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
History of
Cryphalini Classification
The first mention of
Cryphalini
as a group name was by Lindemann in 1877. The group-concept was much broader, including
Pityophthorus
Eichhoff, 1864
,
Hypoborus
Erichson, 1836
,
Hylocurus
Eichhoff, 1872
, and
Xyloctonus
Eichhoff, 1872
, all of which are currently placed in separate tribes.
Eichhoff described many of the contemporary genera, plus several which are now junior synonyms (
Eichhoff 1878a
). Most contemporary
Cryphalini
genera were classified in ‘Cryphalidae’ which was a much narrower concept than previously described, containing the known
Cryphalini
genera (except
Eidophelus
Eichhoff, 1876
) plus
Hypoborus
and
Liparthrum
Wollaston, 1854 (Hypoborini)
and what is now the genus
Pityoborus
Blackman, 1922 (Corthylini)
. Other groups, such as contemporary
Micracidini
LeConte, 1876
and
Xyloctonini Eichhoff, 1878
, were explicitly described as different tribes.
This approximate group concept of
Cryphalini
remained until Hopkins presented a major reclassification of
Scolytinae
in 1915, with a group ‘Cryphalinae’ in an even broader sense including the contemporary tribes
Xyleborini
and some genera in the current
Dryocoetini
Lindemann, 1877
and
Corthylini
LeConte, 1876
. Most of the contemporary
Cryphalini
are contained in Hopkins ‘Division I, Subdivision A’, a group described based on the
type
of vestiture (‘with scales, rarely with hairs’) and the pattern of asperities along the anterior margin of the pronotum. The characters used to describe and diagnose the genera within the
Cryphalini
include the presence of distinct elytral strial punctures, the shape of the lateral margins of the pronotum, the degree to which the pronotum was produced, the apex of the elytra, and most importantly, the morphology of the antennae.
Eidophelus
was considered in a different subdivision with
Dendroterus
Blandford, 1904
and some other genera now placed in
Dryocoetini
.
Balachowsky (1949)
presented a clarified classification of bark beetles which reflects most contemporary tribes. While restricted to the fauna of
France
, it clearly described
Cryphalini
as different from
Hypoborini
.
Wood (1954)
evaluated the North American
Cryphalini
genera and species, representing the contemporary scope of the tribe for the region. Two additional genera from
East Asia
were described by
Nobuchi (1981)
, inferred partly by new sets of characters from the proventriculus (
Nobuchi 1969
). While these alone enabled identification of most scolytine genera, they were not widely adopted as a diagnostic set of characters.
Schedl was a major contributor to
Cryphalini
systematics. While very prolific in describing new species, his classification of
Cryphalini
did not settle any of the considerable confusion and his nomenclatural practices were not consistently valid (see
Wood and Bright 1992
). Schedl described five genera in the contemporary
Cryphalini
, but four of these are now regarded as junior synonyms.
The most recent treatment of
Cryphalini
was
Wood’s (1986a)
review of all scolytine tribes and genera. In this review,
Cryphalini
was diagnosed based on the combination of the ascending costal margin of the elytra, by the base of the elytra that is unarmed (or rarely armed with a continuous line, not crenulations), by the declivous (steeply sloped) pronotum usually armed with serrations and asperities, by the concealed head when viewed dorsally, by the eye that is ‘usually’ entire and ‘less commonly emarginated’, by the antennal funicle with no more than five segments, by the antennal club which is ‘strongly flattened’ and never truncate, by the lateral margins of the pro- and mesotibiae armed with denticles, and by the metanepisternum which has a posterior margin concealed by the elytron.
Wood and Bright brought significant order to the chaos of the classification of
Scolytinae
as a whole, including
Cryphalini
. Many genera were synonymized, and a small number was described. Their compilation of the catalogs (
Wood and Bright 1987
;
Wood and Bright, 1992
) is a milestone in scolytine systematics and provides a very useful starting point for taxonomic reviews.
Allothenemus
Bright and Torres, 2006
was subsequently described. During the final stages of this manuscript preparation, four further genera were described in
Cryphalini
:
Atomothenemus
Bright, 2019
,
Microsomus
Bright, 2019
,
Pygmaeoborus
Bright, 2019
, and
Trypolepis
Bright, 2019
.