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
species complexes
Rhytiphora argus
Pascoe, 1867
,
R. dispar
Blackburn, 1894
,
R. nigropunctata
Breuning, 1938
and
R. nigrosparsa
Breuning, 1938
are all described from QLD and are fairly similar morphologically (large-bodied and large-eyed with black spots on the elytra). These four species need to be sequenced to confirm whether they are distinct genetic lineages, or one species with variable setae colouring (yellow/orange to grey).
The species
R. bankii
Fabricius, 1775
is extremely widespread, with records from
Australia
through Southeast Asia to
China
,
Japan
and even Hawaii (although this may be a human introduction;
McKeown 1947
). Indeed, the
type
locality in the original publication is listed as
South Africa
(
Cape
of Good Hope;
Fabricius 1775
), though this may be incorrect;
Gahan (1893)
does not discuss his reasoning for synonymising
Lamia bankii
with
Acanthocinus hollandicus
and other Australasian species. Given that no other
Rhytiphora
species
has such an extensive distribution,
R. bankii
specimens from across the Pacific region should be sequenced to determine whether there are cryptic species; we already have mitochondrial data which show that
two specimens
from Queensland and
Christmas Island
(south of
Java
,
Indonesia
) have genetic divergence equivalent to that of other
Rhytiphora
species
(
Ashman
et al.
2022a
).
Rhytiphora cana
McKeown, 1948
,
R. cinerascens
Aurivillius, 1917
,
R. deserti
Blackburn, 1896
and
R. satelles
Pascoe, 1865
are very similar morphologically and need sequencing to confirm the species boundaries. There is at least
one specimen
(ANIC 25-66662) from northern NT which is morphologically closest to
R. deserti
(central
Australia
) but genetically closer to
R. cinerascens
(QLD;
Ashman
et al.
2022a
).
Rhytiphora cinnamomea
Pascoe, 1859
(QLD),
R. gallus
Pascoe, 1864
(central
Australia
) and
R. ferruginea
Aurivillius, 1917
(WA) have very similar colouration but different eye sizes (
R. cinnamomea
lower lobes separated by 3.2x eye width;
R. gallus
2.4x;
R. ferruginea
unknown). Phylogenetically they form a clade with
R. fasciata
Blackburn, 1901
and
R. tuberculigera
Breuning, 1938
(
Ashman
et al.
2022a
), which are both described from QLD and morphologically distinct. The
R. cinnamomea
specimen (ANIC 25-66541) is more closely related to a specimen from WA with similarly small eyes (ANIC 25-66555) than it is to another QLD specimen with larger eyes (ANIC 25-66546). More extensive sampling, combined with an examination of the
R. ferruginea
holotype
, is needed to determine how many lineages there are and which described species, if any, they correspond to.
We synonymised several morphologically similar species under
R. collaris
(
Figs. 7A
,
8E
):
Saperda albocincta
,
R. intertincta
,
R. parafarinosa
,
R. vermiculosa
and
Symphyletes vestigialis
(
Figs. 10C–H
). We used the oldest available name for this species, although the
holotype
of
Saperda collaris
is missing and the species is depicted as having entirely black elytra (
Donovan 1805
). In his description of
Saperda albocincta
,
Guérin-Méneville (1831)
notes that the
holotype
of
S. collaris
is very similar to his new species and may have simply lost the yellow setae that
form the
distinctive elytral patterning seen in
S. albocincta
. In the absence of any specimens with black elytra matching
S. collaris
, and on the basis of Guérin-Méneville’s comment, we have synonymised these species. A
neotype
has been designated for
Saperda collaris
using the only specimen with published genetic data: ANIC 25- 066530 (
Ashman
et al.
2022a
;
Fig. 10D
). We also synonymised the subspecies of
S. albocincta
as they did not make geographic sense (grouping NSW with SA rather than QLD); the corresponding morphological trait (full or patchy white lateral stripe on elytra) is noted beside each type in the checklist.
Rhytiphora costata
Pascoe, 1863
(Australia-wide),
R. intricata
Pascoe, 1864
(SA),
R. tigrina
Blackburn, 1901
(WA) and
R. vermicularia
Donovan, 1805
(east coast) have different colour patterns but very similar body size, shape and sculpturing (large-bodied, oval, transverse rugose pronotum, longitudinally ridged elytra). Sequencing is needed to confirm species distributions and boundaries (
i.e.
R. tigrina
may be a yellow western morphotype of
R. vermicularia
); it is likely these species form a clade with the distinctive
R. pardalis
Newman, 1842
which, like
R. costata
, is widely distributed across
Australia
.
