A Review of the Genus Cryptorhynchus Illiger 1807 in the United States and Canada (Curculionidae: Cryptorhynchinae)
Author
Anderson, Robert S.
text
The Coleopterists Bulletin
1807
2008-03-31
62
1
168
180
http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/1065.1
journal article
10.1649/1065.1
1938-4394
5369896
Cryptorhynchus
Illiger
Cryptorhynchus
Illiger 1807:330
.
(Complete generic synonymy is presented in Alonso-Zarazaga and Lyal (1999) and is not repeated here.)
Type
species.
Curculio lapathi
Linnaeus 1758
by subsequent designation (
ICZN 1967
:83)
.
Diagnosis.
Within North America,
Cryptorhynchus
can be recognized by the following combination of characters. Body size
4.5–9.5 mm
in length. Head with eyes separated by slightly less than width of rostrum; eyes partially covered by postocular lobe when head in repose. Rostrum more or less evenly curved, mandibles prominent when closed with visible inner acute tooth. Pronotum
168
slightly produced over head but vertex visible in dorsal view. Elytra with intervals flat or with intervals 3 and 5 very slightly convex and with tufts or patches of erect dark scales giving them a more elevated appearance; vestiture of broad scales only, no hairs. Middle coxae widely separated by distance greater than width of coxa. Legs with femora each with one (may be small) or two teeth; tibiae with outer edge simple, not carinate.
Diversity.
Cryptorhynchus
is a large, cosmopolitan genus. Only a very few species are temperate and the vast majority are tropical in their distributions. For example, some 120+ species are known from Central America (O’Brien and Wibmer 1982).
Anderson (2002)
mistakenly stated that only four species are present in North America (erroneously excluding
C. tristis
LeConte
and
C. woodruffi
(Sleeper))
. With the nomenclatural changes reported herein, five species are now recognized as occurring in North America.
Nomenclatural changes.
Cryptorhynchus minutissimus
LeConte 1876:254
is here removed from
Cryptorhynchus
and provisionally placed in the genus
Acalles
Schoenherr
as
Acalles minutissimus
(LeConte)
,
new combination
. It is much smaller in size than other North American
Cryptorhynchus
and is very similar to
Acalles sablensis
Blatchley. Both
possess a distinct and relatively long metepisternal suture, similar abdominal structure (length of ventrites and depth of sutures), lack teeth on the femora, and have a very similar dorsal scale pattern. Undoubtedly, the definition of
Acalles
will require modification itself as the continued inclusion of both Old World and New World species in the same genus is questionable. The combination
Cryptorhynchus obliquus
Say
has also been resurrected (see discussion under that species).
Based upon these changes, some modifications to couplet 25 of the key to genera of Cryptorhynchinae in
Anderson (2002)
can be made as follows.
25(24) Elytra with alternate intervals 3, 5, 7 and 9 elevated and sharply carinate, lacking any tufts of erect scales.....................................
Eubulus
- Elytra with intervals 3 and 5 flat to very slightly elevated, not carinate, with tufts or patches of suberect or erect broad, dark scales giving them a more elevated appearance..................................
Cryptorhynchus