D0730 A revision of the New World sharpshooter genus Xyphon Hamilton (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Cicadellinae)

Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Grand Exhibit Hall (Town and Country Hotel and Convention Center)
Therese A. Catanach , Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservatoin, University of Illinois, Champaign, IL
Christopher H. Dietrich , Illinois Natural History Survey, University of Illinois, Champaign, IL
James B. Woolley , Department of Entomology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
The leafhopper genus Xyphon is a widely distributed group of insects whose species are vectors for various plant diseases. Xyphon has historically contained up to 9 species. These species have been poorly delimited in the past and their identification has been difficult using published keys. A new species level phylogenetic assessment is presented here. This revision of the genus Xyphon is based on the examination of approximately 8,000 specimens and includes a phylogenetic analysis of the genus that includes data from one gene (NDI) and 47 morphological characters. A generalized model of each preliminary taxonomic unit was used to test the monophyly of each species. These tests resulted in the synonomization of 4 former species: Xyphon gillettei to include X. balli; and X. reticulatum to include X. diductum, X. dyeri, and X. sagittiferum. Parsimony and Bayesian techniques were used to infer relationships among species. These analyses resulted in almost identical tree topologies. In all analyses Xyphon was monophyletic and Draeculacephala was its sister genus although clade support for the genus was generally low. The analyses found that X. flaviceps and X. fulgidum form a basal clade within Xyphon, above which X. gillettei and X. n. sp. 1 (new species 1) form a clade that is sister to a third clade containing X. triguttatum, X. nudum, and X. reticulatum.

doi: 10.1603/ICE.2016.52671