June 25, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 93, 4♀ (AMNH). Lander Co.: 1.5 mi S of Rt. 50 on Rt. 376, T18N R45E, 5900 ft, June 28, 1983, Schuh and Schwartz, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 1103, 134♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: Atomic Test Site, 2.6 mi W of Mercury Hwy, Cane Spgs. Rd, 3400 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Grayia spinosa (Chenopodiaceae), 23, 13♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 401M, June 14, 1965, Beck, Knight, Merino, Paratypes: 23 (USNM). 5.5 mi S of Belmont on Rt. 82, 2031 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh, G. M. Stonedahl, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 93, 14♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus pallipes (Knight), new combination Figures 10, 14</p> <p>Ankylotylus pallipes Knight, 1968: 56 (n. sp.). Merinocapsus pallipes Schuh, 1986: 224 (n.</p> <p>comb., diag. figs. distr.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by generally pale coloration, except for the largely red­orange to brown pronotum and scutellum; labium relatively short, reaching only between fore and middle coxae. Similar in general coloration to some pale specimens of nigrofemoratus, but head always pale in pallipes and dorsal surface distinctly dull. Breeds only on Ephedra.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized elongate, total length 3.49–4.13, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.36–2.62, width across pronotum 0.96–1.14. COLORATION: Head and hemelytra pale, pronotum and scutellum partially to entirely orange­brown to brown; underside of thorax mostly pale orange, abdominal venter pale green; eyes brown; appendages largely pale orange, an­ tennae and tibiae lighter than coxae and femora; tibial spines pale with pale bases. SUR­ FACE AND VESTITURE: Head, pronotum, and scutellum smooth, dull, almost powdery in appearance, hemelytra very weakly shining; dorsum clothed with pale recumbent simple setae intermixed with flattened silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Elongate, parallel­sid­ ed (fig. 9); labium short, reaching to about midpoint of mesosternum; claws nearly straight over much of length, curving sharply near apex, pulvilli small. MALE GENITA­ LIA: Vesica relatively short, twisted, apex bifid, scondary gonopore subapical, gonopore sclerite small and weakly sclerotized (fig. 14).</p> <p>Female: Total length 3.18–3.48, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.21–2.38, width across pronotum 1.00–1.04; elongate ovoid (fig. 10).</p> <p>HOSTS: Ephedra spp. (Ephedraceae).</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Although the coloration of pallipes is quite different from that of ephedrae and froeschneri, the bifid apex of the vesica nonetheless suggests a close relationship with those species.</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Southern Nevada and Utah.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — Arizona: Coconino Co.: 27 mi E of Jacob Lake on Rt 89 Alt., June 24, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Ephedra torreyana (Ephedraceae), 13, 2♀ (AMNH). Mohave Co.: Virgin River Canyon, 0.35 mi SW of milepost 24 on Hwy 15, Purgatory Canyon, 2600 ft, May 24, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, 23 (AMNH). Nevada: Nye Co.: 35 mi N of Tonapah, Coyote Hole Spring/ Sevier Reservoir, T8 R42E S11 &amp; 23, 6000 ft, June 30, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 4♀ (AMNH). Northumberland Canyon Rd, Toquima Mts, T14N R44E Sec. 31, 6400 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 53, 6♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 401M, June 20, 1965, H. Knight, J. Merino, holotype: male (USNM). Mercury, TM, June 14, 1965, E. Beck, H. Knight, J. Merino, 1♀ (USNM). Utah: Grand Co.: 11 mi SE of jct. Rd 313 and Rd 163 toward Dead Horse Point, 5200 ft, June 11, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra viridis (Ephedraceae), 13, 2♀ (AMNH). San Juan Co.: 1.2 mi W of Gooseneck Rd jct. on Rt. 244, 5000 ft, June 16, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra torreyana (Ephedraceae), 33, 4♀ (AMNH). Glen Canyon Recreation Area, 12 mi S of Rt. 263, T40S R14E, 4300 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra torreyana (Ephedraceae), 13, 5♀ (AMNH). Goosenecks Overlook, 5000 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra torreyana (Ephedraceae), 73, 11♀ (AMNH). Rt. 63 at Arizona border, Monument Valley, 5200 ft, June 16, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Ephedra cutleri (Ephedraceae), 43, 7♀ (AMNH). Washington Co.: 3.5 mi E of La Verkin, June 25, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Ephedra sp. (Ephedraceae), 2♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus parapunctipes, new species</p> <p>Figures 10, 15</p> <p>HOLOTYPE: Male, Nevada: Eureka Co., 12 mi N of Rt. 50 on Rt 278, 5800 ft., June 27, 1983, R. T. Schuh, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Torr. and Frem.) S. Wats. (Chenopodiaceae). Deposited in the American Museum of Natural History.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized, in common with punctipes and sarcobati, by generally pale green coloration, including appendages, white eyes, and pale brown spots on femora (fig. 10). Distinguished from them by infuscate thoracic sternum and form of male genitalia (compare figs. 15 and 16), and also from Sarcobatus ­feeding sarcobati by that species’ larger size and broader head. Similar in size and general appearance to sparsus, but eyes almost always black in sparsus; also sparsus usually with some dark areas on head, pronotum, and femora. Distinguished from generally pale schwartzi by red eyes of that species and its lack of spots on femora.