Cyclopelta

Cyclopelta is a genus of Dinidorid bug found in Africa and Asia. There are 14 species in the genus with 8 found in Asia and 6 in Africa. Some species are known to form large aggregation on trees and can cause damage in a few trees of economic importance.

Cyclopelta
Cyclopelta siccifolia from India
Scientific classification
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Cyclopelta

Amyot and Serville, 1843
Type species
Cyclopelta obscura
(Lepeletier & Serville, 1828)

The genus Cyclopelta has a four-segmented antenna. Species in the genus have two to four pairs of conjunctival processes in their aedeagus, a feature shared with Coridius, Colpoproctus and Dinidor. In Cyclopelta the femora are spined along the surface and the females have hind tibiae that are opaque on the inner surface. The underside does not have a series of yellow spots as in Dinidor. Species within this genus include:[1][2]

  • C. robusta Lis & Lis, 2001[3]
  • C. bechynei Durai, 1987
  • C. funebris (Fabricius, 1775)
  • C. tristis (Stål, 1865)
  • C. abdominalis Distant, 1920
  • C. trimaculata Vollenhoven, 1868
  • C. obscura (Lepeletier & Serville, 1828)
  • C. parva Distant, 1900)
  • C. rugosa Distant, 1921
  • C. bruneiensis Lis, 1992
  • C. gibbosa Kocorek, 2013[4]
  • C. ornata Stål, 1870
  • C. siccifolia (Westwood, 1837)
  • ?C. subhimalayensis Strickland, 1932 (type missing)

References

  1. Durai, P. S. S. (1987). "A Revision of the Dinidoridae of the World (Heteroptera: Pentatomoidea)". Oriental Insects. 21: 163–360. doi:10.1080/00305316.1987.11835477.
  2. Kocorek, Anna (2013). "A new species of the genus Cyclopelta(Hemiptera: Dinidoridae) from Thailand, with a key to its Oriental species". Oriental Insects. 47 (4): 243–245. doi:10.1080/00305316.2013.871820.
  3. Lis JA; Lis B. (2001). "Cyclopelta robusta, a new species of dinidorid bugs (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Dinidoridae) from Zaire". Polskie Pismo Entomologiczne. 70 (2): 147–150.
  4. Kocorek, Anna (2013). "A new species of the genus Cyclopelta(Hemiptera: Dinidoridae) from Thailand, with a key to its Oriental species". Oriental Insects. 47 (4): 243–245. doi:10.1080/00305316.2013.871820.
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