identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03C387CEFFF1FFB1FF78CAB1FDE6095B.text	03C387CEFFF1FFB1FF78CAB1FDE6095B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Turrana Distant 1911	<div><p>Turrana Distant, 1911</p><p>Type species: Turrana abnormis Distant, 1911, by monotypy.</p><p>Turrana Distant, 1911: 579 (original description); Bergroth, 1913: 147 (catalogue); Cassis &amp; Gross 2002: 98 (catalogue); Brailovsky 2007: 173-178 (diagnosis, key); CoreoideaSF Team 2021 (catalogue, type photograph)</p><p>Diagnosis. Body slender, elongate, nearly parallel-sided; head longer than wide, with apices of maxillary plates rounded apically, extending well beyond depressed clypeus, latter without apical spine; thickened antennae, with AIII either longer or subequal to AI; labium reaching between base of prosternum to beyond midpoint of mesosternum; labial groove terminating at midpoint or posterior margin of mesosternum; monomorphic and short legs, femora unarmed; metathoracic external efferent system auriculate; brachypterous wings, not reaching abdominal terminalia; pronotal disc, clavus, and corium with uniform distribution of setigerous punctures, setae scalelike; abdomen weakly tapered caudally.</p><p>Redescription. Colouration (fig 1). Body mostly yellowish brown to orangish brown, sometimes with yellowish/orange and dark brown banding on abdominal connexiva; tibiae paler yellowish brown, with apices embrowned.</p><p>Texture and vestiture (figs 1; 2; 3A). Head and callosite region of pronotum granulate, without punctures; pronotal disc, clavus, and corium with uniform distribution of setigerous punctures, punctures deep and separated, setae pale yellow/white, short and scale-like; femora finely tuberculate, tibiae finely and obscurely granulose; male pygophore with dense distribution of bristlelike setae, densest on posterior margin of genital opening (fig 3A).</p><p>Structure. Elongate, narrow, male parallel-sided, female broader medially; dorsoventrally compressed (fig 1A–D). Head (figs 1; 2A–C): subrectangular in dorsal view, longer than wide; dorsally mostly flat; frons with short midline sulcus; clypeus vertical, barely visible from above, without apical spine; mandibular plates (= jugae) large, apically rounded, projecting well beyond clypeus, separated at midline; maxillary plates small and tumescent, projecting anteriorly just beyond clypeus; ocelli small and flattened with a diagonal slit-like scar; bucculae small with margins arcuate. Eyes (figs 1A–D; 2A–D): small, suboval, positioned between midpoint of head or caudal to the midpoint. Antennae (figs 1A–D; 2C): greatly enlarged, inserted at front of head; subequal to length of head to apex of scutellum; AI–AIII cylindrical, thickened, and subequal in length; AIV clavate and shortest antennomere Labium (figs 1B, D; 2A, C): extending between posterior margin of prosternum or beyond midpoint of mesosternum. Thorax (figs 1A–D; 2A–B, D–E): pronotum nearly flat, with lateral margins weakly divergent caudally; anterolateral angles acute; humeral angles rounded; callosite region medially divided by pair of longitudinal sulci; pronotal disc with pair of minor swellings; posterior margin rounded with medial concavity; scutellum short, flat, with or without midline weakly raised or keel-like; pro- and mesosternum with conspicuous midline furrow to receive labium. Hemelytra (fig 1A, C): brachypterous, narrower than abdomen, contiguous with the medial margin of the laterotergites, reaching abdominal terga V–VI; clavus short, commissure a little longer than scutellum; corium with raised veins and closed cells; membrane with anastomosing venation. Legs (fig 1B, D): short, slender, and cylindrical; monomorphic, with hind legs a little longer; femora unarmed. Abdomen (fig 1A–D): elongate, narrow, tapering caudally, proctiger flat and broadly rounded, almost fully covering pygophore. Male genitalia (fig 2A–C): pygophore cupshaped, caudal margin projecting, partly visible from above, genital opening dorsal in orientation. Female genitalia (fig 4A–C): elongate, tubelike.</p><p>Distribution. Two species distributed in Australian Monsoonal Tropics (fig. 5).</p><p>Remarks. Brailovsky (2007) hypothesised that Turrana is allied to Postleniatus, because of the elongate head (longer than wide), absence of a postocular tubercle, the concave posterior margin of the pronotum, the short legs, the unarmed femora, the flat ocelli and the deeply punctate hemelytra. Brailovsky (2007) distinguished Turrana from Postleniatus by AIII being longer than AII, the smaller eyes, the shorter labium (not reaching beyond the prosternum), the labial groove not extending to the metasternum, and the elongate female terminalia. Brailovsky (2007) also differentiated the other Australian acanthocorine genus Pomponatius from Turrana by its transverse head, ventrally armed femora, and the presence of a postocular tubercle, as well