</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized, total length 3.28–3.72, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.12–2.42, width across pronotum 0.91–1.00. COLORATION: General coloration of body and appendages pale green, including eyes; underside of thorax and abdomen often darkened in males; femora with some small dark spots; tibial spines pale with dark bases (fig. 10). SURFACE AND VES­ TITURE: Dorsum smooth, very weakly shining, clothed with pale, recumbent, simple setae intermixed with silvery, shining, weakly flattened setae. STRUCTURE: Elongate, costal margins weakly convex; labium reaching to posterior margin of middle trochanters; claws elongate and smooth, curving over entire length; pulvilli small. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica in the form of a J, apex attenuated; gonopore delicate, subapical; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 15).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.43–2.75, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.78–2.08, width across pronotum 0.87–1.03; body form ovate, robust (fig. 10).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: Named for its similarity of appearance to Megalopsallus punctipes (Knight).</p> <p>HOST: Atriplex canescens, A. confertifolia, A. sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior western North America, from California, Nevada, and Utah.</p> <p>PARATYPES: USA. — California: Mono Co.: 8 mi W of Nevada state line on Rt. 359, 6700 ft, July 2, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 83, 8♀ (AMNH). Riverside Co.: Thousand Palms, November 24, 1955, W. R. Richards, 73, 6♀ (CNC). Santa Barbara Co.: 8 mi E of New Cuyama, 2000 ft, May 10, 1985, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 123, 20♀ (AMNH). Nevada: Eureka Co.: 12 mi N of Rt. 50 on Rt 278, 5800 ft, June 27, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 683, 56♀ (AMNH). Lander Co.: 7.5 mi S of Rt. 50 on Rt. 376, 5900 ft, June 28, 1983, Schuh and Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 9♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: Cumberland Canyon Road, Toquima Mts, T14N R44E, 6400 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, 33 (AMNH). Rock V. on Jackass Flats Road, 3300 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Stonedahl, 23, (AMNH). Atomic Test Site, 6.5 mi S GS500 on Jackass Flats Rd, 3300 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 33, 28♀ (AMNH). Atomic Test Site, 2 mi E of Mercury Hwy on Tweezer Rd, 3800 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 263, 49♀ (AMNH). 2.8 mi E of Mercury Hiway on Tweezer Road, 3800 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Stonedahl, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 43 (AMNH). Utah: Uintah Co.: 5–10 mi SW of Bonanza, T10S R24E, 5000­5600 ft, June 3, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 123, 7♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus pictipes (Van Duzee), new combination Figures 11, 16</p> <p>Plagiognathus pictipes (Van Duzee), 1918: 305 (n. sp.).</p> <p>Psallus pictipes: Van Duzee, 1923: 161 (n. comb., list).</p> <p>Psallus suaedae Knight, 1925: 34 (n. sp.); Carvalho, 1958: 127 (n. syn.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by generally pale green coloration of dorsum and strongly contrasting deep red, often mottled, color of antennal segment 1 and all femora (fig. 11). Not easily confused with any other species.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Small, total length 2.48–2.93, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.69–2.03, width across pronotum 0.83– 0.87. COLORATION: General coloration of dorsum pale green, vertex and anterior margin of pronotum often with some reddish spotting; antennal segment 1, thoracic pleuron and venter, and all coxae, trochanters, and femora deep red or with reddish spots; eyes usually reddish; abdomen pale, usually greenish; antennal segments 2, 3, and 4 pale; tibiae pale with dark spots at bases of pale spines (fig. 11). SURFACE AND VESTI­ TURE: Dorsum smooth, weakly shining, clothed with recumbent, pale, simple setae intermixed with silvery, weakly flattened setae. STRUCTURE: Relatively stout; labium just reaching onto middle trochanters; claws relatively long and slender, smoothly curving; pulvilli minute. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica S­shaped, apex attenuated, sclerotized; gonopore subapical, sclerotized; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.50–2.63, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.75–1.89, width across pronotum 0.91–0.96; ovoid (fig. 11).</p> <p>HOSTS: Allenrolfea occidentalis, Atriplex sp., Chenopodium sp., Sarcobatus vermiculatus, S. sp., Suaeda fruticosa, S. torreyana, Suaeda sp. (Chenopodiaceae). Probable sitting records: Dondia nigra, D. suffrutescens</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C64F8F4CC500D8C24EF3F919	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C64C8F4BC7CBDAC748B6F91A.text	4A3FBB30C64C8F4BC7CBDAC748B6F91A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Haplopappus acradenius (Asteraceae)	<div><p>(Apiaceae); Haplopappus acradenius (Asteraceae); Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior western North America from northern Mexico north to southern Oregon.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Psallus suaedae Knight was synonymized with Psallus pictipes Van Duzee by Carvalho (1958). Examination of the male genitalia of the species indicates that it is clearly a species of Megalopsallus, a placement corroborated by the chenopodiaceous hosts.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: MEXICO. — Baja California Norte: 70 km S of Rosarito, sand dunes, September 8, 1977, Fisher and Westcott, 53 (CAS). Bahia de Los Angeles, March 31, 1973, Doyen, Szerlip, and Powell, 13 (UCB). Baja California Sur: 1–3 mi E of San Jose del Cabo, September 11, 1988, E. G. Riley, 23, 3♀ (TAMU). 95 km N of Loreto, April 21, 1985, R. T. Schuh and B. M. Massie, Allenrolfea occidentalis (Chenopodiaceae), 33, 3♀ (AMNH). Baja California: Aqua Verde, May 26, 1921, E. P. Van Duzee, 63, 6♀ (CAS). Econdido Bay, June 14, 1921, E. P. Van Duzee, 1♀ (CAS). El Consuelo Dunes, J. D. Pinto, 23, 2♀ (UCR). Chihuahua: Meoqui, May 30, 1964, L. A. Kelton, Chenopodium sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 123, 58♀ (CNC). Sinaloa: 10 mi N of Los Mochis, April 23, 1977, Hanson and Davis, 1♀ (USU). 