A New Cixiid Fossil Genus of the Tribe Acrotiarini from Mid-Cretaceous Burmese Amber (Insecta, Hemiptera, Fulgoromorpha)

Simple Summary Many fossil planthoppers (Hemiptera: Fulgoromorpha) have been recently described from Burmese amber. Most belong to extinct families already well known or newly described, but few are related to existing families and for which these fossils will prove to be very useful for future molecular calibration analyzes. Here, we describe a new fossil genus of the extant Cixiidae family that we place into the recently described fossil tribe Acrotiarini. A new key to genera identification of Acrotiarini is proposed. Allowing the description for the first time of the male genitalia of Acrotiarini, this new fossil genus broadens the knowledge of the fossil tribe, and it underlines the already great diversity of the Cixiidae in the Cretaceous. Abstract A new Burmese amber genus Maculixius gen. nov. with its type species Maculixius jiewenae sp. nov. is described in the planthopper family Cixiidae. This new genus is unique in Burmese Cixiidae by its forewing venation, with Pcu and A1 merging in the middle of clavus, the late bifurcation of ScP+R slightly after this level, and the early CuA forking well before this level. Although the head capsule is missing, it belongs to the recently described tribe Acrotiarini, based on the pentacarinated mesonotum and the distinctly arched RA on forewing with cell C1 wider submedially than apically. Morphological characteristics of Acrotiarini are discussed, and a key to identification of Acrotiarini genera is provided. The new taxon broadens the knowledge of the tribe, and it underlines the already great diversity of the family in the Cretaceous.

Among them, the family Cixiidae Spinola, 1839 is the largest family in Fulgoromorpha, existing at least since the Cretaceous [2]. It is currently divided into 19 tribes with nearly 250 genera and some 2500 species worldwide [21]. The fossil tribe Acrotiarini Bourgoin & Luo, 2021  In this study, a fourth genus, Maculixius gen. nov., with a new species, M. jiewenae sp. nov., from Burmese amber in Acrotiarini is described. The characteristics to separate all known genera in Acrotiarini and a key to their identification are provided and discussed. Particularly, the male genitalia is described for the first time in Acrotiarini.

Materials and Methods
The specimen was collected in Hukawng Valley, Kachin State, northern Myanmar. This Burmese amber is documented from the Cenomanian period of the mid-Cretaceous as 98.79 ± 0.62 Ma based on U-Pb dating of zircons [22]. The amber specimen was observed with an Olympus SZX7 microscope, photographed with a Leica M205FA stereoscopic microscope, and processed with the software Heliconfocus. Measurements were conducted using the software LAS X connected to the Leica M205FA stereoscopic microscope. Line drawings were drawn using Coreldraw 2019. Terminologies follow Bourgoin et al. [23] for the forewing venation, Luo et al. [2] for the hindwing venation, and Bourgoin [24] for the male genitalia. The metatibiotarsal formula (t-st)/sI/sII corresponds to the number of lateral teeth (t) on the metatibia, the number of apical spines (st) on the metatibia, the number of apical spines (sI) on metatarsomere I, and the number of apical spines (sII) on metatarsomere II.

Systematic Paleontology
Order: Hemiptera Linnaeus,  Diagnosis: This new genus is unique in Acrotiarini by the following combined characters on forewing: RP with 3 terminals; Pcu and A1 fused in the middle of clavus; the fusion of Pcu and A1 earlier than the first bifurcation of ScP+R but later than the first bifurcation of CuA.
Etymology: The name is the combination of Latin word "macula" meaning spot, and the genus name "Cixius", the type genus of the family Cixiidae, referring to the distinctive multi-spotted pattern on the forewing of the species. The gender is masculine.

