identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
038B87F2CF36D441559DB378C302BD4E.text	038B87F2CF36D441559DB378C302BD4E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leucodellus Reuter 1906	<div><p>Leucodellus Reuter, 1906</p><p>Type species by monotypy: Leucodellus albidus Reuter 1906: 69 .</p><p>Heterochlorillus Putshkov, 1970: 752; synonymized by Li &amp; Liu 2007: 34. Leucophylus Duwal, Yasunaga &amp; Lee 2010: 23; new synonymy.</p><p>Revised diagnosis. Distinguished by the following characters of the male and female genitalia: male genital segment exceptionally large, 0.6–0.7 of abdomen (Fig. 3), equal to or longer than combined length of head and pronotum; right paramere lanceolate; vesica strongly coiled, with several closely approximating sclerotized ridges running along margin of lateral strap, apically with two characteristically shaped blades, small blade more or less twisted along axis and attenuated laterally, large blade long and thin, gradually curved (Figs. 12–17); secondary gonopore with well developed sculpture and long and distinct gonopore sclerite, far removed from apex of vesica, placed on membranous, dentate lobe; sclerotized rings of female dorsal labiate plate almost triangular, with distinctly tapering anterior angles (Fig. 22). Body form elongate and nearly parallel-sided, length 3.2–4.8 male, 3.0– 5.0 female. Coloration almost completely pale, hemelytra sometimes with pale brown markings, usually with dark markings on femora, brown spot at base of hind tibia and darkened bases of tibial spines. Vestiture with reclining pale simple setae only, rarely somewhat darkened on cuneus.</p><p>Similar in size and body proportions, general appearance including dark pattern on legs, and twin bladed vesica with approximating ridges on lateral strap to pale-colored species of Plagiognathus Fieber, 1858 (see Schuh 2001), Europiella Reuter, 1909 (see Schuh 2004), Chlorillus Kerzhner, 1962 (see Wagner 1975), Phaeochiton Kerzhner, 1964 (see Konstantinov 2008), and Atraphaxis -feeding group of Glaucopterum Wagner, 1963 (see Kerzhner 1984; Konstantinov 2006, 2011). Clearly distinguished from these genera by the distinctive curvature of the vesica and the shape of its apical blades, presence of the large gonopore sclerite, and triangular sclerotized rings of dorsal labiate plate. Further differing from Europiella and Glaucopterum in having lanceolate, not truncated right paramere, and from Europiella, Chlorillus, and Phaeochiton in lacking of silvery flattened and dark simple setae on dorsum.</p><p>Redescription. Male. Macropterous, with elongate body, total length 3.3–4.7.</p><p>COLORATION: Uniformly pale greenish to pale whitish in life, yellowish to white in collections, dorsum uniformly pale, rarely hemelytron with scarce minute brown spots or diffuse and indistinctly bordered pale brown markings, membrane whitish, semitransparent, typically with oblique wedge-shaped macula at base and variously shaped diffuse paler brown markings behind cells (Figs. 1, 2, 5); fore and middle femora with faint minute brown spots apically, rarely uniformly pale, apex of hind femur dorsally and ventrally with distinct dark brown color-pattern; fore and middle tibiae usually, hind tibia always with dark spots at bases of tibial spines and not infrequently with darkened base (Figs. 6–11); venter uniformly pale (Fig. 3). SURFACE AND VESTITURE: Dorsum smooth, moderately shining; with dense simple uniformly pale setae, rarely somewhat darkened on cuneus, first antennal segment with two pale medial spines, each femur with a few dark or pale spines apically, tibial spines dark brown to whitish. STRUCTURE: Head: Moderately produced anteriorly in dorsal view; eyes relatively large, occupying almost entire height of head in lateral view, posterolateral margins of eyes contiguous with anterolateral margins of pronotum; vertex weakly convex, frons moderately sloping anteriorly in lateral view, clypeus weakly produced, usually not visible in dorsal view; antennae inserted near ventral margin of eye; second antennal segment linear; labium reaching metacoxae. Thorax: Pronotum trapezoidal, 1.9–2.4 times as broad as long, disk weakly convex, calli indistinct, posterior margin nearly straight or weakly concave medially, lateral margins straight, posterolateral angles broadly rounded; mesonotum moderately exposed. Legs: femur elongate, not swollen, usually slightly broader medially, tibia cylindrical, third tarsal segment equal to length of first and second combined, claw elongate, strongly bent at middle, pulvillus small, reaching midpoint of claw, attached to the claw along entire length.