13 mi N of Los Mochis, August 7, 1971, Chemsak and Powell, 1♀ (UCB). USA. — Arizona: Buckeye Co.: Buckeye, May 7, 1935, H. G. Johnston, 93, 13♀ (USNM). Graham Co.: Thatcher, June 20, 1957, E. J. Taylor, 13 (UCD). Maricopa Co.: Gila Bend, 260 m, March 26, 1981, A. F. Guenther, 13 (AMNH). Gila Bend, 260 m, R. T. Schuh, 13 (AMNH). Woolsey Wash near Painted Rock Dam, 205 m, May 9, 1978, R. T. Schuh and A. F. Guenther, Salsola sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 163, 30♀ (AMNH). Mohave Co.: Bullhead City, August 19, 1974, L. A. Lacey, 1♀ (UCR). Pima Co.: Tucson, Santa Cruz River, July 21, 1917, H. H. Knight, 33, 5♀ (CAS, CNC, USNM). Tucson, Santa Cruz River, July 22, 1917, H. H. Knight, Paratypes: 63, 6♀ (USNM). Tucson, 2400 ft, March 30, 1926, A. A. Nichol, 13, 1♀ (USNM). Tucson, Dondia suffrutescens (Apiaceae), 2♀ (UCR). Quitoba­</p> <p>quito, Organ Pipe Cactus National Mon., April 3, 1966, L. and C. W. O’Brien, 43, 1♀ (UCB). Pinal Co.: Coolidge, April 9, 1942, L. L. Stitt, 13 (USNM). Yuma Co.: Dome, April 6, 1978, J. D. Pinto, 43, 4♀ (UCR). California: Alameda Co.: Niles Canyon, July 15, 1917, E. P. Van Duzee, 13, 1♀ (CAS). Imperial Co.: Pothole, April 12, 1923, E. P. Van Duzee, Lycium andersonii (Solanaceae), 13 (USNM). 1 mi E of Coyote Wells, April 23, 1980, M. D. Schwartz, Suaeda sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 7♀ (AMNH). 15 mi NW of Westmorland, January 8, 1977, J. D. Pinto, 33, 3♀ (UCR). 3 mi S of Palo Verde, April 8, 1963, D. E. Bright, 33, 11♀ (UCB). Brawley, March 18, 1964, R. A. Flock, Suaeda fruticosa (Chenopodiaceae), 23 (USNM). Coachella, May 13, 1917, E. P. Van Duzee, 13 (USNM). Potholes, April 12, 1923, E. P. Van Duzee, 43, 2♀ (CAS). Coachella, May 13, 1917, E. P. Van Duzee, Paratypes: 13, 3♀ (CAS). Inyo Co.: 1 mi NW of Keeler, May 11, 1969, J.D. Haddock, 23, 9♀ (UCB). Argus Mts, April 1, 1891, Koebele, 1♀ (USNM). Death Valley Natl. Mon., Furnace Creek Wash, March 26, 1982, L. Russell, 23, 6♀ (AMNH). Death Valley Natl. Mon., Stovepipe Wells Dunes, sea level, March 24, 1982, L. Russell, 83, 11♀ (AMNH). Death Valley, 23 (USNM). Eureka Valley, 0.5 mi W of Dunes, May 4, 1977, J. D. Pinto, Salsola sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 5♀ (UCR). Orange Co.: Santa Ana, June 10, 1936, C. E. Norland, 1♀ (LACM). Riverside Co.: Willis Palms Oasis, Thousand Palms, April 4, 1955, W. R. Richards, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 193, 8♀ (CNC). Thousand Palms, April 23, 1955, W. R. Richards, 4♀ (CNC). San Bernardino Co.: Rabbit Dry Lake, 2 mi W of Lucerne Valley, 935 m, May 13, 1978, R. T. Schuh and J. D. Pinto, Salsola sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 10♀ (AMNH). Baker, 920 ft, April 5, 1966, R. O. Schuster, 2♀ (UCD). Needles, December 17, 1921, J. A. Kusche, 33 (CAS). San Diego Co.: Anza­Borrego State Park, Vallecito Canyon, April 23, 1980, M. D. Schwartz, Haplopappus acradenius (Asteraceae), 23, 18♀ (AMNH). N end of Borego­Clark Lake, March 25, 1978, Wasbauer et al., 2♀ (CAFA). Colorado: Delta Co.: Delta, July 20, 1898, E. D. Ball, 1♀ (UAZ). Delta, July 20, 1898, P. R. Uhler Collection, 13 (USNM). Garfield Co.: Rifle, August 25, 1968, L. A. Kelton, 13, 8♀ (CNC). Mesa Co.: Grand Junction, July 27, 1900, 33, 4♀ (CAS). Grand Junction, July 28, 1900, 2♀ (USNM). Nevada: Clark Co.: Las Vegas, April 27, 1931, E.W. Davis, 2♀ (USNM). Overton, September 19, 1929, D. E. Fox, Dondia nigra (Apiaceae), 1♀ (USNM). Pershing Co.: Woolsey RR Station, June 6, 1973, T. R. Haig, 13 (CAFA). Washoe Co.: 38 mi S of Gerlach, June 17, 1966, W. Gagne, 2♀ (CNC, USNM). New Mexico: Chaves Co.: Roswell, Pecos River, July 22, 1967, L. A. Kelton, 2♀ (CNC). Dona Ana Co.: Mesilla Park, July 12, 1917, H. H. Knight, Paratypes: 13, 1♀ (USNM). Eddy Co.: Carslbad, May 30, 1979, T. P. Friedlander, 1♀ (TAMU). June 19, 1979, D. R. Dolorme and H. L. Corrola, 4♀ (TAMU). Hidalgo Co.: Lordsburg, July 13, 1917, H. H. Knight, 1♀ (USNM). Oregon: Harney Co.: T36S R35E, July 3, 1979, Lightfoot and Cobb, 2♀ (OSU). Texas: ?? Co.: Cedar Lake, August 9, 1928, J. G. Shaw, 13 (KU). Cameron Co.: Big Bend Natl. Park, Santa Elena, 2200 ft, March 21, 1959, Howden and Becker, 153, 7♀ (CNC). Brownsville, May 10, 1930, R. L. McGarr, 23, 7♀ (USNM). El Paso Co.: El Paso, July 23, 1914, J. C. Bradley, Paratypes: 23, (USNM). Hidalgo Co.: Bentsen­Rio Grande Valley St. Pk, April 21, 1984, L. G. and T. P. Friedlander, 13 (TAMU). Texas Experiment Station, May 20, 1930, J. C. Gaines, 1♀ (USNM). Presidio Co.: Presidio, May 9, 1954, 63, 2♀ (USNM). Presidio, September 28, 1929, W. L. Owens, 73, 8♀ (USNM). Walker Co.: Loma, December 11, 1910, 1♀ (USNM). Utah: Emory Co.: 2 mi N of I­70 on Rt. 6, August 12, 1987, D. A. Rider, 83, 12♀ (DAR). Grand Co.: Colorado River Canyon near Fischer Towers, 4000 ft, May 27, 1978, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, 1♀ (JTP). East of Moab, Colorado River Bridge, May 26, 1979, J. T. and D. A. Polhemus, 173, 13♀ (JTP). Uintah Co.: 5–10 mi SW of Bonanza, 5000–5600 ft, June 8, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Washington Co.: St. George, 2800 ft, May 24, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Suaeda torreyana (Chenopodiaceae), 243, 78♀ (AMNH).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C64C8F4BC7CBDAC748B6F91A	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C64A8F57C594DE954869FF22.text	4A3FBB30C64A8F57C594DE954869FF22.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Megalopsallus punctatus Schuh 2000	<div><p>Megalopsallus punctatus,</p> <p>new name, new combination Figures 11, 16, 19</p> <p>Psallus atriplicis Knight, 1968: 48 (n. sp.) (a junior secondary homonym of Megalopsallus atriplicis Knight, 1927).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Unique among Megalopsallus species by virtue of having tiny brown spots covering most of the whitish dorsum (fig. 11). Most similar in size, general appearance, and coloration to Oncotylus guttulatus Uhler.