Description:
Condition of head, prothorax, and forelegs unknown (specimen damaged) ( Figure 1).  Etymology. The new species is named after Mrs Dan Zuo's daughter, Jiewen Zhao. As the donator of the type specimen, her mother hopes that this honor will promote Jiewen's interests in natural history.   Wings. Tegmen 8.01 mm long from base to the apex, 3.28 mm wide in widest part; tegmen with 9 distinct blackish irregular large spots ( Figures 1A, 2A, and 3A): 4 roughly symmetrically distributed on each side of CuA at base of costal area and base of clavus, middle of clavus and mid-part of MP; 2 anteriorly to ScP vein and RA1 vein; 2 more, paler, along the apical margin, respectively on the end of RP2 and among the apex of MP2 and MP3 ; the 9th spot at apex of clavus continued with a fuscous band reaching MP anteriorly to nodal line.
Male terminalia. Pygofer in lateral view 1.00 mm high, 0.72 mm wide in its widest part, posterior margin with 2 convexities, the middle one larger than the one in upper 1/3 ( Figures 2D and 3D); anal tube long, arcuately decurved in apical 1/3 in lateral view (Figure 3D); periandrium long, slightly shorter than anal tube, tubular, bearing distally a thin sclerotized spine (1) curved upward on its dorsal left side ( Figure 3D); aedeagus s.s. asymmetrical, with flagellum (fg) recurved dorsoanteriorly, more or less straight and unarmed, bearing several long and strong sclerotized spines pointing anteriorly: a shorter and thinner one (2) slightly basal on right side, a long one apically recurved downward one (3) passing on right side of the periandrium, a shorter one (4) placed on the left side of the Forewing. More or less rectangular with anterior and posterior margins almost parallel ( Figure 1A); posterior margin almost straight, not bent at the apex of clavus ( Figure 1A); apical margin regularly rounded ( Figure 1A); about 2.5 times as long as wide in midline; veins without visible setae but small setae insertions visible and regularly spaced on RP, MP, and CuA 1 before the nodal line (Figures 2A and 3A); peripheral membrane transversally wrinkled, vanishing after apex of clavus (Figures 2A and 3A); pterostigma absent, peripherical membrane slightly widened at its level (Figures 2A and 3A); clavus open, apex at about 2/3 of tegmen length (Figures 2A and 3A); basal cell about 2.5 times as long as wide; ScP+R nearly parallel to costal margin, leaving basal cell in a common long stem and forking late in veins ScP+RA and RP at the basal 1/3 of tegmen after the level of Pcu and A1 fusion ( Figure 3A); C1 long and wider at the nodal line level, distinctly anteriorly arched after forking of ScP and RA ( Figure 3A); RA with 2 terminals ( Figure 3A); RP reaching apical margin with 3 terminals ( Figure 3A); ir between RA 2 and unforked part of RP ( Figure 3A); stem MP emerging from basal cell at almost the same point as ScP+R, firstly forked to MP 1+2 and MP 3+4 at nodal line level; MP 1+2 short, forked again at apical 2/3 of tegmen, MP 1 sinuate and MP 2 nearly straight; MP 3+4 long, forking at subapical line, MP 3 simple, MP 4 miming proximally a transverse vein touching CuA 1 before running parallel to MP 3 ( Figure 3A); rp-mp1+2 and mp-cua1 at nodal line level ( Figure 3A); transverse ir, distal rp-mp1, the 2 im and proximal part of MP 4 more or less aligned in a subapical line ( Figure 3A); stem CuA short, forked early at basal 1/4 of tegmen, well before ScP+R forking and Pcu-A1 merging levels; CuA 1 long and slightly sinuate ( Figure 3A); CuA 2 simple and straight ( Figure 3A); CuP straight, reaching apical 1/3 of tegmen; Pcu and A1 fused nearly half length of clavus ( Figure 3A); Pcu+A1 stem reaching margin before CuP apex: clavus open ( Figure 3A); cell C1 of acrotiarinian type ( Figure 3A); C3 longer and wider than C2 ( Figure 3A); C3a short, basally triangular ( Figure 3A); C4 almost as long as C3 ( Figure 3A); C5 probably closed after the nodal line by cua1-cua2 but not visible on the fossil ( Figure 3A).
Legs. Middle leg slender, with femur probably flattened ( Figure 1B); hind leg slender ( Figure 1B); metatibia apparently without lateral spine, with a wide and strong row of 6 apical teeth.
Male terminalia. In lateral view, pygofer higher than wide, posterior margin sinuate, with a short medioventral process ( Figure 3D); anal tube long with apical part curved ventrally, covering aedeagus apex (Figures 2D and 3D); periandrium long, tubular with a distal spine-like process on left side (Figures 2D and 3D); aedeagus asymmetric with a recurved dorsal flagellum bearing spine-like strong processes (Figures 2D and 3D); gonostyli as long as pygofer in lateral view, ending in a more or less dorsally curved quadrangular formation and bearing a small spine-like process on its anterodorsal margin ( Figures 2D and 3D). Etymology. The new species is named after Mrs Dan Zuo's daughter, Jiewen Zhao. As the donator of the type specimen, her mother hopes that this honor will promote Jiewen's interests in natural history. Wings. Tegmen 8.01 mm long from base to the apex, 3.28 mm wide in widest part; tegmen with 9 distinct blackish irregular large spots ( Figures 1A, 2A and 3A): 4 roughly symmetrically distributed on each side of CuA at base of costal area and base of clavus, middle of clavus and mid-part of MP; 2 anteriorly to ScP vein and RA 1 vein; 2 more, paler, along the apical margin, respectively on the end of RP 2 and among the apex of MP 2 and MP 3 ; the 9th spot at apex of clavus continued with a fuscous band reaching MP anteriorly to nodal line.
Male terminalia. Pygofer in lateral view 1.00 mm high, 0.72 mm wide in its widest part, posterior margin with 2 convexities, the middle one larger than the one in upper 1/3 ( Figures 2D and 3D); anal tube long, arcuately decurved in apical 1/3 in lateral view ( Figure 3D); periandrium long, slightly shorter than anal tube, tubular, bearing distally a thin sclerotized spine (1) curved upward on its dorsal left side ( Figure 3D); aedeagus s.s. asymmetrical, with flagellum (fg) recurved dorsoanteriorly, more or less straight and unarmed, bearing several long and strong sclerotized spines pointing anteriorly: a shorter and thinner one (2) slightly basal on right side, a long one apically recurved downward one (3) passing on right side of the periandrium, a shorter one (4) placed on the left side of the periandrium, and probably a 5th short antero-dorsal one (5) at the base of the flagellum ( Figure 3D); in lateral view, gonostyli medially thinner, dorsal margin bearing setae proximally, apically developed in a wide dorsal plate with its anterior margin bearing a short tooth-like process, dorsal margin almost straight, posteroventral margin widely convex ( Figures 2D and 3D).

