Review of the Palaearctic genera of Saprininae (Coleoptera: Histeridae)
Author
Lackner, Tomáš
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2010
suppl.
2010-10-20
50
1
254
journal article
9574
10.5281/zenodo.4272127
724cb358-6f18-4816-afc7-bb42cb9b6942
0374-1036
4272127
Myrmetes
Marseul, 1862
Myrmetes
Marseul, 1862: 511
.
Myrmetes
:
THOMSON (1867)
:402
;
SCHMIDT (1885a)
:283
, 318;
GANGLBAUER (1899)
:378
;
REITTER (1909)
:290
;
JAKOBSON (1911)
:641
, 648;
BICKHARDT (1916
–1917):105;
REICHARDT (1941)
: 154
, 157;
WITZGALL (1971)
: 165
;
MAZUR (1973)
: 41
;
KRYZHANOVSKIJ & REICHARDT (1976)
: 111
, 121;
MAZUR & KASZAB (1980)
: 6
, 62;
VIENNA
(1980)
: 112
;
MAZUR (1981a)
: 71
, 93;
MAZUR (1984)
: 107
;
MAZUR (1997)
: 217
;
YÉLAMOS (2002)
: 245
, 254;
MAZUR (2004)
: 95
.
Type
species:
Hister piceus
Paykull, 1809
, by monotypy.
Diagnosis.
Cuticle rufous, silky metallic; frontal and supraorbital striae absent; frontal disc microscopically imbricate-punctate; pronotal foveae absent; pronotal disc impunctate; pronotal hypomeron glabrous; elytra almost entirely smooth, only on apical part with shallow scattered punctures; sutural elytral stria absent; inner subhumeral stria almost complete; carinal prosternal striae united in front with lateral prosternal striae, continued onto the anterior margin of prosternum; pre-apical foveae absent; meso-metaventral sutural stria absent. All tibiae slender and flattened; protibia on outer margin with one row of short denticles, teeth absent; protarsal groove absent.
Differential diagnosis.
This taxon is most similar to the genera
Gnathoncus
and
Eremosaprinus
, which are presumably its closely related taxa. From
Eremosaprinus
it differs by the absent sutural elytral stria, absent protibial groove and the strongly reduced, but present lateral prosternal striae. Likewise, the pronotal punctation is lacking in
Myrmetes
, whereas it is well developed in
Eremosaprinus
. By the aforementioned characters (except for the strongly reduced lateral prosternal striae that are present in both taxa) this taxon differs likewise from the genus
Gnathoncus
; furthermore in
Gnathoncus
there is a characteristic short hooked appendix between the fourth dorsal elytral and sutural elytral striae, absent in
Myrmetes
.
Biology.
The genus
Myrmetes
contains one myrmecophilous species,
Myrmetes paykulli
Kanaar, 1979
. It is found within the nests of
Formica rufa
and more rarely in the nests of several other
Formica
species. Very occasionally it is also found on carcasses.
Distribution.
Distribution of
Myrmetes
covers a large part of the Palaearctic Region, from
Spain
to Siberia. Its presence in Central Asia reported by
KRYZHANOVSKIJ & REICHARDT (1976)
was later refuted (
TISHECHKIN 2002
).
Species examined.
Myrmetes paykulli
Kanaar, 1979
.
Discussion.
Myrmetes
is a well-defined monophyletic taxon, supported by several autapomorphies: silky metallic rufous cuticle, absent sutural elytral stria, absent protibial groove, and peculiar shape of the sensory structures of antennal club. It shares several putative synapomorphies with genera
Eremosaprinus
and
Gnathoncus
, as mentioned earlier (see Diagnosis of the aforementioned genera for details), e.g. absent frontal and supraorbital striae and longitudinally divided tenth tergite of males. Possibly, this taxon branched off the common ancestor of these three taxa and the above-mentioned autapomorphies are simply result of the convergence of its lifestyle within ant nests. A molecular study of these three genera would be highly desirable and would undubtedly yield interesting results.