</p><p>GENITALIA: Genital segment large, 0.6–0.7 of abdomen, distinctly longer than basal width, without distinctive ornamentation. Parameres: Right paramere lanceolate, with slender apical process; left paramere with obtuse sensory lobe and straight, gradually tapering apical process. Apex of theca: Shape typical of many phylines, comparatively long and narrow. Vesica: S-shaped, comparatively large, strongly coiled, body of vesica of distinctive curvature and form, with several closely approximating ridges running along margin of lateral strap, apically with two characteristically shaped blades, small blade more or less twisted along axis and attenuated laterally, large blade long and thin, gradually curved (Figs. 12–17); secondary gonopore far removed from apex of vesica, with well developed sculpture and long and distinct gonopore sclerite, placed on membranous, dentate lobe.</p><p>Female. Macropterous. Similar to male in color, structure, and vestiture, but more strongly ovoid, eyes slightly smaller than in male, with correspondingly broader vertex. GENITALIA: Dorsal labiate plate of bursa copulatrix with almost triangular sclerotized rings, their anterior angles distinctly tapering (Fig. 22); posterior wall simple; vestibulum narrow, S-shaped, irregularly sclerotized, vulva with two almost straight sclerites at sides (Fig. 23).</p><p>Hosts. Hosts are documented for three out of six species of the genus, and available data may suggest that either Leucodellus spp. feed on a broad range of plant groups or some host data represent a sitting record.</p><p>Distribution. All species of Leucodellus inhabit mountain terrains with moderate elevations. The genus has a highly disjunct distribution, with two closely related species, L. amygdali and L. zagdani, known from the Caucasus, while the rest of the species occurring in Nepal, Sichuan province and Tibet Autonomous Region of China. The two ranges are separated by as much as 3500 km and the genus remains unknown from the relatively well sampled mountains of Central Asia.</p><p>Discussion. A number of features of the male and female genitalia listed in the revised diagnosis unequivocally indicate the monophyly of Leucodellus . Duwal et al. (2010) being unaware of the paper by Li &amp; Liu (2007) described the monotypic genus Leucophyllus and correctly pointed out that the new genus is similar in overall appearance and vesica structure to Plagiognathus pallescens (already transferred to Leucodellus by Li &amp; Liu 2007).</p><p>Careful investigation of Leucophylus variegatus and all species currently assigned to Leucodellus allows me to conclude that they are congeneric. The peculiar vesical structure, large male genital segment and triangular sclerotized rings of the dorsal labiate plate are similar in all species. Leucodellus and Leucophylus share a common color pattern, similar pretarsal structure and vestiture. Based on the above features, the genus Leucophylus Duwal, Yasunaga &amp; Lee, 2010 is synonymized with Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF36D441559DB378C302BD4E	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
038B87F2CF34D440559DB092C1F9BCF0.text	038B87F2CF34D440559DB092C1F9BCF0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leucodellus albidus Reuter 1906	<div><p>Leucodellus albidus Reuter, 1906</p><p>Figures 1, 6, 12, 22, 23</p><p>Leucodellus albidus Reuter 1906: 69 .</p><p>Material examined. Lectotype: CHINA: Sichuan: [Fubyankho River, Between Shigaits and Shintyan], 0 1 Aug 1893, Potanin, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00159818) (ZISP). Paralectotype: CHINA: Sichuan: [Fubyankho River, Between Shigaits and Shintyan], 0 1 Aug 1893, Potanin, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00159817) (ZISP). Other Specimens Examined: CHINA: Sichuan: Jinchuan, 2000–2350 m, 31.46666 ° N 102.05 ° E, 0 9 Sep 1963, Unknown, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00337423) (NKMU). Xiaojin, 30.98333 ° N 102.35 ° E, 2350 m, 26 Aug 1963, Le-Yi Zheng, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00337424) (NKMU).