The Middle American species of Peridinetus Schönherr (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Baridinae)
Author
Prena, Jens
text
Zootaxa
2010
2507
1
36
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.195971
e3eee8e4-bbb7-478c-a86b-55b36c3ec399
1175-5326
195971
5.
Peridinetus canus
Champion
(
Fig. 17, 18
)
Peridinetus canus
Champion, 1907
: 172
.
Champion (1909: 484)
,
Seidlitz (1909: 325)
.
Conophoria cana
.
Casey (1922: 9)
.
Peridinetus (Conophoria) canus
.
Hustache (1938: 8)
,
Blackwelder (1947: 886)
,
O’Brien &
Wibmer (1982
: 178
).
Conophoria cana dispersa
Casey, 1922
: 9
.
New synonymy.
Peridinetus (Conophoria) canus dispersus
.
Hustache (1938: 8)
,
Blackwelder (1947: 886)
,
O’Brien &
Wibmer (1982
: 178
).
Diagnosis.
Peridinetus canus
has a distinctive, uniformly grey color pattern with dark marks on the apical part of the elytron (
Fig. 17
) and cannot be confused with any other species. The studied specimens were
6.4– 9.7 mm
long (standard length 6.0–9.0 mm).
Distribution.
This species occurs on the Pacific side of Cordillera de Talamanca in
Costa Rica
and
Panama
.
Plant association.
Piper aereum
(Prena 1
×
),
P. glabrescens
(Prena 2
×
),
P. hispidum
(Prena 8),
P. phytolaccaefolium
(Prena 1
×
).
Type
material.
P. c a n u s
: 36
syntypes
,
Panamá
, Bugaba (
BMNH
11,
MNHUB
2,
USNM
3) and Volcán (
BMNH
16,
DEI
2,
USNM
2 [including HT of
C. cana dispersa
]).
Conophoria cana dispersa
:
holotype
,
Panamá
, Volcán (
USNM
).
FIGURES 17–24.
Dorsal and lateral habitus of
Peridinetus
species.
17–18,
P. ca n u s
, Volcán (Panamá);
19–20,
P. rubens
, Cerro Campana (Panamá)
;
21–22,
P. cretaceus
, Turrialba
(Costa Rica);
23–24,
P. distinctus
, Columbia Forest (Belize)
.
Material examined.
Costa Rica
. Guanacaste: Taboga, near Cañas (
CHAH
3). Puntarenas: P.N. Corcovado, without site (
INBC
2), Est. Agujas,
300 m
(
INBC
1,
JPPC
4), Est. Sirena,
50 m
(
CHAH
1,
INBC
10), Est. Esquinas,
10 m
(
INBC
7); Osa, Río Rincón (
JPPC
2); Osa,
2.5 mi
SW Rincón (
CHAH
4);
Osa, Rancho Quemado
,
200 m
(
INBC
6);
Osa, Piedras Blancas, Cerro Anguciana
,
100 m
(
INBC
1); Quebrada Piedras Blancas,
400 m
(
INBC
2), R.B. Carara, Est. Quebrada Bonita,
50 m
(
INBC
9); P.N. Manuel Antonio,
80 m
(
INBC
4,
JPPC
1); P.N. La Amistad, Sector Altamira, Buenos Aires (
INBC
2); Las Mellizas, Fca.
Cafrosa,
1300 m
(
INBC
1,
JPPC
5); Tigra,
1300 m
(
INBC
5); Fundación Dúrika,
1700 m
(
JPPC
2); Est. Pittier,
1700-1800 m
(
INBC
1); Coto Brus, Est. Las Alturas,
1500 m
(
INBC
5); Cotoncito,
3.5 km
N de la Lucha,
1600 m
(
INBC
1); Fila Cruces, Laguna Gamboa,
1400 m
(
INBC
1); Las Cruces (
AMNH
1,
CHAH
2,
CMNC
1,
JPPC
1); Agua Buenas, Est. Boscosa (
CMNC
1); Piedras Negras (
USNM
1). San José:
12 km
NE San Isidro del General, Cerro Chucuyo,
1350 m
(
JPPC
3).
Panamá
. Chirquí: Las Lagunas,
4 km
W El Hato del Volcán,
1360 m
(
CMNC
1,
HPSC
5,
JWPC
1); Sta. Clara (
CMNC
1,
HPSC
1); Río Sereno,
1000 m
(
HPSC
1); Volcán,
1600 m
(
BMNH
1,
HPSC
1,
USNM
2); Cerro Punta (
CMNC
1); Bugaba (
USNM
3,
MNHUB
2).
Panamá
: near Gamboa, Plantation rd. (
USNM
1). Total
138 specimens
.
Note.
Casey (1922)
was mincing Champion’s (1907) words when he described one
syntype
of
P. canus
(a homogeneous series from two sites in Chiriquí) as
Conophora cana dispersa
. The available records show that this is a single, well-defined species that is restricted to the Pacific side of the Cordillera de Talamanca.
Conophora cana dispersa
is a new subjective synonym of
P. canus
.