Nomenclatural changes in American Apomecynini including description of new genera and species (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae)
Author
Santos-Silva, Antonio
Author
Nascimento, Francisco E. de L.
Author
Wappes, James E.
text
Insecta Mundi
2019
2019-07-26
716
716
1
35
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.3677213
e75dd27e-8506-4850-9e05-48101e710bec
1942-1354
3677213
E65684F6-5A77-4970-9BCD-A4CE2971CF8D
Typophaula melancholica
Thomson, 1868
(
Fig. 67–71
)
Typophaula melancholica
Thomson 1868: 152
;
Lacordaire 1872: 604
;
Gemminger 1873: 3101
(cat.);
Aurivillius 1922: 294
(cat.);
Zikán and Zikán 1944: 26
(distr.);
Blackwelder 1946: 598
(checklist);
Breuning 1960: 177
(cat.);
1971: 269
;
Monné and Giesbert 1994: 190
(checklist);
Monné 1994: 17
(cat.);
2005: 313
(cat.);
Morvan and Morati 2006: 41
(distr.);
Monné et al. 2010: 247
(distr.);
Morvan and Roguet 2013: 21
(distr.);
Dalens 2014: 28
(distr.);
Monné 2018: 426
(cat.).
Typophaula dejeani
Thomson 1868: 153
;
1878: 11
(
type
) (nom. nov.).
Adetus tuberosus
Galileo and Martins 2003: 476
;
Monné 2005: 285
(cat.);
Monné and Hovore 2006: 224
(checklist);
Monné et al. 2017: 58
(
holotype
);
Monné 2018: 389
(cat.).
Syn. nov.
Remarks.
Examination of the
holotype
of
Adetus tuberosus
, and comparison with the original description of
Typophaula melancholica
, as well as photograph of the
holotype
of the latter, show that they are the same species. It is worth commenting that the tubercle of the prosternal process reported in the original description of
A. tuberosus
is also one of the most conspicuous features of
T. melancholica
. Also, worth mentioning, is that in the key by
Breuning (1971)
Typophaula
is differentiated from
Adetus
at alternative of couplet 14 (1) as follows: “Saillie prosternale tronquée à son bord postérieur” (Translated: prosternal process truncated at posterior margin).
According to
Monné (2018)
,
T. melancholica
, described from
Brazil
(without exact location) is currently known from
French Guiana
and
Brazil
(
Minas Gerais
,
Espírito Santo
,
Rio de Janeiro
,
São Paulo
).
Adetus tuberosus
was described based on a single specimen from
Brazil
(
Alagoas
). This latter record indicates that the species likely occurs in other Brazilian states along the east coast.