</p><p>Diagnosis. Recognized by the large size, 4.0–4.5 male, 3.9–4.9 female, comparatively small eyes in male with vertex 1.7–1.8 times as wide as eye, pale dorsum and tibial spines (Fig. 1), darkened base of hind tibia, reduced color pattern on ventral surface of hind tibia (Fig. 6), robust vesica 1.5–2.0 times as large as those in other species of the genus, membranous lobe around secondary gonopore prominent, covered with denticles arranged in 6–7 rows, small blade of vesica gradually tapering, attenuated laterally, with gradually curved base and straight apex, large blade somewhat sinuous and flattened, widened at middle (Fig. 12). Not easily confused with other species of the genus. Most similar to L. xizangensis in the large size, uniformly pale dorsum, hind femur with reduced dark pattern on ventral surface and pale tibial spines but differing from that species in the darkened bases of hind tibia and tibial spines, and distinctive shape of vesica.</p><p>Distribution. Sichuan province of China.</p><p>Host. Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF34D440559DB092C1F9BCF0	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
038B87F2CF34D440559DB439C429BFF6.text	038B87F2CF34D440559DB439C429BFF6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leucodellus amygdali (Linnavuori 1965) Linnavuori 1965	<div><p>Leucodellus amygdali (Linnavuori, 1965)</p><p>Figures 5, 7, 13</p><p>Plagiognathus (Chlorillus) amygdali Linnavuori 1965: 59 . Chlorillus amygdali: Wagner 1975: 12 .</p><p>Heterochlorillus amygdali: Kerzhner 1997: 247. Leucodellus amygdali: Li &amp; Liu 2007: 39 .</p><p>Material examined. Paratypes: TURKEY: Bolu: Nr Bolu, 40.74 ° N 31.611 ° E, 11 Aug 1963, R. Linnavuori, 23 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237147, AMNH _PBI 00237148) (ZISP).</p><p>Diagnosis. Recognized by the middle size, 3.5–4.0, large eyes in males with vertex 0.9–1.1 times as wide as eye, diffuse and indistinctly bordered smoky pale brown spots on hemelytron (Fig. 5), venter of hind femora with a series of dark spots along fore margin (Fig. 7), darkened base of hind tibia and tibial spines, relatively small and weakly sclerotized vesica, membranous lobe around secondary gonopore well developed, projected backwards, covered with numerous denticles arranged in several irregular rows, small blade of vesica gradually tapering, attenuated laterally, twisted at base and almost straight apically, large blade thin, gradually tapering and nearly round in cross section (Fig. 13). Most similar to and apparently not separable by the structure of male genitalia from L. zagdani . Differs from that species in the color pattern (see key and Figs. 2, 5).</p><p>Distribution. Known only from the type locality, Bolu in NW Turkey.</p><p>Host. Collected from almond tree, Amygdalus sp. ( Rosaceae) (Linnavuori 1965).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF34D440559DB439C429BFF6	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
038B87F2CF32D445559DB732C1F9BA55.text	038B87F2CF32D445559DB732C1F9BA55.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leucodellus pallescens (Zheng & Li 1991) Zheng & Li 1991	<div><p>Leucodellus pallescens (Zheng &amp; Li, 1991)</p><p>Figures 8, 15</p><p>Plagiognathus pallescens Zheng &amp; H.Y. Li in H.Y. Li &amp; Zheng 1992 (September): 89, 91. Plagiognathus pallescens: Zheng &amp; H.Y. Li 1991 (November), formal description and designation of the lectotype (as holotype): 114.</p><p>Plagiognathus pallescens: Schuh, Lindskog &amp; Kerzhner 1995, discussion: 392. Leucodellus pallescens: Li &amp; Liu 2007: 37 .</p><p>Material examined. Paralectotypes: CHINA: Sichuan: Baoxing, 950–1360 m, 30.36666 ° N 105.83333 ° E, 17 Jun 1963, Le-Yi Zheng, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00337417), 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00337418) (NKMU); 0 1 Jul 1963, Le-Yi Zheng, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00337420) (AMNH). Jinchuan, 2000–2350 m, 31.46666 ° N 102.05 ° E, 10 Sep 1963, Unknown, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00337419) (AMNH).