On the Phytophagous Scarabs of the Subfamilies Dynastinae, Rutelinae, and Melolonthinae from the Schouten Islands (Kepulauan Biak), Indonesian Papua (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
Author
Prokofiev, Artem M.
text
Species Diversity
2016
2016-05-25
21
71
77
journal article
10.12782/sd.21.1.071
2189-7301
5737668
8C100709-5B8B-42CB-BF9E-60B6F55F6045
Engertia amboinae
(
Brenske, 1897
)
Phila amboinae
Brenske, 1897: 111
.
Material.
1 female
,
Indonesia
,
Papua, Yapen I
.,
northern coast,
Rosbori village
, at light,
14.11
.2012, A
. M
. Prokofiev leg
.; 1 isolated elyton, Miosindi Islet between
Biak
and
Yapen Is
., on sea coast,
15.11.2012
, A
. M
. Prokofiev leg.
Remarks.
Five known species of
Engertia
Dalla Torre, 1912
are distributed in the
Philippines
,
Sri Lanka
, southern
Moluccas
, and New
Guinea
(
Keith 2006
). Surprisingly, the Schouten specimens represent not
E. papuana
(Moser, 1913)
known from the main island of New
Guinea
, but
E. amboinae
which has been known hitherto only from
Ambon
I. (
Keith 2006
). The females of
E. amboinae
can be distinguished easily from those of
E. papuana
by the shape and density of the scales on the elytra which are larger, ovate, and more numerous and more closely packed in contrast to the sparse lanceolate scales of
E. papuana
(
Figs 1–2
). Both Schouten specimens agree well in this character with the
type
of
E. amboinae
(
cf.
Keith 2006
). The third Indo-Australian species of this genus,
E. setifera
(Moser, 1913)
, can be easily distinguished by the presence of setae instead of scales on the elytra (
Fig. 3
). The Yapen I. and Miosindi Islet records greatly extend the known distribution of this species, which is probably widely distributed in eastern
Indonesia
.