Discussion
With a pentacarinated mesonotum, this new genus can be directly placed into the pentastirinian lineage [2] that groups the Pentastirini, Mnemosynini, and the Acrotiarini tribes. The tegmen, with the RA distinctly arched with cell C1 much wider submedially than apically, allows us to place this genus in Acrotiarini. Unfortunately, the loss of the head capsule prevents checking for the presence of the characteristics of paired submedian frontal carinae surrounding dorsally a slightly more elevated area and the straight frontoclypeal suture observed in the other Acrotiarini taxa. With other Acrotiarini genera, Maculixius shares the absence of a pterostigmal sclerotized plate; setiferous veins (although distinctly less dense in this new genus); the regular cixiid venation of the hindwing; the lack of lateral metatibial teeth and the distal ones strong, of subequal length; and absence of diastema. From the three other Acrotiarini genera already known, it differs by a plesio-morphic RP with 3 terminals, a late forking of stem ScP+R beyond the merging of Pcu+A1, and the more unusual early forking of CuA well before the level of Pcu and A1 merging on forewing.
A new identification key to Acrotiarini genera is provided accordingly: Maculixius is the first male specimen known for the fossil tribe Acrotiarini. If, by chance, the specimen provides some details on the male genital structures for the tribe, the significant disparity and diversity of these structures existing in the current Pentastirini species [25] prevents us from suggesting any of these characteristics as diagnostic for the tribe. It remains however important to note: a long and tubular anal tube produced ventrodistally in lateral view, a long and tubular periandrium, and a typical recurved aedeagus with a long tubular flagellum, flanked by long sclerotized spines.

Conclusions
Numerous planthopper fossils remain to be described from Burma ambers, particularly within Cixiidae, for which, unfortunately, a better classification system and a solid phylogenetic frame allowing interpretation of the evolution of the family, are still missing. The new genus described broadens the knowledge of the tribe and underlines the already great diversity of the Cixiidae in the Cretaceous while it also expands our knowledge about their disparity. While providing additional morphological characters of the male genitalia, described for the first time here, which could help to place the tribe with more certainty relative to extant lineages of Cixiidae, it is also an additional landmark for future fossil calibration dating in molecular approaches.
Institutional Review Board Statement: Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement:
No new data were created or analyzed in this study. Data sharing is not applicable to this article.