</p><p>Diagnosis. Recognized by the relatively small size, male 3.2–3.5, female 3.0–3.3, large eyes in male, with vertex almost equal to width of eye, pale dorsum, well developed dark markings on ventral side of hind femur (Fig. 8), pale bases of all tibia, dark tibial spines, weakly sclerotized vesica gradually curving and tapering distal to secondary gonopore, membranous lobe around secondary gonopore not projecting backwards, apically with 1–2 irregular rows of denticles along outer edge, small blade of vesica spatula-shaped, with extreme apex abruptly turned laterally, large blade lanceolate, flattened and somewhat widened at middle (Fig. 15). Most similar to L. xizangensis in the uniformly pale dorsum and structure of the male genitalia but differing from that species in the smaller body size, coloration of tibial spines and under surface of hind femur, and minute distinctions in the vesica structure, viz. location of secondary gonopore in relation to apical blades and shape of the small blade.</p><p>Distribution. Sichuan province of China.</p><p>Host. Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF32D445559DB732C1F9BA55	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
038B87F2CF31D445559DB353C3F3BD0F.text	038B87F2CF31D445559DB353C3F3BD0F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leucodellus variegatus (Duwal, Yasunaga & Lee 2010) Duwal, Yasunaga & Lee 2010	<div><p>Leucodellus variegatus (Duwal, Yasunaga &amp; Lee, 2010) comb. nov.</p><p>Figures 9, 16</p><p>Leucophylus variegatus Duwal, Yasunaga &amp; Lee 2010: 24 .</p><p>Material examined. Paratypes: NEPAL: Bagmati: Kathmandu District Co.: Bhaktapur, Dadhikot, 27.38219 ° N 85.23594 ° E, 1408 m, 22 May 2007, R. K. Duwal, Artemisia sp. ( Asteraceae), 23 (AMNH _PBI 00383607), 2Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00383597) (SNUK).</p><p>Diagnosis. Recognized by the relatively small size, 3.1–3.8 male, 3.0–3.5 female, dorsum usually partly covered with minute brown spots, venter of hind femora with a series of dark spots along fore margin (Fig. 9), pale bases of all tibiae and tibial spines, middle-sized vesica strongly narrowing and abruptly curving distal to secondary gonopore, membranous lobe around secondary gonopore not projecting, apically with 1–2 irregular rows of denticles along outer edge, spatula-shaped small blade of vesica, located close to secondary gonopore and apically almost adjoining to large blade, lanceolate large blade, flattened and somewhat widened at middle. Most similar to L. pallescens and L. xizangensis in size, coloration and shape of small blade but differing from both species in the location of secondary gonopore, distinct narrowing and curving of vesica distal to secondary gonopore, presence of dark spots on dorsum and other characters mentioned in the key.</p><p>Distribution. Temperate and subboreal zones of Nepal (Duwal, Yasunaga &amp; Lee 2010).</p><p>Host. Artemisia sp. ( Asteraceae).</p><p>Discussion. Two alternative spellings of the specific epithet were given in the original description, namely variegates and variegatus; the latter is selected here as the correct one.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF31D445559DB353C3F3BD0F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
038B87F2CF31D445559DB49EC1FBBF8C.text	038B87F2CF31D445559DB49EC1FBBF8C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leucodellus xizangensis Li & Liu 2007	<div><p>Leucodellus xizangensis Li &amp; Liu, 2007</p><p>Figures 10, 17</p><p>Leucodellus xizangensis Li &amp; Liu, 2007: 38 .</p><p>Material examined. Paratypes: CHINA: Tibet (Xizang): Gyitang, 30.73333 ° N 97.33333 ° E, 3600 m, 13 Sep 1976, Yin-heng Han, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00337421), 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00337422) (NKMU).