The Australian genus Rhytiphora (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae) with a revision of the Rhytiphora collaris group
Author
Ashman, Lauren G.
0000-0003-1333-4678
lauren.g.ashman@gmail.com
Author
Keyzer, Roger De
longiman@iinet.net.au
Author
S ́ Lipińsk, Adam
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-07-04
5312
1
1
62
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5312.1.1
journal article
59206
10.11646/zootaxa.5312.1.1
769fe7b3-8227-4736-b8ed-15f27e100836
1175-5326
8129680
E45A10FC-CB08-4C66-B1E9-B6857C58343B
Rhytiphora delicatula
(
McKeown, 1948
)
(
Figs. 6E
,
8B
,
9D
,
10A–B
)
Rhytiphora uniformis
Blackburn, 1901: 40
. TL: “N. W.
Australia
”. Junior secondary homonym of
Aegomomus uniformis
(Pascoe, 1864)
Rhytiphora blackburni
Tavakilian & Nearns 2014a: 106
. Replacement name for
R. uniformis
(
Blackburn, 1901
)
Platyomopsis delicatula
McKeown, 1948: 60
. TL: Carnarvon,
Western Australia
.
New synonym
Moved to
Rhytiphora (Setomopsis) delicatula
:
Breuning, 1961a: 273
Diagnosis.
This species has not been sequenced, but it is morphologically similar to
R. garnetensis
sp. nov.
(see above),
R. piperitia
,
R. amicula
and
R. collaris
(
Figs. 6–8
). The latter three species have distinct transverse grooves on the pronotum;
R. piperitia
and
R. collaris
also have mottled or banded antennae (with tubercules slightly closer together: 3.2–3.3 widths apart), and
R. amicula
and
R. collaris
have fully divided eyes.
Rhytiphora piperitia
has larger eyes (lower lobes 3.5–3.7 widths apart) and different colouring (heavily mottled ochre and brown, with diagonal white and brown patches in the apical third of the elytra).
Rhytiphora amicula
is slightly less elongate (body 3.0 times as long as wide) with no dorsal dark patches or brown mottling on the elytra.
Rhytiphora collaris
has a short clypeus (in line with mandibular articulation), striped pronotum, white metanepisternum, heavily mottled elytra with no dorsal dark patches and the lateral white stripe usually extending beyond the basal third.
Description.
Body small to medium-sized, elongate: body length 15.0–17.0 mm, width
4.4–5.1 mm
. Winged. Dark brown with pale grey setae, slight ochre mottling and distinct brown patches on elytra (
Figs. 6E
,
8B
).
Head with frontoclypeus rectangular. Eyes moderately faceted, ringed with white setae, deeply emarginate, lobes connected by 1 row ommatidia. Lower lobes separated by 4.3–4.4 times eye width, slightly longer than gena (gena 0.8–0.9 times as long as lower lobe). Upper lobes separated by 2.3 times width of antennal socket, 0.9 times as long as antennal socket. Antennal tubercules fairly prominent, separated by 3.8 times width of antennal socket. Clypeus arcuate, slightly extended beyond mandibular articulation, sometimes covering membranous anteclypeus; mandibles apically pointed, maxillary and labial palps fusiform. Frontoclypeus grey-white, sometimes mottled with ochre. Antennae extending slightly beyond elytral apices in male, with ventral fringe of long, dense setae on antennomeres 2–11. Scape smooth, expanding apically, 2.3 times as long as wide, 4 times longer than pedicel, shorter than antennomere 3, posteriorly extending to anterior margin of pronotum. Antennomere 3 longer than 4. Antennomeres covered with fine grey setae.
Prothorax subquadrate, 0.8 times as long as wide, base distinctly narrower than humeri. Lateral margins with distinct anterior ridge; pronotal disc finely punctate with no distinct grooves or granules, setae pale grey with slight ochre mottling. Prosternal process narrow, arcuate. Procoxae without spiniform projection in males.
Elytra finely punctate, granulate in basal third, without distinct basal projections. Humeri each with large brown patch; thin, curved white line on lateral margin, not extending beyond basal third. Rest of elytra pale grey, lightly mottled with ochre and brown, with small brown patch at beginning of apical third. Elytral apices truncate.
Legs covered with fine grey setae; male protibial tubercule absent. Mesoventrite arcuate without anterior projection. Metaventrite twice as long as mesoventrite, setae pale grey with central white strip.
Ventrite 2 with broad yellow-brown sex patches in male, covering majority of ventrite length; fringe of ventrite 1 slightly thicker in male than other ventrite fringes. Ventrite 5 slightly longer than
4 in
female, with slight apical divot and endocarina.
Male genitalia: parameres narrowly separated at base, thick, apically blunt and setose; penis tip rounded (
Fig. 9D
).
Types examined.
Lectotype
female, here designated (
Rhytiphora uniformis
): “
Type
” // “N. W.
Australia
” // “
Rhytiphora uniformis (Type)
Blackburn”(
BMNH
;
Fig.10B
)
.
Holotype
male (
Platyomopsis delicatula
): “
Carnarvon, N. W.
Australia
H. W. Brown
” // “
Platyomopsis delicatula McKeown
” // “Type” (
AM
;
Fig. 10A
)
.
FIGURE 10.
Rhytiphora collaris
group, type specimens.
A:
Platyomopsis delicatula
McKeown, 1948
holotype male.
B:
Rhytiphora uniformis
Blackburn, 1901
lectotype female.
C:
Rhytiphora maculosella
Blackburn, 1902
lectotype female.
D:
Saperda collaris
Donovan, 1805
neotype male.
E:
Rhytiphora (Setomopsis) vermiculosa
Breuning, 1970
holotype female.
F:
Rhytiphora (Saperdopsis) parafarinosa
Breuning, 1970
holotype female.
G:
Symphyletes compos
Blackburn, 1902
lectotype male.
H:
Symphyletes vestigialis
Pascoe, 1864
lectotype male.
I:
Rhytiphora amicula
White, 1859
lectotype male.
J:
Rhytiphora piperitia
Hope, 1842
lectotype female.
K:
Symphyletes humeralis
White, 1858
lectotype.
L:
Rhytiphora truncata
Breuning, 1940
holotype.
Other material examined:
Marloo Stn. Wurarga, WA
1931–1941,
A. Goerling
(
2 specimens
,
ANIC 25-061931
;
Figs. 6E
,
8B
,
9D
)
.
Distribution and host plants.
Western Australia
. Localities include: Carnarvon, Wurarga. Host plants for this species are unknown.
Remarks.
The replacement name
R. blackburni
was instated for
R. uniformis
Blackburn, 1901
because there was no synonym available at the time. Here, we use
R. delicatula
as the oldest available name for this species, however we retain the record of the replacement name
R. blackburni
in case this synonymy is undone in the future (see ICZN Article 60).