Micrelytra fossularum

Micrelytra fossularum
Micrelytra fossularum. Lateral view
Dorsal view
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Suborder: Heteroptera
Infraorder: Pentatomomorpha
Superfamily: Coreoidea
Family: Alydidae
Genus: Micrelytra
Species: M. fossularum
Binomial name
Micrelytra fossularum
(Rossi, 1790)[1]
Synonyms
  • Cimex fossularum Rossi, 1790[2]
  • Gerris fossularum Fab. 1798)
  • Hydrometra fossularum Fab. 1803)
  • Alydus apterus L. 1827
  • Actorus fossularum Burm. 1835

Micrelytra fossularum is a species of true bugs belonging to the family Alydidae.

Description

Micrelytra fossularum can reach a length of about 10–12 millimetres (0.39–0.47 in).[3] It has a slender body with a significant thickening in the abdomen and quite thin legs. The basic color is brown or yellowish, with two white lateral lines along the abdomen. The head is broad, similar in length and width to the pronotum and the scutellum. The compound eyes are globular and protruding. The antennal segments are alternately black and white, but the last one is red, elongated and curved. The hemelytra are greatly reduced (hence the name of the genus) and have a thin white line around the outside edge. These vestigial wings makes this bug incapable of flight. The female is bigger and larger than the male.[4]

Behavior

These true bugs form large colonies on Poaceae (mainly Dactylis glomerata and Poa annua). They feed on the nutritious fluids contained in seeds, that they reach with their proboscis. The females lay eggs in April and May. The adults can be found in August, at the end of various larval stages.[5]

Distribution

This species is present in the Mediterranean regions, mainly in Albania, Belgium, Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain and former Yougoslavia. It prefers xerophytic meadows.[6][7]

References

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