Review of the genus Microchilus Blanchard (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Rutelinae: Geniatini)
Author
Jameson, Mary Liz
University of Nebraska State Museum Division of Entomology W 436 Nebraska Hall Lincoln, NE 68588 - 0514 U. S. A.
text
Insecta Mundi
2008
2008-01-28
2008
25
1
14
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.4532782
1942-1354
4532782
Microchilus lineatus
Blanchard, 1851
(
Fig. 1-2
,
8-13
,
15, 17, 19, 21-22
, 25)
Microchilus lineatus
Blanchard 1851: 240
.
Type
specimens not examined.
Probably
at Paris. Blanchard’s description provided no indication regarding the number of specimens or gender of specimens used in the original description.
The
only locality information in the original description is “
Brésil
”.
Description.
Length
6.1-7.9 mm
; width at humeri
3.2-4.2 mm
. COLOR: Head, pronotum, scutellum, pygidium, and venter red-brown to castaneous; elytra tan with well-defined or poorly defined longitudinal, castaneous vittae; elytra rarely entirely castaneous. HEAD:
Frons
in lateral view with base and disc flat or weakly convex, punctate; punctures small and moderate in size, moderately dense, some setose; setae minute, tawny. Interocular width of male 5.8-6.7 transverse eye diameters; female 8.1-10.9.
Clypeus
in lateral view with base and disc weakly convex or flat, margins weakly concave; in dorsal view, apex broadly rounded, moderately reflexed. Surface densely punctate, punctures small and moderate in size, some setose; setae minute, tawny.
Mandible
(
Fig. 12
) with poorly developed molar region and poorly developed lamellae. Apex with weakly developed, ventrally produced tooth.
Labrum
(
Fig. 8
) at middle apex with triangular, ventrally-produced tooth.
Maxilla
(
Fig. 10
) with 2 poorly defined ridges; terminal segment of palpus elongate-oval, kidney-shaped, subequal in length to segments 1-3; basistipes with length about 1.5 times width at base.
Male antenna
with club 1.7-1.9 times longer than segments 2-7 combined
(rarely 1.5 times longer than 2-7 segments combined
in specimens in which segments 2-7 are fused).
Fe-
male antenna
with club about 1.3 times longer than
segments 2-7 combined. PRONOTUM: Surface punc-
tate; punctures minute (sparse) to moderate in size
(moderately dense) (except for small area at mid-mar-
gin that is confluent).
Scutellum
with surface mod-
erately densely punctate, punctures moderate in size.
ELYTRON: Surface punctate with weakly to moder-
ately defined striae. Punctures round or ocellate,
small, moderately dense, some setose; setae minute,
tawny. Striae indicated by depressed, punctate line;
punctures round or ocellate, small, moderately dense,
some setose: 2 striae adjacent to suture (neither reach-
ing apex), 4 striae on disc in male (neither reaching
apex; 4-6 striae in female), single stria laterad of
humerus in male (
1-2 in
female). Intervals moder-
ately densely punctate; punctures round or ocellate,
small, moderately dense or occasionally confluent,
some setose; setae minute, tawny. Odd intervals suf-
fused with castaneous color or not.
Elytral sutural
Figure 25.
Distribution of
Microchilus
species.
length
6.9-8.3 times length of scutellum. PYGIDIUM:
Surface convex in lateral view, moderately densely
punctate; punctures on mid-disc irregularly rounded, moderately large, moderately dense; punctures laterally and at margin transversely elongate, moderately large to large, moderately dense (laterally) to confluent (at margin). Apical bead complete. VENTER: Mesosternum not invaginated, not forming a rounded pit.
Base of first sternite
at middle simple, not produced ventrally.
Last sternite of male
at apex with moderately deep to deep emargination (middle of emargination subequal to 1/2 length of sternite or entire length of sternite); middle of emargination rounded. LEGS (
Fig. 11
,
15, 17, 19
):
Male protarsomere I
elongate (about 1.5 times longer than protarsomere II), weakly flattened dorsoventrally; protarsomeres II-III weakly elongate (slightly longer than wide), dorsal surface weakly convex; protarsomere V elongate (subequal to protarsomeres III-IV), subcylindrical (weakly flattened dorsoventrally).
Female protarsomere I
subequal to protarsomeres II-IV combined, shape subcylindrical; protarsomere II moderately elongate (about 1.5 times longer than wide), protarsomeres III-IV weakly elongate (slightly longer than wide), shape nearly subconical; protarsomere V slightly elongate (about 1.5 times longer than protarsomere IV), subcylindrical (weakly flattened dorsoventrally).
Metatrochanter
with apex not produced beyond posterior border of femur.
Male metatibia
with moderately developed, external carina near apical third.
Female metatibia
with poorly developed, external carina in basal third and well developed, external carina near apical third. Inner apical spur about 1/3 length of apical spur in male; 1/3 to 1/2 length of apical spur in female. PARAMERES (
Fig. 21-22
): Shape asymmetrical.
Diagnosis.
Microchilus lineatus
is distinguished from
M. rodmani
by the following characters: second protarsomere elongated in the male (
Fig. 15
) (subequal in width and length in
M. rodmani
[
Fig. 16
]); male metatibia with carinae in apical third (
Fig. 17
) (lacking external carinae in male
M. rodmani
[
Fig. 18
]); female metatibia with carinae in basal third and near apical third (lacking external carinae in female
M. rodmani
); pronotum lacking white, scale-like setae (sparse, white scale-like setae present on pronotum in
M. rodmani
); and form of male parameres (
Fig. 21-22
). Additional characters that separate the species are: mandible with molar region and lamellae poorly developed (moderately developed in
M. rodmani
) and labrum at middle apex with triangular, ventrally-produced tooth (quadrate, ventrally produced tooth in
M. rodmani
).
Distribution
(Fig. 25). Southeastern
Brazil
in the Atlantic Coastal Forest.
Locality Data.
41 specimens
examined from
BMNH
,
CASC
,
CMNC
,
ISNB
,
LACM
,
UCCC
,
UNSM
,
ZMHB
.
BRAZIL
(36).
MINAS GERAIS
(11)
:
Uberaba
(10); no data (1).
PARANA
(3)
:
Ponta Grossa
(3).
SÃO PAULO
(22)
:
Batatais
(2);
Itu
,
Fazenda Pau d’Alho
(1);
Sao José dos Campos
(6); Yporanga (9); no data (4).
NO DATA
(5).
Temporal Data.
January (1), February (2), October (9), November (8), December (2).
Natural History.
Microchilus lineatus
feeds on
Aristida pallens
Cav. (Poaceae)
(
Ohaus 1908
). The species is diurnal and can be found on vegetation during the day (
Ohaus 1900
).
Remarks.
Color variation in
M. lineatus
ranges from reddish-brown to brown, thus overlapping with color in
M. rodmani
. Based on locality information,
M. lineatus
and
M. rodmani
are apparently sympatric in a portion of their range (from Uberaba south to near
São Paulo
).