Taxonomic revision of Prosopocoilus gracilis (Saunders, 1854) and its allied species from China (Coleoptera: Lucanidae)
Author
Zhong, Fang
Department of Ecology, School of Resources & Engineering, Anhui University, Hefei 230601, China
Author
Bai, Ming
Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China
Author
Ge, Yang
Department of Ecology, School of Resources & Engineering, Anhui University, Hefei 230601, China
Author
Wan, Xia
Department of Ecology, School of Resources & Engineering, Anhui University, Hefei 230601, China
text
Zoological Systematics
2014
2014-01-01
39
1
136
148
journal article
5667
10.11865/zs20140102
4a7f6cf9-ce81-4120-908b-a43bb1a68567
2095-6827
4616845
A44423F5-262D-4CCC-8CCB-BD695EEA0E89
Prosopocoilus gracilis (
Saunders, 1854
)
(
Figs 1
,
5–17
,
43–48
)
Cladognathus gracilis
Saunders, 1854
.
Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond.
, 3(2): 47.
Hemisodorcus gracilis
:
Roon, 1910
.
Coleop. Cat
., par 8: 32.
Prosopocoilus gracilis
:
Benesh, 1950
.
Pan-Pacif. Ent
., 26(2): 16–17.
Epidorcus gracilis
:
Séguy, 1954
.
Revue Fr. Ent
., 21(3): 192.
Figs 1–4. Labels, type specimens in MNHN. 1. Lectotype of
Prosopocoilu gracilis
(Saunders)
. 2. Holotype of
Prosopocoilus piceipennis
. 3. Holotype of
Prosopocoilus tonkinensis
. 4. Lectotype of
Prosopocoilus denticulatus
. Scale bars = 10 mm.
Length
16–48 mm
. Width
7–15 mm
. Color. Reddish to dark brown (
Figs 5–17
). Head. Almost inverted trapezoidal, 1.8 times wider than long. Anterior margin at middle strongly concaved, with forming a large, deep, triangularly frontal depression in males. Vertex strongly raised, almost V-shaped. In females, the frontal depression very small and quite shallow mainly covered with densely large punctures; vertex slightly raised. Male mandibles. About 1.2–3.3 times the total length of head and pronotum in males. Mandibles of large males strongly curved inwards, the apex sharp with a sub-apcial vestigial tooth (
Figs 9–12
) or completely absent in most of specimens. A large triangular tooth situated anteriorly (about at 1/3–1/2 position on each mandible); at the front of this tooth, 2–5 denticles sparsely presented near to the apex; behind of it, 5–12 denticles regularly serrated to the mandibular base. Size of this tooth and the amount of denticles gradually reduced following to the body size diminishing in males, exceptionally, only a large tooth presented without any denticles (
Fig. 16
). Mentum. Almost trapezoidal, front angles rounded with small punctures in males. That of female with larger and denser punctures, containing sparsely brown setae. Pronotum. 2.0 times wider than long, as wide as that of head. Front angles relatively acute. Lateral margins curved, strongly divergent on the anterior 2/3 and then convergent on the posterior 1/
3 in
males, almost uniformly convex in females. Hind angles obtusely rounded. Elytra. 1.4 times longer than wide, as wide as that of pronotum. Disc dim and reddish. Punctures presented densely along the elytra suture. Legs. Front tibiae slender, laterally serrated with 5–7 small teeth. Middle and hind tibiae simply with a very small spine. Aedeagus (
Figs 43–48
). Slender, the ventrally triangular teeth of PA small and short (about 1.0 mm from its point angle to outer margin of PA). PES about 2.0 times the length of Tegmen. BP about 1.8 times the length of PA. Female genitalia (
Fig. 61
). HS strongly sclerotized with sub-round apex, irregular plate-liked, somewhat bifurcated at base. Paired sclerites of sternite 9 relatively narrow. SD slightly widened where it joins BC. S almost elongate oval-shaped. SG slender with expanded apex.
Figs 5–17.
Prosopocoilus gracilis
. 5–12, 14–17. ♂ 13. ♀ 5–7. Specimens from Fujian, Mt. Wuyi. 8. Specimens from Zhejiang, Mt. Tianmu. 9–13. Specimens from Guangxi, Wuming. 14–16. Specimens from Guangxi, Mt. Daming. 17. Specimens from Yunnan, Malipo. 5–6, 8–10, 15–17. Large. 7, 11–12. Medium-sized. 14. Small. 16. With one tooth. Scale bars = 10 mm.
Lectotype
designation.
