Revision of the Bark Beetle Genera Within the Former Cryphalini (Curculionidae: Scolytinae)
Author
Johnson, Andrew J.
School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611,
andrewjavanjohnson@gmail.com
Author
Hulcr, Jiri
School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611,
Author
Knížek, Miloš
Department of Forest Protection Service, Forestry and Game Management Research Institute, Strnady, Jíloviště, Praha 5, Zbraslav CZ- 15600, Czechia,
Author
Atkinson, Thomas H.
Texas Natural History Collections, Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712,
Author
Mandelshtam, Michail Yu.
Department of Forest Protection, Wood Science and Game Management, Saint-Petersburg State Forest Technical University named after S. M. Kirov, Institutskii per., 5, 194021 Saint-Petersburg, Russia,
Author
Smith, Sarah M.
Department of Entomology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824,
Author
Cognato, Anthony I.
Department of Entomology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824,
Author
Park, Sangwook
Research Institute of Forest Insect Diversity, Namyangju 12113, South Korea,
Author
Li, You
School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611,
Author
Jordal, Bjarte H.
University Museum of Bergen, University of Bergen, P. O. 7800, 5020 Bergen, and
text
Insect Systematics and Diversity
2020
2020-05-31
4
3
1
1
81
journal article
22148
10.1093/isd/ixaa002
be792f86-9e77-414c-9e2f-767704ff704e
2399-3421
3826789
Microcosmoderes
Johnson and Jordal
gen. nov.
(
Fig. 20
)
(LSID:
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
9503C4F2-A4A1-4BAB-9EB6- 8C5061CD118A
)
Type of genus
Ptilopodius shoreae
Schedl, 1953: 293
.
Diagnosis
Microcosmoderes
can be diagnosed from other Trypophloeini genera by the rounded apical margin of the pronotum (without marginal asperities), by the males with fully developed wings, the proventriculus with a very long and saw-toothed apical plate, a cylindrical third tarsal segment, and the antennal club with one faint suture.
Female
Eye very weakly emarginated. Frons with a transverse, short, barely visible carina just below level of eyes. Cuticle behind eyes with weakly visible striations. Antennae with four funicle segments. Antennal club flattened and round; posterior face with a single, weakly indicated procurved suture; anterior face with a transverse suture near base. Anterior margin of the pronotum smooth, numerous asperities behind margin towards a slightly elevated summit. Pronotal disc coarsely punctured near to summit; a weakly visible carina at the base of the lateral margin only. Elytra convex, without distinct sculpturing. Interstrial bristles slightly flattened and spatulashaped. Interstrial ground vestiture absent. Proventriculus: apical plate longer than posterior plate, without median suture, with about 15 recurved sharp edges containing many small sharp teeth; closing teeth branched at tips, femoral teeth long and abundant.
Male
Similar to female with no apparent external sexual dimorphism. Penis apodemes of a similar length or longer than penis body, separated at apex. Tegmen open dorsally, with a median ventral apodeme nearly as long as penis apodemes. Spiculum gastrale slightly thicker than penis apodemes, with a weak fork. Basal sclerites visible.
Distribution
Peninsular
Malaysia
to Borneo.
Etymology
The name is composed by the Latinized form of Greek adjective
mikros
, meaning small, and the name of the related genus
Cosmoderes
in reference its morphological similarity to this genus. Gender masculine.
Figure 19.
Images of
Macrocryphalus oblongus
: Dorsal and lateral photographs of A) male and B) female, D) Antennae of female, and D) aedeagus.
Remarks
Monotypic.
Microcosmoderes
was previously determined as a
Ptilopodius
(=
Eidophelus
) sp. following Wood’s key to genera and used with that designation (
Jordal and Cognato 2012
,
Pistone et al. 2018
). The biology of this genus is not known; the species was found in a small twig.
Browne (1961)
notes that the species is inbreeding (similar to
Hypothenemus
), but we studied a male which had functional eyes and wings which suggest that males disperse and mate outside the parental gallery (typical of an outbreeding species). Based on Browne’s inferred habits of this species (
Browne 1961
), it is likely that it feeds gregariously, a trait correlated with, but not limited to, inbreeding in bark beetles (
Kirkendall 1983
,
Jordal and Cognato 2012
,
Johnson et al. 2018
).
Type material examined
Holotype
of
Ptilopodius shoreae
Schedl, 1953
(
BMNH
).
Included species
Microcosmoderes shoreae
(
Schedl, 1953b: 293
)
(
Ptilopodius
)
comb. nov.
[
Ptilopodius
].