Ebenacobius Haran, a new southern African genus of flower weevils (Coleoptera: Curculioninae: Derelomini) associated with dicotyledonous plants
Author
Haran, Julien
A04E1722-994A-44AD-8FD2-28DC0F220805
CBGP, CIRAD, Montpellier SupAgro, INRAe, IRD, Montpellier University, Montpellier, France.
julien.haran@cirad.fr
Author
Benoit, Laure
61963F74-724B-4174-9E9A-8817A3516B0E
CBGP, CIRAD, Montpellier SupAgro, INRAe, IRD, Montpellier University, Montpellier, France.
Laure.Benoit@cirad.fr
Author
Procheş, Şerban
0ACCE987-9774-453B-A1BA-42E93D75D3C7
Centre for Functional Biodiversity and Discipline of Geography, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa. 4 CBGP, INRAE, CIRAD, IRD, Institut Agro, Univ Montpellier, Montpellier, France.
setapion@gmail.com
Author
Kergoat, Gael J.
D763F7EC-A1C9-45FF-88FB-408E3953F9A8
gael.kergoat@inrae.fr
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2022
2022-05-05
818
1
1
54
http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2022.818.1771
journal article
55593
10.5852/ejt.2022.818.1771
c6f4d05a-7619-4e78-9d1f-f5becd279615
2118-9773
6532969
17950060-6B62-4479-BAF0-473767DC6ADB
Ebenacobius hippopotamorum
Haran
gen. et sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
B47B9BFA-B008-4D25-AC97-14AF75D0C6CA
Figs 3E
,
5G
,
6N
Differential diagnosis
Ebenacobius hippopotamorum
gen. et sp. nov.
can be distinguished by the following combination of features: claws simple, prothorax with two dark bands on each side of the median line, reaching the basal and apical margins of prothorax and elytra with minute setae glabrous in appearance (
Fig. 3E
). This species is closely related to
E. pedi
gen. et sp. nov.
and
E. tsonga
gen. et sp. nov.
, but in these species bands on prothorax are not reaching the apical margin (
Fig. 3C–D
).
Etymology
The species name refers to the location where the recently collected specimens were found: a dry river bank inhabited by a group of hippos that made access to the flowering
Euclea
bush particularly delicate.
Type material
Holotype
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA •
♂
; “Rep. of
South Africa
[REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA].
Mulati
[
Limpopo Province
]
;
10.vii.2018
” “
23°55’12.0″ S
30°50’24.0″ E
;
flowers of
Euclea natalensis
;
J. Haran
leg.;
JHAR01148
” “Holotype;
Ebenacobius hippopotamorum
; Haran 2022”;
SAMC
.
Paratypes
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
–
Limpopo Province
•
1 ♂
,
1 ♀
,
1 spec.
(preserved in ethanol);
Mulati
;
23°55′12.0″ S
,
30°50′24.0″ E
;
10 Jul. 2018
;
J. Haran
leg.;
on flowers of
Euclea natalensis
;
JHAR01148
;
CBGP
•
2 ♀♀
;
SA Wildlife College
,
10 km
from Orpen Gate of KNP
;
24°01′58.3″ S
,
31°11′25.5″ E
;
17 Oct. 2000
;
W. Breytenbach
leg.; collected
along tar road on flowering
Lonchocarpus capassa
(Fabaceae)
;
SANC
.
Description
Male
BODY LENGTH. 2.0–
2.2 mm
.
COLOUR. Body integument pale brown, head reddish-brown; prothorax with 2 longitudinal dark bands on each side of the median line, reaching basal and apical margin of prothorax; dark pattern on elytra forming interstriae 1, 3 and 5 a spots at base longitudinal bands near middle of length; dorsum (prothorax + elytra) with minute recumbent setae, not contiguous, integument glabrous in appearance.
HEAD. Rostrum shorter than prothorax in lateral view, moderately downcurved; underside with a row of setae, as long as 2
nd
segment of funicle, integument forming a small tubercle before apex; in dorsal view covered with short recumbent and non-contiguous setae; antennae inserted near apical 1/4 of length; head capsule coarsely punctate in dorsal view, with minute recumbent whitish setae, shorter than diameter of punctures; eyes convex, exceeding the lateral curve of head capsule in dorsal view; antennal funicle with first segment 1.5 × longer than wide, as long as 2–4, 3–7 wider than long.
PROTHORAX. Wider than long (W:L ratio: 1.30), widest near basal ⅓, slightly narrower there than elytra at humeral angles; sides straight or slightly convex in middle of length, moderately converging apicad, abruptly converging in apical 1/5, apical constriction as long as width of funicle at apex; integument densely punctate, space between punctures smooth, shiny, at most as wide as diameter of punctures; setae of larger punctures shorter than diameter of punctures in the central area; prosternal process absent, integument only raised beyond procoxae.
ELYTRA. Sides slightly convex, widest near middle of length (W:L ratio: 0.70); humeri raised; apex jointly rounded; striae with punctures well aligned, 1.5–2 × narrower than interstriae; interstriae slightly convex, more convex apically, 9 entirely convex; scutellar shield rounded, glabrous.
ABDOMEN. Underside covered with recumbent whitish setae, not contiguous.
LEGS. Profemora strongly thickened near middle of length, forming internal angle beyond middle of length; protibiae with external margin straight, meso- and metatibiae slightly curved outward in apical half; tibiae armed with a small apical mucro, almost indistinct on meso- and metatibiae; claws simple.
TERMINALIA. Body of penis elongate (W:L ratio: 0.33), 0.8 × as long as apodemes; sides subparallel, narrowing apicad in apical ¼ in dorsal view, apex acute; in lateral view curvature slightly stronger in basal half, width expanding from base to apical ¼, narrowing apicad in apical 1/4 (
Fig. 6N
).
Sexual dimorphism
Females can be distinguished from males by their rostrum which is almost straight in lateral view.
Fig. 7.
Habitus in natura, host plants and habitats of
Ebenacobius
Haran
gen. nov.
A
. Habitus of adult of
E. rectirostris
Haran
gen. et sp. nov.
B
. Inflorescence of
Euclea natalensis
A.DC. (Ebenaceae)
, host of
E. rectirostris
.
C
. Biotope of
E. rectirostris
in the Mpumalanga Province of South Africa.
D
. Habitus of adult of
E. san
Haran
gen. et sp. nov.
E
. Inflorescence of
Euclea racemosa
L. (
Ebenaceae
), host of
E. san
.
F
. Biotope of
E. san
in the Western Cape Province of South Africa.
Remarks
One of the female specimens from Orpen Gate of KNP shows a distinctly less downcurved and more elongate rostrum. This divergent phenotype exceeds the variability commonly observed in
Ebenacobius
gen. nov.
and in
Derelomini
in general and could indicate that several closely related species might exist in this species in its current concept.
Life history
Ebenacobius hippopotamorum
gen. et sp. nov.
was collected on flowers of
Euclea natalensis
, which is probably its host plant. This species was collected in sympatry with
E. rectirostris
gen. et sp. nov.
on this plant, although in smaller numbers. Adults were collected in July and October.
Distribution
Republic of South Africa
(
Limpopo Province
).