Abstract

The metathoracic scent glands in the Heteroptera produce defence secretions which are spread outside the body through and by using the thoracic external scent efferent system. That complex system was studied in 18 species from 11 genera of four subfamilies, Elvisurinae, Eurygastrinae, Hoteinae and Scutellerinae of the family Scutelleridae (Pentatomoidea). The results have been compared with published data. The pattern of that system is more consistent at the level of genus, mostly very similar in the congeneric species, but mostly variable within higher taxonomic levels, tribes and subfamilies. Five types of the external scent efferent system are recognized within the family Scutelleridae, basic two of them in studied species: (i) peritreme well developed, covering large part of metapleuron, evaporatorium small, developed only on metapleuron, (ii) evaporatorium large, more conspicuous than moderate-sized to small peritreme, extending to mesopleuron as large structure. The results do not support a hypothesis that the system of structures associated externally with metathoracic scent glands is in correlation with type of a habitat. However, these structures are well usable as diagnostic characters for scutellerid genera (e.g. Cantao, Hyperonchus, Scutellera and Solenosthedium).

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