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The genus Euschistus Dallas includes 67 species restricted to the New World, and several species are registered on cultivated plants in the Nearctic and Neotropical regions. In South America, most Euschistus species are completely overlooked due to the lack of information to allow accurate identification. Here, we redescribed Euschistus taurulus Berg, including for the first time, characterization of the internal and external genitalia of both sexes. We also report original information on bionomics, review and update information on geographical distribution and host plants records. Additionally, we provide DNA barcoding sequences for E. taurulus and three other morphologically similar key-agriculture pest species in South America: Euschistus heros (Fabricius), Dichelops melacanthus (Dallas), and Dichelops furcatus (Fabricius). We discuss means for correct identification of E. taurulus and its phylogenetic position within Euschistus and other similar stink bugs; the potential economic importance of the E. taurulus is also addressed.
Genitalia are multitasking structures whose development is mediated by numerous regulatory pathways. This multifactorial nature provides an avenue for multiple sources of selection. As a result, genitalia tend to evolve as modular systems comprising semi‐independent subsets of structures, yet the processes that give rise to those patterns are still poorly understood. Here, we ask what are the relative roles of development and function in shaping modular patterns of genitalia within populations and across species of stink‐bugs. We found that male genitalia are less integrated, more modular, and primarily shaped by functional demands. In contrast, females show higher integration, lower modularity, and a predominant role of developmental processes. Further, interactions among parts of each sex are more determinant to modularity than those between the sexes, and patterns of modularity are equivalent between and within species. Our results strongly indicate that genitalia have been subjected to sex‐specific selection, although male and female genitalia are homologous and functionally associated. Moreover, modular patterns are seemingly constant in the evolutionary history of stink‐bugs, suggesting a scenario of multivariate stabilizing selection within each sex. Our study demonstrates that interactions among genital parts of the same sex may be more fundamental to genital evolution than previously thought.
Comparative taxonomy, phylogeography and population dynamics of Dichelops furcatus and Dichelops melacanthus (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Pentatomidae): an integrative approach The green-belly stink bugs Dichelops spp. (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) are considered emergent pests in different cultivated plants in Brazil. Dichelops furcatus (Fabricius) and Dichelops melacanthus (Dallas) are morphologically similar, and the morphological characteristics are variable within the species, sometimes overlapping between them, bringing into question the species delimitation. Based on wide sampling throughout the whole distribution of Dichelops spp., the goals of this study were: 1) to study the morphological diversity of D. furcatus e D. melacanthus using both traditional and geometric morphometrics, and 2) define tools for the species identification recognized from quantitative morphological data; 3) to study the genetic diversity, population structuring, and the geographical distribution pattern of D. furcatus and D. melacanthus populations in Brazil using molecular data. For that, digital photographs of the main morphological structures (head, pronotum and scutellum) were taken and statistical analysis of traditional and geometric morphometrics were made. DNA from individuals of both species from different populations of Brazil was extracted, and two mitochondrial genes (COI and 16s) were amplified by PCR and sequenced. Results from geometric morphometrics show that shape of pronotum, head and scutellum were strongly overlapping between species, making this method inefficient in separating D. furcatus from D. melacanthus. However, traditional morphometrics was efficient in separating the species. Results showed high genetic diversity and high genetic structuring between populations of both species, supporting the existance of two lineages for D. furcatus and two lineages for D. melacanthus.
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