The
taxon corresponding to the modern family Dinidoridae was originally established by
Stål in 1870 as the subfamily Dinidorida of the family
Pentatomidae. Subsequent authorities such as Lethierry and Severin applied the name Dinidoridae, but in a subfamily sense in spite of the implication of the suffix "-dae". Twentieth century authorities treated the Dinidoridae as a distinct family, which now is the established view. Two subfamilies are generally recognised, the
Dinidorinae and the
Megymeninae. They may be distinguished as follows:
, a typical member of the subfamily Dinidorinae. lists six tribes (and also the unplaced fossil genus †Dinidorites'' Cockerell, 1921) in the two subfamilies:
Dinidorinae The Dinidorinae Stål, 1868 includes the Dinidorini, which comprises tens of species, some with four-segmented and some with five-segmented antennae. ;tribe Amberianini J.A. Lis & Kocorek, 2014 •
Amberiana Distant, 1911 ;tribe Dinidorini Stål, 1868 •
Colpoproctus Stål, 1870 •
Colporidius Lis, 1990 •
Coridiellus Lis, 1990 •
Coridius Illiger, 1807 •
Cyclopelta Amyot & Serville, 1843 •
Dinidor Latreille, 1829 •
Patanocnema Karsch, 1892 •
Sagriva Spinola, 1850 ;tribe Thalmini Nuamah, 1982 The tribe Thalmini contains three species, each in its own genus. All three species have two-segmented tarsi. •
Folengus Distant, 1914 •
Thalma Walker, 1868 •
Urusa Walker, 1868
Megymeninae In the subfamily Megymeninae Amyot & Serville, 1843 the lateral margins of the abdomen and commonly also of the head and pronotum are produced into lobes, tubercles, or spines. In many species the pronotum bears a dorsal
anteromedian tuberosity, or a posterior transverse ridge. In most species the legs are heavily and strongly spined; in others the antennae and legs are setulose. ;tribe Byrsodepsini Kocorek & Lis, 2000 •
Byrsodepsus Stål, 1872 ;tribe Eumenotini Bergroth, 1907 •
Afromenotes Kment & Kocorek, 2014 •
Eumenotes Westwood, 1847 ;tribe Megymenini Amyot & Serville, 1843 •
Doesbergiana Durai, 1987 - monotypic
D. borneoensis Durai, 1987 •
Megymenum Guérin-Méneville, 1831 - several species with expanded pronotal margins and some have reduced
hemelytra and are flightless. In most species the second
valvifers are reduced, lightly sclerotized, and fused mesally. Work continues in establishing the taxonomy of the family in the light of molecular genetics. Current evidence suggests that Dinidoridae is in fact
monophyletic and is a sister group to the
Tessaratomidae. However the monogeneric tribe Eumenotini, including only the monotypic genus
Eumenotes Westwood, had been seen as belonging in the Megymeninae. This however no longer seems defensible. The tribe actually looks closer to the Dinidorinae, but whether it should be assigned to Dinidorinae or to its own subfamily needs separate consideration. ==Biology==