The
holotypes
of
R. cretata
Pascoe, 1859
(QLD) and
R. heros
Pascoe, 1863
(NT) have similar elytral patterns but different antennae and pronotum colouring (plain vs. striped). There are also intermediate specimens from QLD with plain antennae and striped pronotum (
e.g.
Fig. 134D in Ślipiński &
Escalona 2013
). It is possible that
R. heros
is the same species as
R. cretata
, and the
holotype
has simply lost the setae on its antennae and pronotum; sequencing specimens across the geographic and morphological gradients will provide further insight.
Rhytiphora detrita
Hope, 1842
(north and west coast;
Fig. 2A
) and
R. variolosa
Pascoe, 1862
(east coast) are quite similar morphologically but do have different elytral patterns (ochre lateral stripe and dorsal mottling vs. just ochre spots). However,
Ashman
et al.
(2022a)
found very little genetic divergence between these two species; more extensive sampling is needed to determine whether
R. detrita
and
R. variolosa
are separate species or one widespread species.
We examined the
holotypes
of
Corrhenes flavovittata
Breuning, 1938
and
C. flavovittata demarzi
Breuning, 1963
and found several morphological differences (
e.g.
antennae and elytral setae patterns;
Fig. 11
). We therefore elevated
C. flavovittata demarzi
to species status (here renamed
R. rentzi
new name
), pending genetic confirmation:
R. rentzi
is quite similar to
R. stigmatica
Pascoe, 1863
. We have synonymised
C. flavovittata
with
R. paulla
Germar, 1848
, along with several other species with similar white markings on the antennae, pronotum and elytra:
Saperda funesta
Pascoe, 1859
,
Anaesthetis lepida
Germar, 1848
and
Cobria rufa
Breuning, 1961
. We have used the name
R. paulla
as that
holotype
is presumably better preserved than
A. lepida
, which from its description (in the same publication as
R. paulla
) seems to have lost most of its setae. It would be worthwhile using sequence data to determine how many lineages exist in this large species complex of
R. paulla
.
Rhytiphora fraserensis
Blackburn, 1893
and
R. obenbergeri
Breuning, 1938
(
Figs.3B,3F
) overlap geographically and have only subtle differences in morphology (eye size, elytral setae); sequencing is needed to confirm whether they are separate species. The widespread
R. lateralis
Pascoe, 1858
also has similar elytral colouring but can be distinguished by the waviform pattern of the brown dorsal and white lateral setae, as well as the ochre stripe on the pronotum.
Rhytiphora frenchi
Blackburn, 1890
and
R. frenchiana
Breuning, 1961
have similar names but are very different species. Most of the specimens we have seen labelled as
R. frenchi
in Australian collections match the description of
Blackburn’s (1895)
Rhytiphora frenchi
, now renamed
R. frenchiana
by Breuning (
Fig. 2L
): large-bodied (18 lines = ~
38 mm
) with a mottled black and white pattern similar to that of
R. saundersii
Pascoe, 1857
(
Fig. 1F
; also see below). The senior homonym,
R. frenchi
(originally
Platyomopsis
;
Blackburn 1890
), is a smaller grey-haired species resembling
R. armatula
White, 1859
and
R. obliqua
Donovan, 1805
(
Fig. 1H
) but without such pronounced elytral spines. These three species, as well as
R. multispinis
Breuning, 1938
,
R. regularis
Gahan, 1893
and
R. subregularis
Breuning, 1973
(
Fig. 12
), are often confused and would benefit from sequencing to confirm the species boundaries (especially for
R. regularis
and
R. subregularis
, which may be red western/brown eastern morphotypes of the same widespread species).
Rhytiphora freyi
Breuning, 1961
(
Fig. 4D
) has similar elytra to
R. villosa
Breuning, 1938
(colour pattern and basal tufts of long setae) but a different pronotum (colour pattern more similar to
R. oblita
Pascoe, 1863
). Sequencing is needed to determine how many lineages exist.
Rhytiphora fulvescens
and
R. subtuberculata
White, 1858
have similar body shape and white markings on the elytra, but are predominately different colours.
White’s (1858)
description of
Symphyletes subtuberculatus
mentions an ochreous variant of the grey
holotype
, which may refer to what
Pascoe (1863)
described as
Symphyletes fulvescens
. Sequencing of both colour varieties is needed to confirm whether there are one or two species.
