Hermatobates

Summary

Hermatobates is a genus of wingless marine bugs placed as the sole genus in the family Hermatobatidae that are sometimes known as coral-treaders. They are quite rare and known only from coral reefs in the Indo-Pacific region. During low tide, they move over the water surface not unlike the more familiar water-striders around coral atolls and reefs and stay submerged in reef crevices during high tide.

Hermatobates
Illustration of H. djiboutensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Suborder: Heteroptera
Infraorder: Gerromorpha
Superfamily: Gerroidea
Family: Hermatobatidae
Poisson, 1965
Genus: Hermatobates
Carpenter, 1892
Type species
Hermatobates haddoni
Carpenter, 1892

The genus was described by the amateur entomologist Rev. George Carpenter in 1892 on the basis of a single specimen obtained from Mabuiag Island in the Torres Straits by Alfred Cort Haddon. The species was described as H. haddoni. The species are very rare and difficult to observe in life. Most subsequent specimens in the genus have been captured using neuston drag nets, sometimes with artificial lights at night. They are differentiated from the striders in the Gerridae by the presence of three tarsal segments on all the legs and with pre-apical claws only on the fore-tarsi. The pronotum is short while the meso- and metanotum are fused.[1][2]

Species edit

At least 13 species are known:[3]

  • Hermatobates armatus Andersen & Weir, 2000
  • Hermatobates bredini Herring, 1965
  • Hermatobates djiboutensis Coutiere & Martin, 1901
  • Hermatobates haddoni Carpenter, 1892
  • Hermatobates hawaiiensis China, 1957[4]
  • Hermatobates kula J. Polhemus & D. Polhemus, 2006
  • Hermatobates lingyangjiaoensis Luo, Chen, Wang & Xie, 2019[5]
  • Hermatobates marchei Coutiere & Martin, 1901
  • Hermatobates palmyra J. Polhemus & D. Polhemus, 2012
  • Hermatobates schuhi J. Polhemus & D. Polhemus, 2012
  • Hermatobates singaporensis Cheng, 1976[6]
  • Hermatobates tiarae Herring, 1965
  • Hermatobates weddi China, 1957

References edit

  1. ^ Cheng, L.; Yang, C.M.; Andersen, N.M. (2001). "Guide to the aquatic Heteroptera of Singapore and Peninsular Malaysia> I. Gerridae and Hermatobatidae" (PDF). The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 49 (1): 129–148.
  2. ^ Herring, J. L. (1965). "Hermatobates. a new generic record for the Atlantic Ocean, with descriptions of new species (Hemiptera: Gerridae)". Proc. U.S. Natl. Mus. 117 (3510): 123-129. doi:10.5479/si.00963801.117-3510.123.
  3. ^ Polhemus, J. T.; Polhemus, D. A. (2012). "A Review of the Genus Hermatobates (Heteroptera: Hermatobatidae), with Descriptions of Two New Species". Entomologica Americana. 118 (1): 202–241. doi:10.1664/12-ra-018.1. S2CID 85287005.
  4. ^ China, W.E. (1956). "XXXVIII.—A new species of the genus Hermatobates from the Hawaiian Islands (Hemiptera-Heteroptera, Gerridae, Halobatinae)". Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 9 (101): 353–357. doi:10.1080/00222935608655822.
  5. ^ Luo, Jiuyang; Chen, Pingping; Wang, Yanhui; Xie, Qiang (2019). "First record of Hermatobatidae from China, with description of Hermatobates lingyangjiaoensis sp. n. (Hemiptera: Heteroptera)". Zootaxa. 4679 (3): 527–538. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4679.3.6. PMID 31715949. S2CID 207939379.
  6. ^ Cheng, Lanna (1976). "A new species of Hermatobates (Hemiptera: Heteroptera)". The Pan-Pacific Entomologist. 52: 209–212.