as it having shallower punctures. We have observed armed femora in Pomponatius, which were not illustrated in the habitus images of Brailovsky (2007). Turrana ejuncida sp. nov. is mostly consistent with the diagnostic characters given by Brailovsky (2007) but differs by the longer labium, which reaches near the posterior margin of the mesosternum: this character state separates it from T. abnormis and is more like Postleniatus glycosmisus . Nonetheless, T. ejuncida sp. nov. is undoubtedly congeneric with T. abnormis, and the revised diagnosis of Turrana herein excludes the very short labium character as given in Brailovsky (2007). Both Turrana species also have a clavate AIV as opposed to the fusiform shape found in Postleniatus glycosmisus .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C387CEFFF1FFB1FF78CAB1FDE6095B	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	Tatarnic, Nikolai J.;Cassis, Gerasimos	Tatarnic, Nikolai J., Cassis, Gerasimos (2022): Turrana ejuncida, a new species of Acanthocorini (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Coreidae) from Cape Range, Western Australia, with discussion of its systematic position and host plant associations. Zootaxa 5092 (1): 85-96, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5092.1.4
03C387CEFFF0FFB5FF78CB01FC2C08BF.text	03C387CEFFF0FFB5FF78CB01FC2C08BF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Turrana ejuncida Tatarnic & Cassis 2022	<div><p>Turrana ejuncida sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1–4</p><p>http://zoobank.org/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: A20136D2-9CD7-4AA4-A564-CDDDA1276CEB</p><p>Type material. Holotype. ♂ AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=113.940834&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-22.169844" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 113.940834/lat -22.169844)">Cape Range National Park</a>, rocky ridge adjacent to canyon [L31], 22.169844°S 113.940834°E, 229m, beating, ex. flowering Ipomoea yardiensis A.S. George. McMah, A. &amp; Tatarnic, N. 25/06/2019 WAM (WAME106179).</p><p>Paratypes.: 2 ♀♀, same collection data as holotype, WAM (WAME106178, WAME106180); 4 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀, same collection data as holotype (UNSW) . 2 ♂♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=114.005875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-22.09672" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 114.005875/lat -22.09672)">Cape Range National Park</a>, Charles Knife Canyon Road, on ridge 22.09672ºS 114.005872ºE, 286m, ex. base of Triodia epactia S.W.L. Jacobs. Tatarnic, N. and Wilson, N., 20/08/2021 (WAME109822, WAME109823) .</p><p>Etymology. This species’ name refers to its slender body shape, from the Latin ‘ejuncida’, meaning rushlike or lean; feminine.</p><p>Diagnosis. Turrana ejuncida sp. nov. is recognised by the following combination of characters: body orange brown; body with moderately dense distribution of white scale-like setae; slender, parallel-sided body; male head length less than 2x maximal pronotal length; eyes closer to pronotum than to apex of head; labium reaching beyond midpoint of mesosternum; labial groove extending to posterior margin of mesosternum; midline of scutellum not keeled; parameres with apices weakly recurved.</p><p>Description. Colouration (fig 1A–D). Body mid brown to orangish brown, with contrasting darker markings; head with paler midline. Head dull brown, darker on apex of maxillary plates with darker colouring extending laterally in line with the eye. Antennae orange-brown, with AIV darker. Pronotum dull brown, darker on anterior region, and submedially on pronotal disc. Thoracic pleura with irregular dark brown mottling. Metathoracic external efferent system yellow-brown, paler than remainder of thoracic pleura. Hemelytra mostly yellowish brown, with membrane veins dark brown. Femora mid brown, with tibiae paler, yellowish brown. Abdomen dark brown with obscure yellow brown and dark brown banding.</p><p>Texture and vestiture (figs 1A–D; 2A–F; 3A). Pale scalelike setae moderately to densely distributed on body and appendages.</p><p>Structure. Head (figs 1; 2A–C): males approximately 1.09x and females approximately 1.13x longer than wide; eyes positioned closer to thorax than to apex of head. Labium: extending just beyond middle of mesosternum, LI, LII, and LIV subequal in length, LIII shortest. Thorax (figs 1A–D; 2A–B, D–E): scutellum flat, without keeled midline; pro- and mesosternum with sulcate midline furrow reaching posterior margin of mesosternum to receive labium. Metathoracic scent gland (figs 1B, D; 2F): external efferent system auriculate-type; ostiolar canal depressed, elongate, apically truncate, bound anteriorly by raised, smooth, apically tumose peritreme, posteriorly with round tumescence; with depressed evaporative area, with tightly packed evaporative