A revision of the taxonomic status of Xestotrogus Reitter, 1902 and related taxa, with the description of a new species from Iraqi Kurdistan (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae)
Author
Uliana, Marco
Museo di Storia Naturale di Venezia Giancarlo Ligabue, S. Croce 1730, 30135 Venezia, Italy
Author
Khudhur, Farhad A.
Department of Forest Ecology, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Mendel University, Brno, Czech Republic & Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Sulaimani, Sulaymaniyah, Kurdistan Region, Iraq
text
Zootaxa
2025
2025-01-24
5575
3
477
490
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5575.3.8
journal article
307912
10.11646/zootaxa.5575.3.8
f77d7aaa-0a32-4870-a879-18967d7c4c83
1175-5326
14747276
3BE1C923-D4E5-453A-BCC1-6D65D21BB846
Genus
Xestotrogus
Reitter, 1902
status revised
Type
species:
Rhizotrogus validus
Kraatz, 1884
, by monotypy
=
Cyprotrogus
Nikolajev, 2004
new synonym
Diagnosis.
Based on characters of males (females are unknown). Integument non-pruinose. Dorsal side subglabrous, with conspicuous setation only on vertex and scutellum. Frons not crested, moderately swollen in the medial area. Clypeus broadly rounded. Labrum transverse, bilobed, densely setose on its whole surface. Dorsal side of pronotum with few minute setae near the anterior angles, some more developed setae may be sparsely present along the anterior margin. Dorsal side of maxillary palps with a flattened area. 10 antennomeres (individual cases of incomplete disjunction observed). Claws toothed at base. Metatibial spurs not significantly dilated, setation of metatarsi not hyper-developed. Phallobase longer than paramera, curved, with a dorsal hump at about mid length and a broad parabolic membranous area anterior to it, connected to paramera. Basal region of paramera fused both dorsally and ventrally. Dorsal portion of paramera short, bearing two well-developed digitiform medial processes, smooth, parted by a deep and narrow cleft. Ventral portion of paramera much longer than dorsal, produced in two long laminar processes parted by a broad gap; such processes laminar, not carinated, sinuous in lateral view. Paramera glabrous on the whole surface.
History and current status.
Xestotrogus
Reitter, 1902
was introduced as a monotypic subgenus of
Rhizotrogus
Latreille, 1825
, then raised to genus rank by
Baraud (1987)
and as such accepted by
Keith (2002)
, who added as a second species the Cypriot endemic
Ancylonycha nitens
Baudi, 1870
. The latter had been assigned to the genus
Madotrogus
since
Reitter (1902)
.
Shortly afterwards,
Nikolajev (2004a)
downgraded
Xestotrogus
to subgenus of
Xanthotrogus
, based on the similarity of paramera, whose peculiar dorsal processes however granted it the preservation of a distinct, subgeneric status. At the same time, he removed
A.
nitens
from it, announcing that it would require a different generic assignment due to the lack of hair on the lower side of paramera, a condition which he considered a diagnostic trait of
Xanthotrogus
(
Nikolajev 2004a
,
2004b
,
2007
) in accordance with the opinion of
Medvedev (1966)
. Thus, to accommodate this species,
Nikolajev (2004b)
subsequently introduced the monospecific subgenus
Cyprotrogus
, within the subgenus
Dasytrogus
(under the name
Madotrogus
Reitter, 1902
, which was in use for the same concept until
Branco (2010)
evidenced that the nomenclatural rules enforced by
ICZN (1999)
require the use of its subjective synonym
Dasytrogus
Reitter, 1902
).
FIGURES 1–2.
Males of
Xestotrogus nitens
(Baudi di Selve, 1870)
, from Sfalagkiotissa (1), and
X. validus
(Kraatz, 1884)
, from Adiyaman, 20 Km from Golbaşi (2).
In this framework, the placement of
Ancylonycha nitens
inside
Dasytrogus
was justified by the absence of setation on the lower side of paramera, while its distinction in a separate subgenus was justified, again, by their peculiar structure. Paramera, exactly as in
Xestotrogus
, are indeed equipped with two long dorsal processes, a similarity that was interpreted as convergent evolution by
Nikolajev (2004b)
. Such processes are absent in the other species of
Dasytrogus
,
as well as in those of
Xanthotrogus
, where the corresponding area bears at most two small denticles.
Nikolajev also pursued some preliminary exploration of the endophallic structure of the discussed taxa. His picture was however largely incomplete, also due to the referred difficulty to inflate dry material (
Nikolajev 2004b
,
2007
). He did not publish any information on the species discussed here, although he speculated over the traits expected for
Ancylonycha nitens
.
New observations and discussion.
After direct examination of the taxa involved, it is evident that Nikolajev worked under the wrong assumption that paramera of
R. validus
(
type
species of
Xestotrogus
) are hairy on their lower side, while they are actually glabrous (as are those of
A.
nitens
).
This brings two consequences: first,
Xestotrogus
fails to fit the current definition of the genus
Xanthotrogus
, of which it is treated as a subgenus. Second, the only character supporting the placement of
R. validus
and
A.
nitens
in two distinct genera falls. Pending a sound phylogenetic evaluation, the strong resemblance of their paramera and their evident difference from those of most similar taxa (
i.e.
: species assigned to
Dasytrogus
and
Xanthotrogus
) seem enough to justify a generic treatment on their own for these two species, as proposed by
Keith (2002)
.
The study of their endophalli, formerly unexplored, reveals a common ground plan similar to that observed in some species of
Dasytrogus
(including the
type
species
D. transcaspicus
(Brenske, 1886)
, see
Nikolajev 2004b
), and clearly more distinct from the structure observed in
Xanthotrogus
(see
Nikolajev 2007
, and M.U., unpublished observations). The endophallites, however, exhibit a remarkable variability in the presence or absence of the same element across the different species (
Figs. 31–39
). Notably,
Nikolajev (2007: 54)
even observed an intrapopulational variability in the presence or absence of the same large endophallite, suggesting caution on the taxonomic interpretation of this trait and the need of a better comprehension of its variability at a low taxonomic level.
Concluding, in accordance with the results above,
Xestotrogus
Reitter, 1902
status revised
is removed from subgeneric status under
Xanthotrogus
Reitter, 1902
and treated as a valid genus, and
Cyprotrogus
Nikolajev, 2004
is introduced as its
new synonym
. The genus
Xestotrogus
contains now three species:
X
.
nitens
(habitus in
Fig. 1
),
X. validus
(habitus in
Fig. 2
), and
X
.
sagrmaticus
,
new species
.