</p><p>Diagnosis. Recognized by the large size, 4.2–4.6 male, 3.7–4.3 female, uniformly pale dorsum, hind femur with reduced dark pattern on ventral surface (Fig. 10), hind tibia without dark spot at base and with reduced or absent spots at bases of pale tibial spines, vesica comparatively large, well sclerotized, gradually curving and tapering distal to secondary gonopore, membranous lobe around secondary gonopore not projecting, with 1–2 irregular rows of denticles along outer edge, small blade of vesica spatula-shaped, running at a distance from large blade, with extreme apex abruptly turned laterally, large blade lanceolate, flattened and somewhat widened at middle (Fig. 17). Most similar to L. pallescens and L. variegatus; see these sections for differential characters.</p><p>Distribution. Known only from the type locality, Gyitang (Xizang Autonomous Region of China).</p><p>Host. Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF31D445559DB49EC1FBBF8C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
038B87F2CF3ED44A559DB1A8C21EBD42.text	038B87F2CF3ED44A559DB1A8C21EBD42.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leucodellus zagdani (Putshkov 1970) Putshkov 1970	<div><p>Leucodellus zagdani (Putshkov, 1970)</p><p>Figures 2, 3, 11, 14</p><p>Heterochlorillus zagdani Putshkov 1970: 753 . Leucodellus zagdani: Li &amp; Liu 2007: 39 .</p><p>Material examined. Paratypes: RUSSIAN FEDERATION: Karachay-Cherkessia Rep.: Teberda, 43.45 ° N 41.73333 ° E, 28 Aug 1969, Putshkov, Corylus sp. ( Corylaceae), 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237140), 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237140) (ZISP). Other Specimens Examined: AZERBAIJAN: Pirkulioba [Pirkuli], 41.54056 ° N 48.675 ° E, 0 1 Sep 1971, Putshkov, 33 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237146, AMNH _PBI 00237149), 2Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237146, AMNH _PBI 00237149) (ZISP). GEORGIA: Gonio, Forest of Batumi, 41.55 ° N 41.55 ° E, 30 Jun 1975, Zagulyaev, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237288) (ZISP). RUSSIAN FEDERATION: Krasnodar Terr.: Dzhubga, 44.3 ° N 38.7 ° E, 14 Jul 1971, Putshkov, 83 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237141 - AMNH _PBI 00237145), 6Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237141, AMNH _PBI 0 0 237143 - AMNH _PBI 00237145) (ZISP).</p><p>Diagnosis. Recognized by the middle size, 3.9–4.3 male, 3.4–3.9 female, large eyes in males with vertex 1.0– 1.1 times as wide as eye, uniformly pale dorsum (Fig. 2), bases of all tibiae and second antennal segment with distinct dark brown spot, anterior margin of hind femora with two contrastingly dark brown confluent spots near apex (Fig. 3), relatively small and weakly sclerotized vesica, membranous lobe around secondary gonopore prominent, covered with numerous denticles arranged in several irregular rows, small blade of vesica gradually tapering, attenuated laterally, twisted at base and almost straight apically, large blade thin, gradually tapering and nearly round in cross section (Fig. 14). Most similar to L. amygdali, see corresponding section for details.</p><p>Distribution. Caucasus; known from Krasnodar Territory and Karachay-Cherkessia Republic (formerly part of Stavropol Prov.) of Russia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia.</p><p>Host. Corylus avellana L. ( Corylaceae) (Putshkov 1970).</p><p>Discussion. The shape of the male genitalia offers the most consistent set of characters for discrimination of virtually all phyline species. However, several exceptions are known. For instance, Solenoxyphus adspersus (Reuter, 1904) and S. punctipennis (Reuter, 1879) are highly sympatric and well sampled species differing from each other exclusively in the color-pattern of the forewings (Konstantinov 2008). The same is true for Atomophora maculosa Reuter, 1904 and A. guttata Konstantinov, 2000 (see Konstantinov 2000 for details). L. zagdani is indistinguishable from L. amygdali in the genitalic structures and may represent a synonym of the latter. However, available material shows no intergradation in the color-pattern between these species and more sampling efforts are needed to clarify the status of L. zagdani .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF3ED44A559DB1A8C21EBD42	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