bodies; auricle-shaped. Male genitalia (fig 3A–C): posterior margin of genital opening greatly thickened, densely hirsute; proctiger divided medially as paired subrectangulate plates; parameres short, weakly arcuate, with crown hirsute, contiguous medially at rest; aedeagus with thickened cylindrical phallotheca; large dorsal conjunctival lobe upright, extending beyond vesica, without sclerotised process; paired lateral conjunctival lobes, anterior portion membranous, each with caudally directed, flattened sclerotised process; paired ventral conjunctival lobes apically membranous, each with two caudally directed sclerotized processes; vesica a helical sclerotized tube enclosing ductus seminis. Female genitalia (fig 4A–C): gonocoxae moderately long, weakly tapered caudally; gonocoxae 9 greatly elongate, around 2.5x longer than gonocoxae 8; laterotergites 8 narrow and elongate, longer than gonocoxae 8.</p><p>Measurements. Males (n=3) (holotype followed by range, with mean in parentheses): body length 13.354, 13.354–13.975 (13.587). Head: length 1.198, 1.198–1.339 (1.289), width across eyes 1.103, 1.103–1.208 (1.148), interocular distance 0.724, 0.716–0.785 (0.742). Antennae: AI 1.566, 1.566–1.705 (1.635), AII 1.420, 1.412–1.534 (1.455), AIII 1.570, 1.531–1.673 (1.591), AIV 0.738, 0.738–0.791 (0.765). Labium: LI 0.698, 0.698–0.766 (0.742), LII 0.636, 0.636–0.703 (0.663), LIII 0.429, 0.429–0.494 (0.451), LIV 0.607, 0.607–0.660 (0.636). Pronotum: length 2.284, 2.282–2.452 (2.230), width at collar 0.974, posterior width 1.689. Hemelytra: length 6.606. Females (n=2) (range, with mean in parentheses): body length 16.086 –16.168 (16.127). Head: length 1.335 –1.401 (1.368), width across eyes 1.202 –1.215 (1.209), interocular distance 0.830 –0.831 (0.831). Antennae: AI 1.764 –1.926 (1.845), AII 1.483 –1.562 (1.523), AIII 1.605 –1.644 (1.623), AIV 0.739 –0.797 (0.768). Labium: LI 0.820 –0.826 (0.823), LII 0.746 –0.799 (0.7725), LIII 0.427 –0.560 (0.494), LIV 0.713 –0.744 (0.729). Pronotum: Length 2.648 –2.687 (2.668), width at collar 1.028 –1.125 (1.077), posterior width 1.905 –1.999 (1.952). Hemelytra: length 7.628 –7.966 (7.797).</p><p>Distribution. Known only from the two localities in Cape Range National Park, Western Australia (fig 5).</p><p>Hosts. Initial series collected from flowering Ipomoea yardiensis A.S. George shrubs (fig 6A). This species is narrowly distributed in the Exmouth local government area of northwest Western Australia, where it is commonly found. It is a perennial shrub of about 1.5 metres, with broad grey-green leaves and purple tubular flowers. Additional specimens were subsequently collected from the dried base of Triodia epactia S.W.L. Jacobs (fig 6B). This tussock-forming perennial is a “soft spinifex and is coated with sticky resin on its green surfaces.</p><p>DNA sequence data. Nucleotide data amplified from the holotype male WAME106179 and paratype female WAME106180 for the mitochondrial gene regions COI (accession numbers OL457614 and OL 457615) and 16S (OL 462857 and OL 462858) are available on GenBank .</p><p>Remarks. Turrana ejuncida sp. nov. and T. abnormis are similar in morphology, with the new species differing by the longer labial segment which reaches beyond the midpoint of the mesosternum (cf. restricted to procoxae in the type species), the sparser distribution of scalelike setae, the absence of a keeled scutellum. Turrana abnormis is known from tropical Australia, with collection records from northern parts of Queensland, the Northern Territory, and the Kimberley region of Western Australia (Cassis &amp; Gross 2002) (fig 5). Presently T. ejuncida sp. nov. appears to have a more southwestern distribution, known only from the Gascoyne Region of Western Australia (fig 5).</p><p>The erection of T. ejuncida sp. nov. as a new species is based on comparison to the original description of T. abnormis by Distant (1911), observation of the syntype photograph of the species available online through the Coreoidea Species File (CoreoideaSF Team 2021), and observation of a single female specimen collected during a Bush Blitz survey in the Kimberley region of Western Australia (Palmer Creek, 15.956°S 127.57627°E, 5 June 2014, N.J. Tatarnic &amp; J. Karras, WAM), and an additional six specimens from nearby Kununurra, as well as the diagnostic characters, including genital illustrations, given by Brailovsky (2007).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C387CEFFF0FFB5FF78CB01FC2C08BF	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	Tatarnic, Nikolai J.;Cassis, Gerasimos	Tatarnic, Nikolai J., Cassis, Gerasimos (2022): Turrana ejuncida, a new species of Acanthocorini (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Coreidae) from Cape Range, Western Australia, with discussion of its systematic position and host plant associations. Zootaxa 5092 (1): 85-96, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5092.1.4