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately large, robust, total length 3.78–4.15, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.47–2.70, width across pronotum 1.16–1.27. COLORATION: Entire body and appendages cream colored, including eyes, with a slight tinge of green, dorsum with small brown spots at the bases of simple setae; femora with some small brown spots; tibial spines pale with small dark bases (fig. 11). SURFACE AND VES­ TITURE: Dorsum smooth, very weakly shining, clothed with pale, reclining, simple setae intermixed with silvery, shining, weakly flattened setae (fig. 19C). STRUCTURE: Hemelytra relatively elongate, nearly parallel­sid­ ed (fig. 11); labium reaching to between middle and hind coxae; claws elongate and smoothly curving; pulvilli minute (fig. 19D). MALE GENITALIA: Vesica J­shaped, weakly twisted, apex very slightly attenuated past gonopore; gonopore sclerotized; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 3.16–3.29, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.27–2.40, width across pronotum 1.19–1.28; relatively heavy­bodied, ovoid, not so elongate as male (fig. 11).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: From the Latin, punctum, hole or spot, for the brown spots at the bases of the setae on the dorsum.</p> <p>HOST: Atriplex canescens, A. sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Southwestern United States from southern Nevada, Arizona and east to western Texas.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Knight (1968) described Psallus atriplicis as occurring on Atriplex at the Nevada Test Site. Examination of the male genitalia indicates clearly that this is not a Psallus species but rather belongs to Megalopsallus, even though it is somewhat unusual because of the spotting on the dorsum. The name atriplicis Knight becomes a junior secondary homonym upon transfer of this species to Megalopsallus, and I therefore propose the new name punctatus.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — Arizona: Cochise Co.: Portal, 1500 m, June 15, 1980, R. T. Schuh and K. Schmidt, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 3♀ (AMNH). Coconino Co.: Rt. 64 just SE of Grand Canyon Natl. Park, June 26, 1980, K. &amp; R. Schmidt, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 33 (AMNH). Nevada: Lyon Co.: North boundary Toiyabe Nat Forest on Hiway 22, 5700 ft, July 11, 1980, G. M. Stonedahl, 73, 6♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: Atomic Test Site, 16M, July 24, 1965, H. H. Knight and J. Merino, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 2♀ (USNM). New Mexico: Dona Ana Co.: 9 mi W of Santa Teresa, May 8, 1999, J. C. Schaffner, 5♀ (TAMU). Texas: Culberson Co.: 2 mi W of Kent on I­ 10, 1550 m, April 27, 1978, R. T. Schuh and T. J. Henry, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). 38 mi N of Van Horn, 1220 m, April 28, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 7♀ (AMNH). Van Horn, 1440 m, April 28, 1978, R. T. Schuh and T. J. Henry, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 143, 16♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus punctipes (Knight)</p> <p>Figures 11, 16, 20</p> <p>Europiella punctipes Knight, 1968: 47 (n. sp.). Megalopsallus punctipes: Schuh et al., 1995: 389</p> <p>(n. comb.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized, in common with parapunctipes and sarcobati, by generally pale green coloration, including appendages, white eyes, and pale brown spots on femora (fig. 11). Distinguished most easily from parapunctipes by lack of infuscation on thoracic sternum and form of male genitalia (fig. 16), and from sarcobati by larger size and broad­ er head of that species as well as form of male genitalia. Similar in size and general appearance to sparsus, but eyes almost always black in sparsus; also sparsus usually with some dark areas on head, pronotum, and femora. Distinguished from schwartzi by that species having red eyes and lacking spots on femora.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized, total length 2.91–4.12, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.93–3.16, width across pronotum 0.92–0.99. COLORATION: Entire body and appendages pale, greenish white; femora with scattered small brown spots (fig. 11); tibial spines pale with small brown bases. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, weakly shining, clothed with reclining, brown, simple setae and silvery woolly setae (fig. 20C). STRUCTURE: Moderately elongate, corial margins weakly convex (fig. 11); labium short, reaching point midway between fore and middle trochanters; claws elongate and curving; pulvilli small, covering about one­half of ventral claw surface (fig. 20D). MALE GENITALIA: Vesica in the form of a J, not twisted, apex membranous; gonopore small, conspicuously subapical; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.52–2.79, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.78–1.98, width across pronotum 0.91–1.06; ovoid (fig. 11).</p> <p>HOSTS: Atriplex canescens, A. confertifolia, A. sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior western North America from northern Mexico north to Oregon and east to western Texas.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: MEXICO. — Baja California Norte: El Crucero, April 4, 1976, P. Rude, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 73 (UCB). USA. — Arizona: Graham Co.: 30 mi SE of Globe on Rt. 70, 3200 ft, May 31, 1983, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 5♀ (AMNH). California: Imperial Co.: 1 mi E of Coyote Wells, E of intersection of Rts 580 &amp; I­8, April 23, 1980, M. D. Schwartz and L. Russell, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 5♀ (AMNH). Imperial near RR tracks on Rt. 580, 42 ft, April 23, 1980, M. D. Schwartz and L. Russell, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 243, 27♀ (AMNH). Inyo Co.: 2 mi E of Westgard Pass Summit, White Mts, 2125 m, July 2, 1980, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 23, 16♀ (AMNH). 