Published February 13, 2026 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Apolygus limbatus

  • 1. Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya nab. 1, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia & All-Russian Institute of Plant Protection, Podbelskogo shosse, 3, Pushkin, St Petersburg, 196608, Russia
  • 2. Department of Entomology, Faculty of Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gory st. 1 bldg 12, Moscow, 119991, Russia

Description

Apolygus limbatus (Fallén, 1807)

Figures 5 C – E, 7 E – H, 9 R – U, 11 A – D, 15 G, 15 H, 18 E, 18 F, 18 I, 18 J, 19 S – V

Lygaeus limbatus Fallén 1807: 85 (original description).

Lygocoris (Apolygus) limbatus Carvalho 1959: 137 (catalogue); Kerzhner and Jaczewski 1964: 720 (key to species, figures of male genitalia); Wagner and Weber 1964: 201 (key to species, figures of male genitalia); Miyamoto et al. 1994: 11 (species list); Vinokurov and Kanyukova 1995: 90 (key to species, figures of male genitalia); Schuh 1995: 798 (catalogue).

Lygocoris limbatus Kulik 1965 a: 46 (species list); Kulik 1974: 12 (species list).

Lygus (Apolygus) limbatus Wagner 1974: 401 (key to species, figures of male genitalia); Kerzhner 1988 b: 805 (key to species).

Apolygus limbatus Kerzhner and Josifov 1999: 65 (catalogue); Seong and Lee 2007: 326 (key to species); Vinokurov et al. 2010 (list of species); Kim and Jung 2016: 597 (key to species); Oh et al. 2018: 10 (species list, key to species); Vinokurov et al. 2024: 247 (catalogue).

For the full list of references see Carvalho (1959), Schuh (1995), Kerzhner and Josifov (1999), Vinokurov et al. (2010), Vinokurov et al. (2024).

Material examined.

Other material. Belarus, Finland, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Mongolia, Poland, Serbia, Russia, Altai Terr., Amur Prov., Arkhangelsk Prov., Bryansk Prov., Irkutsk Prov., Jewish Prov., Khabarovsk Terr., Khanty-Mansi Distr., Leningrad Prov., Magadan Prov., Primorsky Terr., Pskov Prov., Ryazan Prov., Samara Prov., Tula Prov., Yaroslavl Prov., Zabaikalsky Terr. • many ♂♂, ♀♀ (See File S 1).

Diagnosis.

Length in male 4.8–5.4 mm (European form), 5.1–5.5 mm (Asian form), in female 4.7–5.2 mm (European form), 4.9–5.5 mm (Asian form). Head yellow, clypeus entirely or mostly pale brown to dark brown (Fig. 15 G, H); antennal segment I yellow; antennal segment II yellow with pale brown to brown apical half or less, sometimes basal 1 / 3 also pale brown to brown; pronotum yellow sometimes pale brown or brown basally and often with brown to dark brown markings around calli, sometimes mostly brown to dark brown; scutellum varying from uniformly yellow to mostly brown to dark brown with yellow apex; clavus pale brown to dark brown, corium yellow, with brown to dark brown marking posteriorly, usually not reaching embolium, rarely reaching embolium only posteriorly; lateral margin of embolium brown to dark brown; cuneus yellow, brown to dark brown basally, pale apically (Fig. 11 A – D); pleura including metathoracic scent gland evaporative area yellow; legs mostly yellow, at least hind femur with red or brown rings apically, sometimes most part of hind femur with red tinge; tibia yellow with dark brown to black markings at bases of spines and dark brown or red brown marking basally. — Male genitalia. Apical process of right paramere subequal to paramere body (Fig. 19 S – V); sublateral sclerite present, toothed, acute apically; needle-shaped sclerite surpassing secondary gonopore and apex of wing-shaped sclerite, but not reaching apex of ventral sclerite; wing-shaped sclerite with straight outer margin, as wide as lateral sclerite and wider than median sclerite. European form: wing-shaped sclerite ca. 4–5 × as long as wide, needle-shaped sclerite subequal to wing-shaped sclerite (Fig. 18 E, F). Asian form: wing-shaped sclerite ca. 2–3 × as long as wide, distance between wing-shaped sclerite and needle-shaped sclerite apices 0.2–0.3 × as long as needle-shaped sclerite (Fig. 18, J).

Distribution.

Apolygus limbatus can be considered as trans-Palearctic, but it does not live in the southern parts of Russia (Vinokurov et al. 2024). This species is known from the Russian Far East, i. e. Amur, Khabarovsk, Primorsky Territories (Kerzhner 1988 b; Vinokurov et al. 2010) and East Asia, i. e. Korea (Kim and Jung 2016; Oh et al. 2018).

Host plants.

Apolygus limbatus lives on Salix spp. (Kerzhner and Jaczewski 1964; Kulik 1965 a; Kerzhner 1988 b; ZIN), it was also recorded from Populus sp. (Kulik 1965 b, 1974; Wagner 1974).

Notes.

According to Kerzhner and Josifov (1999), Apolygus limbatus is known from Japan, but it is absent in the species list for Japan (Yasunaga 2023).

