A revision and addition to Zopheridae (Coleoptera: Tenebrionoidea) in Baltic amber: possible connections between modern Holarctic distributions and Eocene ‘ amber forests’
Author
ALEKSEEV, VITALII
0000-0003-4390-5443
Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University, Nevskogo 14, Kaliningrad 236016, Russia.
alekseew0802@yahoo.com
Author
MCKELLAR, RYAN C.
0000-0002-7451-4368
Royal Saskatchewan Museum, 2445 Albert St., Regina, SK, S 4 P 4 W 7, Canada. & Biology Department, University of Regina, Regina, SK, S 4 S 0 A 2, Canada; & Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, 66045, USA;
ryan.mckellar@gov.sk.ca
Author
BUKEJS, ANDRIS
0000-0001-7165-3023
Institute of Life Sciences and Technologies, Daugavpils University, Vienības 13, Daugavpils LV- 5401, Latvia.
carabidae@inbox.lv
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-11-04
5536
2
201
247
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5536.2.1
journal article
304981
10.11646/zootaxa.5536.2.1
903c9627-28ff-4bfb-9c49-d911e9673c71
1175-5326
14033618
5F1FBB59-9C69-4E66-9B0D-69A015F30EAA
Xylolaemus richardklebsi
Alekseev et Bukejs, 2016
(
Figs 33–36
)
Material examined.
One
specimen with collection number
JDC-12545
[
JDC
],
Baltic
amber;
adult
, sex unknown (
Fig. 33
)
. A complete beetle is included in a transparent, yellow amber piece with dimensions of 23×
17 mm
and a maximum thickness of
7 mm
, preserved without supplementary fixation. Ventral portion of specimen is obscured by cracks and ‘milky’ opacity within amber. Syninclusions: one
Formicidae
(
Hymenoptera
) specimen; large leg of?
Araneae
; few stellate
Fagaceae
trichomes; and numerous minute detrital particles.
FIGURES 33–38.
Fossil
Xylolaemus
in Baltic amber: 33—
X. richardklebsi
, specimen No. JDC-12545 [JDC], habitus in dorsal view; 34—
X. richardklebsi
, specimen No. JDC-12546 [JDC], 34—habitus in dorsal view; 35—idem, habitus in ventral view; 36—
X. richardklebsi
, specimen No. KA-CLP-002 [CKVA], habitus in dorsal view; 37—
X. legalovi
, specimen No. KA-CLP-003 [CKVA], 37—habitus in dorsal view, 38—idem, habitus in lateral view. Scale bars = 1.0 mm.
One
specimen with collection number
JDC-12546
[
JDC
],
Baltic
amber;
adult
, sex unknown (
Figs 34–35
).
A complete beetle with partially exposed metathoracic wings is included in a transparent, yellow amber piece with dimensions of 25×
23 mm
and a maximum thickness of
8 mm
, preserved without supplementary fixation. Ventral portion of specimen is visible, partially obscured by gas bubble on right side. Syninclusions: few stellate
Fagaceae
trichomes.
One
specimen with collection number No.
KA-CLP-002
[
CKVA
],
Baltic
amber;
adult
, sex unknown (
Fig. 36
).
A complete beetle included in a transparent, yellow amber piece with dimensions of 20×
27 mm
and a maximum thickness of
4 mm
, preserved without supplementary fixation. Syninclusions:
one specimen
of
Hymenoptera
(?
Chalcididae
).
Note.
Body length of beetle JDC-12545 (including visible part of head)
3.9 mm
, maximum body width
1.4 mm
. This specimen has a dilated antennomere 10, elytra without fascicules, pronotum with longitudinal impression at middle, and about 10–12 small denticles on each side of pronotum laterally. Although the specimen is slightly smaller than the
holotype
, and it is obscured for study on the ventral side, no morphological differences were found, and the specimen is assigned to extinct
X. richardklebsi
.
Body length of beetle JDC-12546 (including visible part of head)
3.4 mm
, maximum body width
1.2 mm
. This specimen has dilated antennomere 10, elytra without fascicules, pronotum with distinct longitudinal impression medially, and 12 small denticles on each side of pronotum laterally. While the specimen is smaller than the
holotype
, no morphological differences were found, and the specimen is assigned to extinct
X. richardklebsi
.
Body length of beetle KA-CLP-002 (including visible part of head)
4.25 mm
, maximum body width
1.5 mm
. Although the specimen is slightly larger than the
holotype
, no morphological differences were found and the specimen is assigned to extinct
X. richardklebsi
.
Our study of
Zopheridae
amber inclusions in Baltic amber (including present material and specimens not considered in the current publication) shows that
X. richardklebsi
was abundant in the Eocene amberiferous forests of Fennosarmatia, and that it is seemingly the most common inclusion among the Baltic amber zopherid species.