10 mi NE of Bishop, June 21, 1978, J. D. Pinto, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 4♀ (UCR). Riverside Co.: 5 mi E of Mecca, Box Canyon Wash, April 6, 1979, J. D. Pinto, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 33, 4♀ (UCR). San Bernardino Co.: Rabbit Dry Lake, 2 mi W of Lucerne Valley, 935 m, May 13, 1978, R. T. Schuh and J. D. Pinto, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 7♀ (AMNH, UCR). San Diego Co.: Anza­Borrego State Park, Vallecito Canyon, April 23, 1980, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex sp. (Cheno­ podiaceae), 83, 15♀ (AMNH). Nevada: Clark Co.: 7 mi S of Boulder City, 530 m, May 17, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13 (AMNH). Esmeralda Co.: 13 mi W of Lida on Rt. 3, 1938 m, July 12, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 5♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: Mercury, 410M(TB), July 21, 1965, E. Beck and J. Merino, Paratypes: 13 (USNM). 5.5 mi S of Belmont on Rt. 82, 2031 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Mercury, CM, June 13, 1965, D. E. Beck and H. Knight, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), Paratypes: 23 (USNM). Rock V. on Jackass Flats Road, 3300 ft, June 6, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Stonedahl, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 13♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 18m, July 7, 1965, E. Beck and J. Merino, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), Paratypes: 43 (USNM, CNC). 6.8 mi SE of Mercury on Orange Blossom Road, Atomic Test Site, 4000 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Stonedahl, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 4♀ (AMNH). Atomic Test Site, Mercury Hwy at Angle Rd, 3800 ft, June 8, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, and Stonedahl, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 43, 5♀ (AMNH). Mercury, 18m, June 23, 1965, H. Knight and J. Merino, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), Paratypes: 13 (USNM). New Mexico: Dona Ana Co.: 20 mi N of Las Cruces, 1280 m, April 30, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). E of Las Cruces, base of Organ Mts, 1600 m, R. T. Schuh and J. Zimmerman, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 1♀ (AMNH). Las Cruces, 1220 m, April 30, 1978, R. T. Schuh and J. Zimmerman, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 2♀ (AMNH). Oregon: Harney Co.: T34S R35E Sec 10 NE, June 22, 1979, Neil Cobb, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 13 (AMNH). Texas: Culberson Co.: 38 mi N of Van Horn, 1220 m, April 28, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 2♀ (AMNH). Van Horn, 1440 m, April 28, 1978, R. T. Schuh, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 1♀ (AMNH). Utah: Emery Co.: 2.5 mi W of Rt 24 on Goblin Valley Road, 5500 ft, June 19, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 63, 1♀ (AMNH). Garfield Co.: 14.3 mi S of Rt. 95 on Rt. 276, 5000 ft, June 19, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, 363, 3♀ (AMNH). Grand Co.: 11 mi SE of jct. Rts 313 &amp; 163 toward Dead Horse Point, 5200 ft, June 11, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 233, 6♀ (AMNH). Millard Co.: Longridge Reservoir Cutoff on Rt. 50/6, 4500 ft, May 19, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 83, 7♀ (AMNH). San Juan Co.: 3 mi SE of Rt. 263 on Clay Hills Crossing Rd, 4700 ft, June 18, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 3♀ (AMNH). 7.7 mi N of Mexican Hat on Rt. 261, 5000 ft, June 17, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex canescens (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 3♀ (AMNH).</p> <p>Megalopsallus rubricornis (Knight)</p> <p>Figures 11, 16</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C64A8F57C594DE954869FF22	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C6578F52C7C0DB0848BCFF0F.text	4A3FBB30C6578F52C7C0DB0848BCFF0F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Europiella rubricornis Knight 1968	<div><p>Europiella rubricornis Knight, 1968: 39 (n. sp.). Megalopsallus rubricornis: Schuh et al., 1995:</p> <p>389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by dark reddish head, pronotum, scutellum (at least mesoscutum), and femora contrasting with generally pale hemelytra (except at extreme base) (fig. 11); antennal segments 1 and 2 generally distinctly reddish. Most easily confused with Lycium feeding nicholi, but that species always with cuneus at least weakly darkened.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Small to medium sized, total length 2.75–3.55, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.88–2.27, width across pronotum 0.92–1.05. COLORATION: Head, pronotum, anterior portion of scutellum, and under surface of thorax very deep red; extreme base of hemelytra (usually), antennal segments 1 and 2, coxae, trochanters, and femora usually reddish (fig. 11); antennae usually red, sometimes pale; most of hemelytra white; antennal segments 3 and 4 pale; abdomen pale green; eyes dark reddish to black; tibial spines black with reddish bases. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, moderately polished and shining, clothed with pale, recumbent, simple setae intermixed with silvery, shining, weakly flattened setae. STRUCTURE: Hemelytra moderately elongate, corial margins very weakly convex (fig. 11); labium reaching to posterior margin of middle trochanters; claws relatively short and stout, curving only near apex; pulvilli relatively large, reaching to near apex of claw, free from claw except at base. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica S­shaped, apex membranous and projecting beyond gonopore ventrally; gonopore distinctly sclerotized; gonopore sclerite well developed (fig. 16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.33–2.86, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.78–2.05, width across pronotum 0.89–1.06; body very short and stout, ovoid (fig. 11); antennal segment 2 varying from slender to spindleshaped, depending on population (fig. 11).