Revision of the endemic Madagascan stag beetle genus Ganelius Benesh, and description of a new, related genus (Coleoptera: Lucanidae: Lucaninae: Figulini)
Author
Paulsen, M. J.
Systematic Research Collections University of Nebraska State Museum W 436 Nebraska Hall Lincoln, NE 68588 - 0546
mjpaulsen@unl.edu
text
Insecta Mundi
2017
2017-12-29
2017
592
1
16
journal article
55466
10.5281/zenodo.5169525
4910761a-706e-4f53-a5a8-6c72379bdbc6
1942-1354
5169525
DA6CBFE5-927E-45B6-9D05-69AC97AF7B76
Ganelius oberndorferi
(Nonfried)
Nigidius oberndorferi
Nonfried 1892: 118
(original combination)
Nigidius passaliformis
Benesh, 1943: 44
(original combination),
new synonymy
Type material.
Neotype
male of
Nigidius oberndorferi
Nonfried
(
Fig. 5
),
MNHN
,
here designated,
labeled (
Fig. 7
): a) “
Madagascar
/ en|au Nossi Bé / Dr. Sicard”; b) on red paper “
Nigidius
/
oberndorferi
♂
/
Nonfried, 1892
/
NEOTYPE
/ des. M.J. Paulsen 2017”; b) “
Ganelius
/
oberndorferi
/ (
Nonfried, 1892
) / det.
M.J. Paulsen
2017”
.
Holotype
female of
Nigidius passaliformis
Benesh
, Museum of Comparative Zoology, labeled: a) handwritten, “West Africa / coll. Harvard”; b) handwritten, “
Eudora
/
passaliformis
/ (Benesh)
”; c) on red paper, “HoloTYPE /
B. Benesh
”; d) on red paper, “M.C.Z. / Type / 25913”; e) handwritten, “
Nigidius
/
passaliformis
/ Benesh”; f) on orange paper, “Allotype” (sic); g) “
H. Bomans
det. 196 [72] / [=
♀
Ganelius
/
madagascariensis
/ Cast.]”; h) handwritten, “Origin certainly / inaccurate – / This insect seen only in
Madagascar
/ !!”. Images studied (
Perkins 2010
)
.
Figures 5–8.
Ganelius oberndorferi
(
Nonfried, 1892
)
.
5)
Male neotype, dorsal habitus.
6)
Female, dorsal habitus.
7)
Neotype labels.
8)
Male genitalia, flagellum, 41 mm.
Non-type material
(
Fig. 34
).
MADAGASCAR:
ANTSIRANANA
:
Ambanja
(
2♂
,
1♀
;
MNHN
)
;
Ambilobe (
1♂
,
MNHN
)
;
“Ambodinadiro” (
Fort Ambodimadiro
,
Passandava Bay
) (
1♂
,
1♀
;
MHNG
)
;
Ankarana
(
1♂
;
MNHN
)
;
Nosy Be
(
1♂
,
3♀
;
MNHN
).
MAHAJANGA
:
Forêt d’Anobohazo
(
1♂
MJPC
).
TOAMASINA
:
Maroantsetra
(
1♂
,
2♀
;
IRSNB
)
.
Diagnosis.
In males of
G. oberndorferi
the dorso-basal tooth on the vertical ramus is weakly produced and obtuse and much lower than the interior median denticle of the ramus; in
G. madagascariensis
the external dorso-basal tooth is strongly produced and near to the interior median denticle of the ramus (see
Fig. 26–27
). In females of
G. oberndorferi
the canthus is sloping and concave (
Fig. 29
), not straight or almost rounded as with female
G. madagascariensis
.
In addition, the tubercle above the antennal insertion is usually much more elevated in females of
G. oberndorferi
(
Fig. 6
). The flagellum of the male genitalia (
Fig. 8
) is somewhat shorter than in
G. madagascariensis
.
Remarks.
The number of specimens examined by
Nonfried (1892)
is not stated, but may have consisted of only a single specimen. The following information was contributed by S. Boucher, MNHN, concerning the whereabouts of Nonfried’s type (pers. comm.). No probable type specimens of
G
.
oberndorferi
Nonfried
have been located in MNHN, where Nonfried specimens received a special label printed by Oberthür and thus are readily identifiable. This part of Nonfried’s collection arrived in Paris from Oberthür in 1952, but another large part of Nonfried’s scarabaeoids were deposited at ZMHB, Berlin. All
Ganelius
material from Berlin was examined and does not appear to have originated with Nonfried. Therefore a
neotype
specimen is chosen from the original locality to stabilize the nomenclature and tie the name to the appropriate species. The identity of
G. oberndorferi
was confused with
A. nageli
by
Benesh (1955b)
, in part. His second figure of
G. oberndorferi
(Benesh’s fig. 15) is a specimen of
A. nageli
from ‘Sandramora’ forest, near Vohilava in eastern Madagascar. Because
Benesh (1955b)
mixed two different species under the name, and
Didier (1928)
erroneously considered the species to belong to the genus
Figulus
MacLeay
, a
neotype
is clearly necessary to resolve the identity of
G. oberndorferi
.
Nonfried (1891) clearly described the mandibles and ocular canthus of this species. The mandibles are described as long, bent nearly vertically and reinforced at the bottom of the base with a large tooth, while the tip is made of two bifurcated small teeth. This description confuses the actual apex with the dorsal ramus, but it nevertheless clearly refers to a male
Ganelius
. In the original description,
Nonfried (1892)
noted that it differed by its slimmer construction and differences in pronotal shape and mandibular form. The first two characters are variable based on body size. However, based on the male mandibles of material examined from the
type
locality as described in the diagnosis, this species is distinct from
G. madagascariensis
.
Based on the relatively few specimens available for study, the species may be restricted to extreme northern Madagascar near the
type
locality (
Fig. 34
). A series of specimens from the Lemoult collection in IRSNB are labeled as being from Maroantsetra. If correct these specimens are geographically separated from all others and possibly sympatric with
G. madagascariensis
, which seems unlikely. However, I do not have any information about whether these might be mislabeled with the locality actually referring to the port from which they were shipped, or if this is a common distributional pattern.
Benesh (1943)
described
G. passaliformis
from ‘West Africa’, which
Bartolozzi and Werner (2004)
proposed might be referring to Madagascar since the genus is not known from mainland Africa. Benesh discusses the specimen as male, however it is a female, which he confirmed with a subsequent dissection (
Benesh 1955a
). The
holotype
is entirely consistent with females of
G. oberndorferi
.
Specimens of that species on hand are indistinguishable from images of Benesh’s type, especially in the concave, sloping anterior margin of the head, elevated suprantennal tubercles, and vaulted appearance of the pronotum anteriorly in lateral view. Thus a name based on a single, abraded female specimen rather unsurprisingly is reduced here to synonymy.