038B87F2CF3ED449559DB4A6C528BFFA.text	038B87F2CF3ED449559DB4A6C528BFFA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Compsidolon nathaliae (Josifov 1974) Josifov 1974	<div><p>Compsidolon nathaliae (Josifov, 1974) comb. nov.</p><p>Figures 4, 18, 21</p><p>Heterochlorillus nathaliae Josifov 1974: 63 . Leucodellus nathaliae: Li &amp; Liu 2007: 39 .</p><p>Material examined. Paratypes: TAJIKISTAN: Takob, S slope of Gissar Mts.Range, 38.83333 ° N 68.93333 ° E, 22 Jun 1970, Josifov, 43 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237160 - AMNH _PBI 00237163), 2Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237296, AMNH _PBI 00237297) (ZISP). Other Specimens Examined: KYRGYZSTAN: Ak-terek, 5 km N Gava, 41.3 ° N 72.81666 ° E, 12 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237333) (ZISP); 14 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 23 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237181, AMNH _PBI 00237182), 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237326) (ZISP); 15 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 223 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237164 - AMNH _PBI 00237185), 19Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237298 - AMNH _PBI 00237316) (ZISP); 18 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237345) (ZISP); 19 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 83 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237516 - AMNH _PBI 00237523), 5Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237346 - AMNH _PBI 00237350) (ZISP); 21 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 4Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237354 - AMNH _PBI 00237357) (ZISP); 22 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 2Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237327, AMNH _PBI 00237328) (ZISP); 23 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237329) (ZISP); 24 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 113 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237524 - AMNH _PBI 00237534), 3Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237351 - AMNH _PBI 00237353) (ZISP); 29 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237183) (ZISP); 30 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237184), 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237330) (ZISP); 31 Jul 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237185) (ZISP); 0 1 Aug 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237317) (ZISP); 0 2 Aug 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 2Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237318, AMNH _PBI 00237319) (ZISP); 0 4 Aug 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237320) (ZISP); 0 8 Aug 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237180), 2Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237321, AMNH _PBI 00237322) (ZISP); 0 9 Aug 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 3Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237323 - AMNH _PBI 00237325) (ZISP); 12 Aug 1937, A. N. Kiritshenko, 53 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237511 - AMNH _PBI 00237515), 13Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237331 - AMNH _PBI 0 0 237332, AMNH _PBI 0 0 237334 - AMNH _PBI 00237344) (ZISP). TAJIKISTAN: Darai Khairon, Darvaz, 38.81666 ° N 70.86666 ° E, 23 Jul 1954, Lopatin, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237542) (ZISP). Gissar Mts. Range, NW bank of Iskanderkul Lake, 39.08333 ° N 68.35 ° E, 0 9 Jul 1947, A. N. Kiritshenko, 23 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237548, AMNH _PBI 00237549) (ZISP); 14 Jul 1947, A. N. Kiritshenko, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237547) (ZISP). Gofilabad, upstream of Luchob River, 38.86666 ° N 68.65 ° E, 2500 m, 13 Aug 1940, Gussakovskiy, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237358) (ZISP). Kondara Canyon, Valley of Varzob River, 38.83333 ° N 68.83333 ° E, 1100 m, 0 7 Jun 1937, Gussakovskiy, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237360) (ZISP); 17 Jun 1937, Gussakovskiy, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237361) (ZISP); 19 Jun 1937, Gussakovskiy, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237359) (ZISP); 12 Jun 1939, Gussakovskiy, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237362) (ZISP); 