</p> <p>HOSTS: Sarcobatus vermiculatus, S. sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Southern Oregon south to Arizona and east to Utah.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — Arizona: Gila Co.: Salt River Mts., 1300 ft, May 9, 1926, A. A. Nichol, 1♀ (USNM). California: Inyo Co.: 1 mi NW of Keeler, May 11, 1969, J. Doyen, 23, 6♀ (UCB). Owens Lake Sand Dunes, May 17, 1978, Guiliani, 33, 3♀ (CAFA). 2 mi E of Big Pine, June 22, 1978, J. D. Pinto, Sarcobatus sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 2♀ (UCR). Lassen Co.: Litchfield, June 22, 1937, B. P. Bliven, 23, 1♀ (CAS). Mono Co.: 1 mi S of Bridgeport, July 9, 1973, J. D. Pinto, Sarcobatus sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 1♀ (UCR). 8 mi W of Nevada state line on Rt. 359, 6700 ft, July 3, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 643, 113♀ (AMNH). San Bernardino Co.: 1.3 mi S of Goffs, 845 m, May 16, 1978, R. T. Schuh, 13 (AMNH). Siskiyou Co.: 5 mi S of Merrill, Oregon, 4060 ft, June 26, 1979, M. D. Schwartz, G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 343, 29♀ (AMNH). East side of Lower Klamath Lake, 1270 m, June 26, 1979, R. T. and Joe Schuh, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 383, 45♀ (AMNH). Nevada: Clark Co.: 5.8 mi W of Valley of Fire State Park, 845 m, May 17, 1978, R. T. Schuh, 13 (AMNH). Elko Co.: Utah state line on Utah Rt. 30, 4760 ft, June 25, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 113, 12♀ (AMNH). Humboldt Co.: Winnemucca, June 1, 1968, T. R. Haig, 13 (CAS). Lander Co.: 11 mi S of Rt. 50 on Rt. 376, 5800 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 193, 41♀ (AMNH). Lyon Co.: 7 mi N of Sweetwater Summit on Rt. 22, Toiyabe Natl. Forest, 1856 m, July 11, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 223, 25♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: 28 mi N of Belmont on Rt. 82, 2113 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 93, 16♀ (AMNH). Washoe Co.: 2 mi N of Vya on Rt. 8A, 1750 m, July 2, 1979, R. T. Schuh and B. M. Massie, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 103, 4♀ (AMNH). Nixon, June 30, 1927, E. P. Van Duzee, 13 (CAS). Pyramid Lake, June 27, 1972, R. A. Belmont, 1♀ (UCD). Oregon: Baker Co.: Anthony Lake, July 11, 1931, Nottingham, 1♀ (KU). Harney Co.: Malheur Wildlife Refuge, 10 mi S of headquarters, July 12, 1968, P. Oman, 13 (OSU). T36S R35E, July 3, 1979, Smith and Cobb, 23 (OSU). Union Co.: La Grande, June 26, 1926, E. W. Davis, 1♀ (USNM); 1♀ (USNM). Utah: Cache Co.: Benson, June 28, 1932, Knowlton and Stains, 1♀ (USNM). Millard Co.: White Valley, June 8, 1940, R. W. Fautin, 1♀ (USNM). Sevier Co.: Monroe, July 25, 1900, 1♀ (USNM). Richfield, August 15, 1929, Paratypes: 43 (USNM). Richfield, July 15, 1929, E. W. Davis, Paratypes: 43 (USNM).</p> <p>Megalopsallus rubropictipes Knight</p> <p>Figures 12, 16</p> <p>Megalopsallus rubropictipes Knight, 1927: 225 (n. sp.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by relatively large size, pale green coloration, red eyes, and reddish femora (fig. 12). Similar to nuperus in general appearance and lack of strong sexual dimorphism (except in some populations of rubropictipes), but distinguished from that species by consistently more greenish coloration.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Medium sized, total length 3.36–3.62, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.31–2.47, width across pronotum 1.03–1.11. COLORATION: General coloration greenish white, femora usually with some distinct reddish areas, in the form of spots or suffusion; eyes red (fig. 12); tibial spines pale, bases of spines often pale, at most pale brown. SURFACE AND VESTI­ TURE: Dorsum smooth, pronotum and scutellum weakly shining, hemelytra dull; dorsum clothed with pale or brown recumbent setae intermixed with silvery, woolly setae. STRUCTURE: Moderately elongate, costal margin of hemelytra weakly convex (fig. 12); labium reaching at least onto hind trochanters, sometimes slightly beyond; claws long, smoothly curving; pulvilli minute. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica S­shaped, apex attenuated and sclerotized, general structure very similar to nuperus; gonopore sclerotized and subapical; no gonopore sclerite (fig. 16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.50–3.41, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.14 –2.45, width across pronotum 0.98–1.16; usually macropterous and slightly more robust than male, sometimes brachypterous, with hemelytra greatly shortened with apex of abdomen projecting beyond posterior margin of reduced membrane (fig. 12).</p> <p>HOSTS: Atriplex confertifolia, A. sp., Salicornia sp., Suaeda erecta, S. sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior western North America from Alberta and Saskatchewan south to New Mexico and west to Oregon.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Some populations of rubropictipes show strong sexual dimorphism. The females have short hemelytra that barely cover the abdomen, which accounts for the great variation in total length between the sexes.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: CANADA. — Alberta: 1­4, July 17, 1952, A. R. Brooks, Suaeda erecta (Chenopodiaceae), 43 (CNC). Castor, August 7, 1957, A. R. and J. E. Brooks, Atriplex sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 53, 3♀ (CNC). Drumheller, August 11, 1957, A. R. and J. E. Brooks, 53, 6♀ (CNC). Irvine, June 11, 1952, A. R. Brooks and L. A. Konotopetz, 2♀ (CNC). Saskatchewan: Minton, August 11, 1955, A. R. Brooks, 13, 1♀ (CNC). Val Marie, A. R. Brooks, 13, 2♀ (CNC). Elbow, August 17, 1951, A. R. Brooks, Suaeda sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 53, 3♀ (CNC). Wood Mountain, August 5, 1955, A. R. Brooks, 83, 11♀ (CNC). USA. — Arizona: Cochise Co.: 3 mi SW of Portal, August 25, 1987, D. A. Rider, 33 (DAR). 