Rhytiphora fumata
Pascoe, 1864
and
R. obscura
Breuning, 1938
are quite similar morphologically, but
R. obscura
has much fainter elytral patterning. Closer examination of the
R. obscura
holotype
, and genetic sequencing of similar specimens (if not the original
holotypes
themselves), will determine whether these two species should be synonymised.
The colour pattern of
R. glauerti
McKeown, 1948
appears to be intermediate between that of
R. crassicollis
(banded pronotum) and
R. macularia
Pascoe, 1867
(finely mottled elytra;
Fig. 4I
). Only
R. crassicollis
has been sequenced (
Ashman
et al.
2022a
); more extensive sampling, across all three species’ geographic ranges, is needed to confirm the species boundaries.
Rhytiphora maculicornis
Pascoe, 1858
and
R. sospitalis
Pascoe, 1865
(both WA) are very similar morphologically except for a white diagonal marking in the apical third of the elytra (present in
R. maculicornis
, absent in
R. sospitalis
). There are also two species from QLD with similar body size, shape and colouring:
R. parantennalis
Breuning, 1970
and
R. ochreomarmorata
Breuning, 1939
. Sequencing of all four species will determine how many lineages there are.
Rhytiphora marmoreoides
Tavakilian & Nearns, 2014
(WA),
R. rosei
Olliff, 1890
(east coast) and
R. saundersii
(western to central
Australia
) share a distinctive black and white elytral pattern (
Fig. 1F
);
R. marmoreoides
and
R. rosei
are more finely mottled than
R. saundersii
, yet do not overlap geographically. Sequencing specimens from across
Australia
is needed to confirm the species boundaries.
Rhytiphora frenchiana
also has black and white elytral patterning, but can be distinguished from the above three species by the white lateral stripe on the elytra (
Fig. 2L
).
Rhytiphora mastersi
Blackburn, 1897
(WA),
R. melanosticta
Pascoe, 1875
(WA and NT) and
R. scenica
Pascoe, 1863
(QLD) have similar morphology (banded antennae, orange/white elytra with black spots;
Fig. 13
). There are several specimens with colouration partway between
R. mastersi
and
R. melanosticta
; sequencing is required to determine the species’ genetic, morphological and geographic boundaries.
Rhytiphora pardalina
Breuning, 1942
(
Figs. 1B
,
13F
) has a similar colour scheme to the above three species, but lacks a lateral pronotum spine and has a unique elytral pattern consistent across many specimens.
Rhytiphora ochreopicta
Breuning, 1940
is similar to
R. oblita
except for the white diagonal marking in the apical third of the elytra (absent in
R. ochreopicta
, present in
R. oblita
). Sequencing is needed to establish whether or not this morphological difference corresponds to distinct lineages.
There is a complicated history of
R. piligera
and
R. pulverulens
Boisduval, 1835
, with some species incorrectly synonymised with the former instead of the latter due to mislabelling of specimens in various museums (
McKeown 1947
). Here we have restricted
R. piligera
to the original
type
, housed in ANIC (
Fig. 2E
), and the newly synonymised
Symphyletes nodosus
Newman, 1842
(which are both brown with basal elytral tubercules and clavate antennal scape). We united all the large, grey, diagonally striped species under
R. pulverulens
:
Saperdopsis armata
Thomson, 1864
,
Symphyletes anaglyptus
Pascoe, 1867
,
S. ingestus
Pascoe, 1863
,
S. moratus
Pascoe, 1863
,
S. munitus
Pascoe, 1863
,
S. sodalis
Pascoe, 1859
and
S. vetustus
Pascoe, 1862
(but not
R. devota
Pascoe, 1866
from WA). Defined thus, this species is distributed widely across the eastern half of
Australia
, as well as New
Guinea
; sequencing specimens across this range would allow us to determine whether
R. pulverulens
is one widespread or multiple convergent species.
Rhytiphora sundaensis
Breuning, 1973
(
Fig. 2I
) from the
Maluku province
of
Indonesia
is very similar morphologically to the Australian
R. pulverulens
, but has been left separate pending genetic confirmation.
The
holotypes
of
R. sannio
Newman, 1838
(east coast) and
R. waterhousei
Pascoe, 1864
(south coast) have very similar body size and shape, but different elytral colouration (red with diagonal markings vs. yellow without markings). However, there are specimens from NSW with intermediate colouration. It is possible that
R. waterhousei
is a southern variant of
R. sannio
; sequencing across the geographic and morphological gradient is needed to determine whether distinct lineages exist.