22 Jun 1947, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237363) (ZISP). Kvak Tract, 35 km N Dushanbe [Stalinabad], 38.88333 ° N 68.76666 ° E, 2000 m, 20 Jun 1937, Pavlovskiy, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237540) (ZISP); 20 Jul 1937, Gussakovskiy, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237536) (ZISP); 21 Jul 1937, Pavlovskiy, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237365) (ZISP); 13 Jul 1938, Gussakovskiy, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237364) (ZISP). Kzyl-tam, NW Gissar Mts. Range, 2080 m, 11 Jul 1933, Vel'tischev, 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237578) (ZISP). Right Bank of Iskanderdarya, nr Source of River, 39.08333 ° N 68.36666 ° E, 11 Jul 1947, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237580) (ZISP); 20 Jul 1947, A. N. Kiritshenko, 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237581) (ZISP). S Slope of Gissar Mts. Range, Ramitskoe Canyon, 38.7 ° N 69.25 ° E, 2100 m, 12 Jul 1962, Baeva, Amelanchier sp. ( Rosaceae), 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237582) (ZISP). Tovil'-dora, Sary-ob Stream, nr Darvaz, 38.7 ° N 70.45 ° E, 22 Jul 1940, Doroshev, 23 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237544, AMNH _PBI 00237579) (ZISP). TURKMENISTAN: Kugitang Mts. Range, Slope of Ayribaba Mt., 38.31 ° N 66.39 ° E, 2500 m, 19 Jul 1971, Isakov, Lonicera sp. ( Caprifoliaceae), 13 (AMNH _PBI 00237543), 1Ƥ (AMNH _PBI 00237543) (ZISP). UZBEKISTAN: Bukhara, Mura Pass, 39.76666 ° N 64.41666 ° E, 3048 m, 15 Jul 1912, A. N. Kiritshenko, 23 (AMNH _PBI 0 0 237545, AMNH _PBI 00237546) (ZISP).</p><p>Distribution. Central Asia; known from Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan (Konstantinov &amp; Namyatova 2008).</p><p>Host. Unknown; avaliable host data on a single female collected from Amelanchier sp. ( Rosaceae) and two specimens collected from Lonicera sp. ( Caprifoliaceae) may represent sitting records.</p><p>Discussion. Li &amp; Liu (2007) transferred Heterochlorillus nathaliae Josifov, 1974 to Leucodellus with a note that the generic assignment of this species remains doubtful. Indeed, nathaliae is similar to other species of Leucodellus in the color pattern of dorsum and legs, size, body proportions, presence of the gonopore sclerite, and claw shape but strongly differs from congeners in all other respects. The vesica of nathaliae is twice smaller and not coiled, typically S-shaped, devoid of characteristic closely approximating ridges of lateral stripe, and terminating with a single straight and comparatively short blade (Fig. 18). The male genital segment in nathaliae is relatively small, about 0.4 of abdomen, and the sclerotized rings of the dorsal labiate plate are ovoid, of typical Phylini shape (Fig. 21). This species further differs from Leucodellus spp. in having relatively long, scarce, dark semierect setae on dorsum in addition to pale ones.</p><p>The vesica of nathaliae is most similar to that of many Compsidolon spp. (Figs. 19–20) in the relatively small size, overall shape and way of twisting of the single strap, form of the single blade and subapical location of the secondary gonopore equipped with well developed gonopore sclerite. The latter feature is documented for Leucodellus spp. (Figs. 12–17), and several otherwise clearly not related phyline genera, viz. Atractotomus Fieber, 1858 (Stonedahl 1990), Megalopsallus Knight, 1927 (Schuh, 2000), and Chlamydatus Curtis, 1833 (Schuh &amp; Schwartz 2005) .</p><p>Characters of external morphology, including head shape, body proportions, coloration, vestiture composed of two types of setae, and structure of pretarsus are in accordance with the generic placement of nathaliae within Compsidolon . Based on these observations I am proposing Compsidolon nathaliae (Josifov, 1974) comb. n.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87F2CF3ED449559DB4A6C528BFFA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Konstantinov, Fedor V.	Konstantinov, Fedor V. (2012): Leucodellus Reuter, 1906 (Heteroptera: Miridae: Phylini): key to species, revised species composition and diagnosis. Zootaxa 3157: 18-30, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.279688