6 mi SE of Wilcox, July 28, 1952, M. Cazier, R. Schrammel, 1♀ (AMNH). Douglas, August 25, 1968, 13 (AMNH). Fairbanks, San Pedro River, September 6, 1927, J. A. Kusche, 33 (CAS). Huachuca Mts, 5354 Ash Canyon Road. 0.5 mi W of Hwy 92, 5100 ft, October 18, 1992, N. McFarland, 163, 3♀ (USNM). Santa Cruz Co.: Patagonia, on Sonoita Creek, October 14, 1927, J. A. Kusche, 13, 1♀ (CAS). Colorado: Delta Co.: Delta, July 20, 1898, P.R. Uhler Collection, 1♀ (USNM). Fremont Co.: Florence August 17, 1925, H. H. Knight, Paratype: 13 (CNC). Garfield Co.: Rifle, August 25, 1968, L. A. Kelton, 103, 50♀ (CNC, AMNH). Las Animas Co.: Delhi, August 6, 1925, H. H. Knight, 13 (USNM). Trinidad, September 12, 1898, Paratypes: 13, 1♀ (USNM). Montezuma Co.: 4 mi E of Cortez, August 16, 1973, J. C. Schaff­ ner, 33, 8♀ (TAMU). Cortez, July 19, 1968, L. A. Kelton, Salicornia sp. (Chenopodiaceae), 23, 17♀ (CNC). Otero Co.: Rocky Ford, September 4, 1898, Paratypes: 13 (USNM). Pueblo Co.: Pueblo, September 15, 1898, 13 (USNM). Montana: Yellowstone Co.: Billings, August 4, 1927, H. H. Knight, 13, 1♀ (CNC). Nevada: Elko Co.: Elko, July 12, 1965, H. H. Knight, 13 (CNC). Eureka Co.: 12 mi N of Rt. 50 on Rt 278, 5800 ft, June 27, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Atriplex confertifolia (Chenopodiaceae), 8♀ (AMNH). Lincoln Co.: Cathedral Gorge State Park, June 17, 1986, J.B. Knight and K.R. Helms, 13, 1♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: 2.5 mi NE of Gabbs off Rt. 844, Rifle Range, 4800 ft, July 2, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, 163, 3♀ (AMNH). Pershing Co.: Woolsey RR Station, June 5, 1973, T. R. Haig, 2♀ (CAFA). New Mexico: Chaves Co.: Roswell, Pecos River, July 21, 1967, L. A. Kelton, 23, 4♀ (CNC). Roswell, Bottomless Lakes, July 21, 1967, L. A. Kelton, 73, 7♀ (CNC). Eddy Co.: 32 ° 21.4 ̍ N 103 ° 46.9 ̍ W (Campsite), May 29, 1979, D. R. Dolorme and H. L. Corolla, 123, 10♀ (TAMU). Carlsbad, May 29, 1979, T. P. Friedlander, 43 (TAMU). July 26, 1979, D. R. Dolorme and C. P. McHugh, 1♀ (TAMU). San Juan Co.: Chaco Canyon Natl. Mon., August 9, 1932, S. E. Wood, 23 (LACM). Santa Fe Co.: 8 mi E of Los Alamos, July 4, 1982, D. A. and J. T. Polhemus, 13, 1♀ (JTP). Oregon: Harney Co.: T34S R35E, August 27, 1979, Smith and Cobb, 13 (OSU). Utah: Box Elder Co.: Snowville, July 29, 1971, G. F. Knowlton, 13, 3♀ (USU). Cedar Hill, August 17, 1972, G. F. Knowlton, 13 (USU). S. Validation Site, August 17, 1972 – August 24, 1972, Hanson and Knowlton, 253, 16♀ (USU). Cache Co.: Logan, August 19, 1939, G. F. Knowlton, 23 (USU). Millard Co.: Delta, June 16, 1968, G. F. Knowlton, 13 (USU). Sevier Co.: Richfield, July 15, 1929 – September 20, 1927, E. W. Davis, 23, 6♀ (USNM). Richfield, July 8, 1930, 13, 1♀ (USNM). Weber Co.: Slaterville, July 12, 1967, Knowlton and Frank, 43, 2♀ (OSU).</p> <p>Megalopsallus sarcobati (Knight)</p> <p>Figures 12, 16, 21</p> <p>Europiella sarcobati Knight, 1969: 83 (n. sp.).</p> <p>Megalopsallus sarcobati: Schuh et al., 1995: 389</p> <p>(n. comb.).</p> <p>Europiella multipunctipes Knight, 1970: 229 (n. sp.). NEW SYNONYMY.</p> <p>Megalopsallus multipunctipes: Schuh et al., 1995: 389 (n. comb.).</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized, in common with parapunctipes and punctipes, by generally pale green coloration, including appendages, white eyes, and pale brown spots on the femora, but differing from both species in lack of distinct sexual dimorphism, larger size, broader head (fig. 12), distinctive differences in structure of male genitalia (fig. 16), and host preferences.</p> <p>REDESCRIPTION: Male: Moderately small, broad­bodied, total length 3.04–3.26, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.05–2.22, width across pronotum 1.01–1.08. COLOR­ ATION: Pale green (often dirty yellow in poorly preserved specimens); eyes pale (fig. 12); femora with numerous small brown spots; tibial spines pale with brown bases. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, weakly shining, clothed with pale or light brown setae intermixed with silvery, slightly flattened setae (fig. 21C). STRUC­ TURE: Relatively broad bodied and ovoid; head short and broad, eyes relatively small (fig. 12); labium reaching to about posterior margin of middle trochanters; claws elongate, nearly straight over two­thirds of length, curving apically; pulvilli moderately large, covering about two­thirds of ventral claw surface (fig. 21D). MALE GENITA­ LIA: Vesica S­shaped, sclerotized and attenuated apically, gonopore subapical; gonopore sclerite well developed (fig. 16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.92–3.34, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.13–2.45, width across pronotum 1.07–1.21; ovoid, often difficult to separate from male as viewed from above (fig. 12).</p> <p>HOSTS: Sarcobatus vermiculatus, Sarcobatus baileyi (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior western North America from southern Washington south to southern Nevada and east to Colorado.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: Examination of the material upon which Knight (1970) based his original description of multipunctipes indicates that this nominal taxon is the same as sarcobati, and I am therefore treating it as a junior synonym. Knight noted that his specimens of multipunctipes ‘‘were from a shrub I thought must be an Atriplex.’’ All verified host records for this species are from Sarcobatus, Knight’s observation apparently being in error. The single record from S. baileyi is the exception among the many known occurences on S. vermiculatus.</p> <p>SPECIMENS EXAMINED: USA. — Arizona: Coconino Co.: 1 mi E of Tuba City on Rt. 163, 5000 ft, June 16, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 9♀ (AMNH). Red Lake on Rt. 160, June 26, 1980, K. &amp; R. Schmidt, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 63, 17♀ (AMNH). California: Inyo Co.: 1 mi NW of Keeler, May 11, 1969, J. D. Haddock, 43, 12♀ (UCB). 2 mi E of Big Pine, June 3, 1975, J. D. Pinto, 4♀ (UCR). Modoc Co.: ca. 4 mi E of Cedarville, 1440 m, July 2, 1979, R. T. Schuh and B. Massie, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 3♀ (AMNH). Mono Co.: 1.3 mi N of Oasis, Fish Lake Valley, June 10, 1976, J. D. Pinto, 13, 3♀ (UCR). 