. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Entomology. THE GREEN LACEWINGSOFTHE WORLD: A GENERIC REVIEW (NEUROPTERA: CHRYSOPIDAE) 261 561. Figs 561-566 Pimachrysa. 561, P. nigra; 562-566, P. fusca. 561, fore wing; 562, apex of 3 abdomen, lateral; 563, apex of 9 abdomen, lateral; 564, 6 genitalia, dorsal; 565, 9 spermatheca, lateral; 566, 9 subgenitale, ventral. not fused with sternite 9; 6: microtholi absent; sternite 8+9 fused; apodemes absent; 9: spiracle on segment 8 opens on sternite; sternite 7 straight apically. GENTALIA 6 (Figs 557, 558). Tignum, gonapsis and median plate absent


. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Entomology. THE GREEN LACEWINGSOFTHE WORLD: A GENERIC REVIEW (NEUROPTERA: CHRYSOPIDAE) 261 561. Figs 561-566 Pimachrysa. 561, P. nigra; 562-566, P. fusca. 561, fore wing; 562, apex of 3 abdomen, lateral; 563, apex of 9 abdomen, lateral; 564, 6 genitalia, dorsal; 565, 9 spermatheca, lateral; 566, 9 subgenitale, ventral. not fused with sternite 9; 6: microtholi absent; sternite 8+9 fused; apodemes absent; 9: spiracle on segment 8 opens on sternite; sternite 7 straight apically. GENTALIA 6 (Figs 557, 558). Tignum, gonapsis and median plate absent; entoprocessus large, linear; parameres absent; gonarcus arcuate, narrow with short, medio-lateral horns; arcessus short, narrow, tapering apically, curved medially at 90°; gonosaccus short; gonosetae few, short, evenly distributed; gonocristae and spinellae absent. Genitalia 9 (Figs 559, 560). Praegenitale absent; subgenitale bilobed apically, tapered slightly basally; spermatheca large, broad; ventral impression very broad, deep; vela very short; duct short, curved. Remarks. Pamochrysa may be distinguished from other nothochrysine genera by the rhomboidal intramedian cell since im is quadrangular in other Nothochrysinae. The genus is probably closely related to Kimochrysa with which it shares the apomorphy of having Sc and C fused in the hind wing. Pamochrysa and Pimachrysa are the only genera in the Chrysopidae in which a spiracle (on tergite 8 in females) opens on a tergite, in all other genera the spiracles open on the lateral. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original British Museum (Natural History). London : BM(NH)


Size: 1579px × 1582px
Photo credit: © Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorbritishmuseumnaturalhistory, bookcentury1900, bookcoll