Correction of existing generic and species concepts in Platyceroidini (Coleoptera: Lucanidae: Lucaninae) and the description of four new species of Platyceroides Benesh
Author
Paulsen, M. J.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4269
3
346
378
journal article
32994
10.11646/zootaxa.4269.3.2
cb56b0e3-1b88-4a89-b478-186e2b30721f
1175-5326
582450
0D7EC140-F88A-49BB-BB62-D2AC8EC6FC1D
Platyceroides
(
Platyceroides
)
agassii
(LeConte)
Platycerus agassii
LeConte, 1861
: 345
, original combination.
Platycerus agassizii
:
Parry 1870
: 114
, misspelling.
Platycerus agassizi
:
Parry 1875
: 20
, misspelling.
Platycerus agassii pygmaeus
Van Dyke, 1946
: 88
, synonym.
Type series.
Holotype male of
P. agassii
(MCZ) labeled: a) handwritten “San / Mateo”; b) handwritten “
P. Agassii
/ Lec.”; c) on red paper, “Type / 3692”; d) “July-Dec. 2001 / MCZ Image / Database”; e) “
Platyceroides agassii
/ (
LeConte, 1861
) / det. M.J. Paulsen 2013”.
Holotype
male of
P. pygmaeus
Van Dyke
(
CASC
) labeled: a) “
Platycerus
/
agassizi
/
pygmaeus
/ Van Dyke” with “
Holotype
” vertically on left.
Taxonomy.
The identity (and name) of this species, the first described, has been confused in the literature, especially by
Van Dyke (1928)
and
Benesh (1946)
. This resulted in a large synonymical list for
P. agassii
in
Benesh (1946
,
1960
).
LeConte (1861)
and
Casey (1889)
both discussed the male
holotype
as being female; because the genitalia were not dissected and given the general lack of sexual dimorphism in
Platyceroides
(males being similar to female
Platycerus
) this is not surprising.
Benesh (1960)
treated four names as synonyms of
P. agassii
.
Examination of their
holotypes
indicates that only one of the four names listed as synonyms of
P. agassii
by
Benesh (1960)
is indeed attributable to
P. agassii
.
The three other names that were treated as synonymous with
P. agassii
by
Benesh (1946)
correspond instead to two other valid species, treated below.
Comparison of the
holotypes
of
Platycerus agassii
and
P. pygmaeus
Van Dyke
confirmed that they are identical. The name
P. agassii pygmaeus
was proposed by
Van Dyke (1946)
for specimens from the Pygmy Forest east of Mendocino, although he does also refer to the taxon as ‘generally smaller’ and ‘somewhat stunted’ so the name may have been proposed to provide a double meaning. Van Dyke was not, however, comparing his specimens to the true
Platyceroides agassii
.
Specimens from the Pygmy Forest are not any smaller on average than other
P. agassii
examined and generally have the same size of antennal club and identical male genitalia.
There has been a tendency to use misspellings that appear to be more orthographically correct (
P. agassizii
in
Parry 1870
,
P. agassizi
in
Parry 1875
) instead of the original spelling. Although LeConte likely formed his patronym for Agassiz by dropping the silent
z
to preserve the appropriate pronunciation, it could be argued that he was using a Latinized form of Louis Agassiz’ name such as ‘
Agassius’,
so the spelling ‘
agassii
’ must be retained (International Commission on
Zoological Nomenclature 1999
, Article 31.1).
Distribution
(
Fig. 25
).
CALIFORNIA
:
MENDOCINO: Caspar; Fort Bragg; Hendy Woods State Park; Mendocino; Pygmy Forest; Van Damme State Park. SAN MATEO: San Mateo. SONOMA: Plantation; Salt Point State Park.
Remarks.
This species is distributed along the northern
California
coast at elevations less than
300 m
.
The
holotype
from ‘
San Mateo’
is from farther south than all subsequently collected specimens, with no other specimens from south of
San Francisco Bay
present in any collection examined, although such a distribution does not seem extraordinary.
The
greatest number of specimens is known from
Mendocino County
.
Males and females of
P. agassii
have a shortened, more oval body form (
Fig. 3
A) and smaller and more glabrous antennal clubs than most other species. The male genitalia (
Fig. 3
B) can only be confused with those of
Platyceroides pacificus
.