Invasive Stink Bugs and Related Species (Pentatomoidea)

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42 Invasive Stink Bugs and Related Species (Pentatomoidea)


4(3) Pronotum with a fine, distinctly impressed subapical groove paralleling anterior margin;
abdominal trichobothria on segments III through VII arranged in longitudinal pairs; body
conspicuously flattened and coarsely punctured; Old World .............................Garsauriinae
4’ Pronotum without distinctly impressed subapical groove paralleling anterior margin;
abdominal trichobothria on segments III through VII arranged in transverse pairs (Figures
2.3A, B); body not conspicuously flattened ........................................................................... 5
5(4) Long setae present at least on lateral margins of head, pronotum, and corium (Figure 2.15I);
female spermatheca composed of a long, coiled, simple, non-differentiated tube; Old World
(Figure 2.15I) ................................................................................................Amaurocorinae
5’ Long setae not present along lateral margins of head, pronotum and corium (Figure 2.15L);
female spermatheca more complex, possessing a spermathecal bulb and pump region;
worldwide (Figure 2.15L) ........................................................................................Sehirinae

2.2.5 Dinidoridae Stål, 1868


The Dinidoridae represents another family that was treated by most early workers as a subfamily of
the Pentatomidae. Amyot and Serville (1843) recognized the group Mégyménides, including only
Megymenum Guérin-Méneville, as a group within their tribe Coniscutes. Stål (1868) proposed the group
Dinidorida to include the genera Aspongopus Laporte (= Coridius Illiger), Atelides Dallas (= Sagriva
Spinola), Dinidor Latreille, and Megymenum; he later (Stål 1870) gave the group subfamilial status, a
classification that most workers followed until the 1950s. The main exception was Lethierry and Severin
(1893) who catalogued this group as a family. Cachan (1952), in his monograph of the Madagascar fauna,
treated this group as a family. Although the name Megymeninae has priority over the Dinidoridae, the
latter family has been well established and should not be supplanted (see article 35.5 of the International
Code of Zoological Nomenclature [ICZN]); the Megymeninae is retained as a subfamily within the
Dinidoridae.
The most recent authoritative work on the family was by Durai in 1987 who also treated this group
at the family level; earlier, this family was treated in a still useful paper by Schouteden (1913). Durai
(1987) established the presently used classification (with a couple updates - see below), and provided


A B C

D E F

FIGURE 2.3 A, Sehirus cinctus, lateral abdomen, ventral view; B, Sehirus cinctus, detail of the second abdominal seg-
ment, ventral view; C, Amnestus pusio, scutellum and hemelytra, dorsal view; D, Scaptocoris castaneus, anterior tibia,
lateral view; E, Scaptocoris castaneus, anterior tibia, inner view; F, Cyrtomenus mirabilis, habitus, dorsolateral view.

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