Hyperaspis vinciguerrae Capra 1929
- Dataset
- The Coccinellidae (Coleoptera) from Fuerteventura, Canary Islands
- Rank
- SPECIES
Classification
- kingdom
- Animalia
- phylum
- Arthropoda
- class
- Insecta
- order
- Coleoptera
- family
- Coccinellidae
- genus
- Hyperaspis
- species
- Hyperaspis vinciguerrae
description
(Fig. 8 G – L)
materials_examined
Material examined. La Pared 30. IX. 2016, 1 ex. on A. salicina; Jandia 30. IX. 2016, 5 exx. on Bougainvillea sp, Jandia 09. II. 2017, 1 ex. on Bougainvillea sp, Aeropuerto de Fuerteventura 30. III. 2017 1 ex. on L. arborescens, Caleta de Fuste 30. III. 2017, 1 ex. on Bougainvillea sp., La Pared 05. VIII 2017, 1 ex. on L. arborescens. Distribution. Occurs in northern Africa and western Asia, including Libya, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Iran (Raimundo & Harten 2000; Kovář 2007; Raimundo et al. 2008; Alizadeh et al. 2013; Biranvand et al. 2017 b). Before our survey, within the Canary Islands probably recorded on Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura and Lanzarote (see Remarks). Remarks. Uyttenboogaart (1930) reported the finding of a single specimen of Hyperaspis arrowi Brèthes, 1925 (now in the genus Cyrea Gordon et Canepari (Canepari et al. 2016 )) at Puerto de la Luz, Gran Canaria. This species of South American origin was later reported by Eizaguirre (2007) from Maspalomas, Gran Canaria based on a specimen from the collection at Universidad de la Laguna, and then by Nicolas & Rae (2012) from Lajares, Fuerteventura. We have not examined the specimens of C. arrowi. However, taking into consideration that C. ar- rowi is externally very similar to H. vinciguerrae (compare Fig. 8 K with Figs. 3 – 6 in Canepari et al. 2016) we assume that all the reports of C. arrowi from the Canary Islands most likely were the result of misidentification of H. vinciguerrae. It is worth noting that Oromí & Báez (2010) list both C. arrowi and H. vinciguerrae (misspelled as H. cinciguerrae) from the Canary Islands, the former from Gran Canaria and the latter from Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura and Lanzarote. Recently, female and male H. vinciguerrae were pictured by Biranvand et al. (2017 b). However, those pictures are confusing. While according to notes made by Poorani & Lalitha (2018), the picture of the female (Fig. 26) may indeed represent H. vinciguerrae, that of the male (Fig. 27) seems to actually show an Indian species, Hyperaspis maindroni Sicard, 1929.
Name
- Homonyms
- Hyperaspis vinciguerrae Capra 1929