8 mi W of Nevada state line on Rt. 359, 6700 ft, July 2, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 93, 15♀ (AMNH). Siskiyou Co.: 5 mi S of Merrill, Oregon, 4060 ft, June 26, 1979, M. D. Schwartz and G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 303, 37♀ (AMNH). Dorris, July 1, 1935, R. H. Beamer, 23 (KU). East side of Lower Klamath Lake, 1270 m, June 29, 1979, R. T. and Joe Schuh, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 343, 64♀ (AMNH). Colorado: Mesa Co.: E of Palisade, Plateau Creek, June 6, 1981, J. T. Polhemus, 13 (JTP). Mineral Co.: Creede, June 21, 1990, J. T. and D. A. Polhemus, 1♀ (JTP). Moffat Co.: Gates of Lodore, June 28, 1979, D. A. Polhemus, 43, 16♀ (JTP). Nevada: Elko Co.: Wells, July 12, 1965, H. H. Knight, 43 (USNM). Elko, July 12, 1965, H. H. Knight, 13♀ (USNM). Utah state line on Utah Rt. 30, 4760 ft, June 25, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 1403, 140♀ (AMNH). Esmeralda Co.: 13 mi W of Lida on Rt. 3, 1938 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 3♀ (AMNH). Lander Co.: Battle Mt., June 26, 1935, R. H. Beamer, 3♀ (KU). 11 mi S of Rt. 50 on Rt. 376, T17N R44E, 5800 ft, June 28, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 203, 50♀ (AMNH). Lyon Co.: 7 mi N of Sweetwater Summit on Rt. 22, Toiyabe Natl. For., 1865 m, July 11, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G.M Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 103, 30♀ (AMNH). Nye Co.: 28 mi N of Belmont on Rt. 82, 2013 m, July 13, 1980, R. T. Schuh and G. M. Stonedahl, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 103, 14♀ (AMNH). 35 mi N of Tonapah, Coyote Hole Spring/Sevier Reservoir, T8 R42E S11 &amp; 23, 6000 ft, June 30, 1983, R. T. Schuh and M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus baileyi (Chenopodiaceae), 13, 5♀ (AMNH). Washoe Co.: 2 mi E of Vya on Rt. 8A, 1750 m, July 2, 1979, R. T. Schuh and B. M. Massie, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 183, 17♀ (AMNH). Oregon: Harney Co.: Alvord De­ sert, T34S R37E, Sec 10, June 20, 1980, Oman, 1♀ (OSU). Union Co.: La Grande, June 26, 1926, E. W. Davis, Paratypes: 33, 5♀ (USNM). Utah: Millard Co.: White Valley, May 24, 1940, 1♀ (USNM). Uintah Co.: 5–10 mi SW of Bonanza, 5000–5600 ft, June 8, 1982, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 123, 17♀ (AMNH). Bonanza, White River Shale Project, T9S R24E Sec 23, 5000 ft, June 1, 1981, M. D. Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Chenopodiaceae), 263, 30♀ (AMNH). Washington: Yakima Co.: Yakima, June 19, 1932, A. R. Rolfs, Paratypes: 63, 5♀ (USNM).</p> <p>Megalopsallus schwartzi,, new species</p> <p>Figures 12, 16</p> <p>HOLOTYPE: Male, Nevada: Nye Co., 35 mi. N of Tonopah, Coyote Hole Spg. / Sevier</p> <p>Resrvr., T 8N R 42E, S 11 &amp; 23, June 30, 1983, Schuh, Schwartz, Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Hook.) Torr. var. baileyi (Cov.) Jeps. (Chenopodiaceae). Deposited in the American Museum of Natural History.</p> <p>DIAGNOSIS: Recognized by elongate slender body form in male, entirely pale greenish white coloration, red eyes (fig. 12), and lack of brown spots on femora and tibiae. Commonly collected with atriplicis and sarcobati, but distinguished from former by that species having red spots on head and pronotum and from latter by that species having pale eyes, brown spots on femora, and more robust body form.</p> <p>DESCRIPTION: Male: Moderate­sized, slen­ der, total length 3.46–3.70, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 2.26–2.37, width across pronotum 0.96–1.03. COLORATION: Pale, nearly white, pronotum and scutellum weakly orange, hemelytra weakly greenish; eyes red or white (fig. 12); tibial spines pale with pale bases. SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, weakly shining, clothed with recumbent, pale, simple setae intermixed with scattered, weakly flattened, silvery setae. STRUCTURE: Hemelytra conspicuously elongate, corial margin nearly straight; eyes relatively small, not conspicuously protuberant (fig. 12); labium reaching to middle trochanters; claws straight over most of length, rather sharply curving apically; pulvilli large, extending three­fourth length of claw. MALE GENITALIA: Vesica in male very weakly twisted, apex acuminate, secondary gonopore subapical, lacking gonopore sclerite (fig. 16).</p> <p>Female: Total length 2.66–2.83, length apex clypeus–cuneal fracture 1.90 –2.01, width across pronotum 0.92–0.99; body form ovoid, compact (fig. 12).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY: Named for Michael D. Schwartz, who collected many of the known specimens, and who otherwise contributed greatly to the success of this project.</p> <p>HOSTS: Sarcobatus vermiculatus, S. baileyi, S. sp., Atriplex canescens, A. sp. (Chenopodiaceae).</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION: Interior western North America from Montana south to New Mexico and west to Oregon.</p> <p>DISCUSSION: The great majority of the many known specimens were taken on Sar­ cobatus, which would seem to suggest that it</p></div> 	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C6578F52C7C0DB0848BCFF0F	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
4A3FBB30C65B8F5BC7C0D9AD48DEFBEB.text	4A3FBB30C65B8F5BC7C0D9AD48DEFBEB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Europiella monticola Knight 1970	<div><p>Europiella monticola Knight, 1970: 230 (n. sp.). Megalopsallus monticola: Schuh et al., 1995: 389</p> <p>(n. comb.).</p> <p>This species was erroneously transferred to Megalopsallus by Schuh et al. (1995).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3FBB30C65B8F5BC7C0D9AD48DEFBEB	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.		Plazi	SCHUH, RANDALL T.	SCHUH, RANDALL T. (2000): Revision of the North American Plant Bug Genus Megalopsallus Knight, with the Description of Eight New Species from the West (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylinae). American Museum Novitates 3305: 1-70, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2000)305<0001:ROTNAP>2.0.CO;2, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282000%29305%3C0001%3AROTNAP%3E2.0.CO%3B2