Saunders (1854)
wrote: “All the species described in this paper in the Collection at the British Museum, and most of them will also be found in the Collection of
F. S. Parry
, Esp., as well as my own collection”. During our study of these specimens, we found one male with old “Type” label in
MNHN
(
Fig. 1
) and one male with old “cotype” label in
BMNH
, which meant the male in
MNHN
should be the described specimen by Saunders. Considering that Parry’s collection partly in
BMNH
and
MNHN
, we designated the male with “Type” label in
MNHN
as
Lectotype
and other males with same data as paralectotypes. Also, the male with “cotype” label in
BMNH
and one male in
OXUM
were designated as
paralectotypes
.
Type material examined.
Lectotype
of
Prosopocoilus gracilis
(Saunders)
,
♂
, in MNHN, labelled:
Lectotype
(red label) / Type sp. (pale label) / Mr. Fortune,
China
(handwritten) / Ex. Museo Parry.
Paralectotypes
:
5♂
,
6♀
, in MNHN, labelled: Mr. Fortune,
China
(handwritten) / Ex. Museo Parry. [The
Lectotype
and
paralectotypes
were designated by Dr. Stéphane Boucher and Dr. Xia Wan].
Paralectotype
♂
, in BMNH, labelled: cotype / 11383 /
China
Bor / Fortune / Fry. coll. 1905-100 /
Hemisodorcus
gricilis Saund. Co-type (handwritten) / BMNH(E) #604729.
Paralectotype
♂
, in OXUM, labelled:
Cladognathus gracilis
n. n. Saund., Trans. Ent. Soc. n. s. r. 3, pl. 3. f. 3, N.
China
(handwritten) / Type, Saunders,
Trans. Ent. Soc.
, 1854, p.47, t.3, f.3 (handwritten), coll. Hope Oxford / Type col. 271,
Cladognathus gracilis Saund.
(handwritten), Hope Dept Oxford. [The two
paralectotypes
were designated by Dr. Xia Wan].
Additional material examined.
China
,
Jiangsu
,
Yixing
,
21 July 1923
,
6♂
, collector unknown
.
Fujian
,
Chong’an
,
Sangang
,
30 July 1979
,
1♂
,
Si-Mei Zhang
leg.
;
Chong’an
,
11 July 1986
,
1♂
, Zhong-Fu
Zheng
leg.
Chongqing
,
Mt. Jinyun
,
3♂
,
3♀
, alt.
800 m
,
13 June 1994
,
You-Wei Zheng
leg.
Yunnan
,
Mengla
, alt.
620 m
,
11 May 1991
, collector unknown;
Malipo
,
10–26 July 1993
,
9♂
, collector unknown (in
NZMC
)
.
Fujian
,
Mt. Wuyi
,
3♂
,
23 July 2010
,
Fang Zhong
and
Xiao-Yan Hu
leg.
;
same locality,
2♂
,
30 July 2012
,
Yu-Yan Cao
leg.
Guangxi
,
Wuming
,
20 July 2011
,
8♂
,
3♀
,
Fang Zhong
and
Sheng-Cheng Yang
leg.
;
Mt. Daming
,
22 July 2011
,
6♂
,
Xiao-Yan Hu
leg.
Guizhou
,
Mt. Leigong
,
2♂
,
26 July 2011
,
Fang Zhong
and
Sheng-Cheng Yang
leg.
(in MAHU).
Distribution.
China
(
Jiangsu
,
Fujian
,
Zhejiang
,
Chongqing
,
Guangxi
,
Guizhou
,
Yunnan
).
Remarks. Specimens of
P. gracilis
(Saunders)
from
Yunnan
are little different in body color and aedeagus. They look more reddish (
Fig. 17
). Their aedeagi more slender in BP, the ventrally triangular teeth of PA very small (
Figs 46–48
). However, it is difficult to determine that the ten specimens should belong to a new taxon considering that geographic variations could be more or less different in morphology in
Lucanidae
unless many specimens can be found and studied. Possibly, these differences reflect that the species is undergoing highly sophisticated pressures from sexual selection, habitat fragmentation and niche competition among different geographic populations.
In addition, it must be pointed out that the name “
P. gracilis
” was firstly used by Kriesche in 1921 to name a small male from Sumatra.
Didier & Séguy (1952
: pl. LXXX) illustrated
P. gracilis
Kriesche
with
7 males
and
1 female
. However, the males looked highly similar to
P. piceipennis
and
P. gracilis
(Saunders)
. At least, smaller males were not corresponding with Kriesche’s description. Perhaps,
Didier & Séguy (1952)
wrongly diagnosed the species of
P. gracilis
Kriesche
in their illustration.
Benesh (1960)
also gave the wrong quotation and recognition of their illustration.
Bomans (1978)
proposed
P. gracilis
Kriesche, 1921
as a junior synonym of
P. flavidus
(
Parry, 1862
)
based on type examination. Our studies supported Bomans’ opinion. In this paper, all the species name “
P. gracilis
(Saunders)
” was wrote simply as
P. gracilis
.