We found that the specimens identified as A. limbatus have two types of sclerotization in vesica and this corresponds to the distribution: Europe (reaching Ural Mountains) and Asia (Fig. 18 E, F, I, J). The drawing of vesica in the key to the Heteroptera of the European part of the USSR (Kerzhner and Jaczewski 1964) corresponds to the European form. Those groups can represent two separate species; however, we did not find any differences in the shape of the parameres and habitus between them, and the molecular data were insufficient to resolve this problem. More specimens from those groups and nuclear markers should be included in the analysis. Therefore, we refrain from any taxonomic decisions pending additional molecular data. Apolygus limbatus is most similar to A. maackiae in coloration, but the latter differs in the apex of cuneus dark brown to black, yellow outer margin of embolium and yellow legs without reddish tinge. Additionally, in A. maackiae wing-shaped sclerite is absent and its ventral sclerite has needle-shaped outgrowth (Fig. 18 G, H).

Notes

Published as part of Namyatova, Anna A., Dzhelali, Polina A. & Bolshakova, Darya S., 2026, Integrative delimitation of Apolygus (Insecta: Heteroptera: Miridae: Mirinae) species known from Russia with the emphasis on Apolygus lucorum and Apolygus spinolae having trans-Palearctic distribution, pp. 47-93 in Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 84 on pages 47-93, DOI: 10.3897/asp.84.e161376

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Scientific name authorship
Fallen
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Hemiptera
Family
Miridae
Genus
Apolygus
Species
limbatus
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Apolygus limbatus (Fallen, 1807) sec. Namyatova, Dzhelali & Bolshakova, 2026

References

  • Fallén CF (1807) Monographia Cimicum Sveciae. C. G. Proft, Hafniae. 123 pp.
  • Carvalho JCM (1959) A catalogue of the Miridae of the world. Part IV. Arquivos do Museu Nacional, Rio de Janeiro 48: 1–384.
  • Kerzhner IM, Jaczewski TL (1964) Family Isometopidae. Family Miridae (Capsidae). In: Bei-Bienko GY (Ed) Keys to the Insects of the European part of the USSR 1. Nauka, Moscow and Leningrad, 700–765. [In Russian]
  • Wagner E, Weber HH (1964) Hétéroptères Miridae. Fédération Française des Sociétés de sciences naturelles, Paris, 592 pp. [in French]
  • Miyamoto S, Yasunaga T, Saigusa T (1994) Heteroptera from the Russian Far East collected by T. Saigusa in 1990, with descriptions of two new mirine species. Japanese Journal of Entomology 62: 243–251.
  • Vinokurov NN, Kanyukova EV (1995) True bugs (Heteroptera) of Siberia. Nauka, Novosibirsk, 237 pp. [in Russian]
  • Schuh RT (1995) Plant Bugs of the World (Insecta: Heteroptera: Miridae). Systematic Catalog, Host List, and Bibliography. New York Entomological Society, New York, 1329 pp.
  • Kulik SA (1965 a) Blindwanzen Ost Sibiriens und des Fernen Ostens (Heteroptera - Miridae). Acta Faunistica Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae 11: 39–70. [In Russian]
  • Kulik SA (1974) Terrestrial true bugs (Heteroptera) of Eastern Siberia and the Far East. Insect fauna of Eastern Siberia and the Far East. Fauna of insects of the Eastern Siberia and the Far East 12 (2) 3–41. [In Russian]
  • Wagner E (1974) Die Miridae Hahn, 1831, des Mitelmeerraumes und der Makaronesischen Inseln (Hemiptera, Heteroptera). Teil. 1. Entomologische Abhandlungen 37 (suppl.): 1–484.
  • Kerzhner IM (1988 b) Infraorder Cimicomorpha. 21. Family Miridae (Capsidae). In: Ler PA (Ed) Keys to the identification of insects of the Soviet Far East, Vol. 2. Nauka, Leningrad, 778–857. [In Russian]
  • Kerzhner IM, Josifov M (1999) Cimicomorpha II. In: Aukema B, Rieger C (Eds) Catalogueof the Heteroptera of the Palearctic Region 3. Netherlands EntomologicalSociety, Amsterdam, 577 pp.
  • Seong J, Lee S (2007) Taxonomic notes on two Apolygus species (Heteroptera: Miridae: Mirinae) in Korea. Journal of Asia-Pacific Entomology 10 (4): 323–327. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1226-8615 (08) 60370-2
  • Vinokurov NN, Kanyukova EV, Golub VB (2010) Catalogue of the Heteroptera of Asian Part of Russia. Nauka, Novosibirsk, 320 pp. [In Russian]
  • Kim J, Jung S (2016) Two new species of the genus Apolygus China (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae: Mirinae) from the Korean Peninsula, with a key to Korean Apolygus species. Zootaxa 4137 (4): 592–598. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4137.4.12
  • Oh M, Yasunaga T, Duwal RK, Lee S (2018) Annotated checklist of the plant bug tribe Mirini (Heteroptera: Miridae: Mirinae) recorded on the Korean Peninsula, with descriptions of three new species. European Journal of Entomology 115: 467–492. https://doi.org/10.14411/eje.2018.048
  • Vinokurov NN, Gapon DA, Golub VB, Zinovyeva AN, Kanyukova EV, Konstantinov FV (2024) Gapon DA (Ed) Catalogue of the Heteroptera of the European part of Russia and Ural. Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, St Petersburg, 792 pp. [In Russian]
  • Kulik SA (1965 b) New species of capsid-bugs (Heteroptera, Miridae) from East Siberia and from the Far East. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal 44: 1497–1505. [In Russian]
  • Yasunaga T (2023) Descriptions of twenty-three new mirine species from Japan, with a key to genera of the tribe Mirini, updating the Japanese fauna (Hemiptera: Miridae: Mirinae). Tijdschrift voor Entomologie 166 (1): 1–116. https://doi.org/10.1163/22119434-bja10024