Monograph on the Cillaeinae (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae) from the Australian Region with comments on the taxonomy of the subfamily
Author
Kirejtshuk, Alexander G.
Author
Kovalev, Alexey V.
0000-0003-3328-8867
agk@zin.ru
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-02-23
5103
1
1
133
journal article
112023
10.11646/zootaxa.5103.1.1
1bf32ba1-8e0d-4435-ba04-6d7dbd0d7238
1175-5326
6245709
9E1A72E7-3862-44F7-B69F-ECE64B239FF9
10. Genus
Brachypeplus
Erichson, 1842
Brachypeplus
Erichson, 1842: 148
;
Type species
Brachypeplus planus
Erichson, 1842: 148
; recent,
Tasmania
(designated by
Parsons, 1943: 155
);
=
Nitidulopsis
Walker, 1858: 206
;
Type species
Nitidulopsis aequalis
Walker, 1858: 206
; recent,
Sri Lanka
(by monotypy).
=
Tasmus
Murray, 1864: 290
;
Type species
Brachypeplus planus
Erichson, 1842: 148
; recent,
Tasmania
(designated by
Jelínek & Audisio, 2007: 478
);
=
Selis
Murray, 1864: 302
;
Type species
Brachypeplus cuneatus
Murray, 1864: 302
; recent, Bacan Islands (“Batchian”) (designated by
Jelínek & Audisio, 2007: 477
);
=
Palaeopeplus
Powell et Cline, 2021: 23
,
syn. nov.
;
Type species
Palaeopeplus cascus
Powell et Cline, 2021: 23
; fossil, Miocene Dominican amber.
Diagnosis
. This genus seems to have the most generalized appearance among Australian cillaines, on the one hand, and a rather great diversity, on the other, and, therefore, it is not always easy to diagnose some its members among representatives of the subfamily. Nevertheless, it is characterized by an unique set of characters making it possible to reliably identify it: elongate oval to moderately elongate body; pubescent integument with longitudinal rows of longer hairs on elytra; head moderately short and moderately narrowed posteriorly, with medium-sized eyes located at base, labrum with subtruncate anterior edge and divided by the median suture into lobes, distinct antennal grooves subrectilinearly convergent, pregenal process and hypostomal sinus moderately narrow to somewhat wide; pronotum somewhat convex, with subtruncate to bi-sinuate base, more or less distinct posterior angles, shallowly emarginate anterior one, arcuate and usually moderately widely explanate sides; elytra about as long as combined width, with truncate apices and leaving uncovered at least three abdominal segments; laterosternites V and VI widened posteriorly; prohypomeran processes narrowly closed procoxal cavities posteriorly; prosternal process slightly or moderately widened at subtruncate apex, rarely subflatened at apex and slightly curved along procoxae; premesocoxal depressions rather short and moderately expressed; posterior edges of metaventrite between metacoxae subangular; femora, tibiae and tarsi of usual shape for the family, tarsomeres 1–3 lobed; male anal sclerite usually slightly exposed from under pygidial apex and with subtruncate to widely rounded apex (usually without crenellation), dorsoventrally compressed; aedeagus of usual bilobed structure; ovipositor of rather various in structure, usually with triangular gonocoxites clearly divided into outer and inner lobes and rectilinearly outlined at sides. The genus
Brachypeplus
shares most mentioned characters with the genera
Brittonoma
,
Idosoronia
,
Leiopeplus
,
Onicotis
and
Matthewsianus
gen. nov.
, although it can be determined after the above key to Australian genera and subgenera.
Notes on composition and synonymy
.
Murray (1864)
included in this genus the following subgenera:
Leiopeplus
,
Liparopeplus
,
Onicotis
,
Selis
and
Tasmus
. Later
Kirejtshuk (2001)
erected the rank of
Leiopeplus
and
Liparopeplus
to two separate genera, and
Onicotis
is also regarded as a separate genus after
Kirejtshuk (2008)
. Besides,
Jelínek & Audisio (2007)
treated
Selis
and
Tasmus
as synonyms of
Brachypeplus
.
Kirejtshuk (2008)
also considered
Tasmus
as synonym of
Brachypeplus
s. str
.
Erichson (1942) initially included two species in the genus
Brachypeplus
:
B. planus
and
B. basalis
. Later
Murray (1864)
both these species included in the subgenus
Tasmus
of the genus
Brachypeplus
.
Parsons (1943)
designated
Brachypeplus planus
as the
type
species of
Brachypeplus
and
Jelínek & Audisio (2007)
designated the same species (
B. planus
) as the
type
species of
Tasmus
. The characters indicated by
Murray (1864)
for distinguishing the species of
Tasmus
(mostly the raised ciliation of pronotal sides and very short abdominal ventrites 1 and 2) are, indead, rather variable and scarcely allow to discriminate a group of related species among congeners. As shown above, the
Brachypeplus
and
Tasmus
have the same
type
species. A recent more detailed comparison of
Selis
demonstrates that this taxon is also reasonable to regard as a synonym rather than separate subgenus, although after publications of
Murray (1864)
,
Grouvelle (1897
, 2017),
Gillogly (1962)
, and some others it recognized as a subgenus of
Brachypeplus
.
Murray (1864)
proposing the subgenus
Selis
emphasized on its 2–3-dentate mandibles and longer pygidium which is more narrowing apically than in other congeners, however these characters are rather variable as among some groups of the closely related species as sometimes even within one species. A further wide comparison could show more stable group difference for a reliable fixation of relationship between groups of the genus under consideration and make it possible to find a clear reason to split this genus into subgenera (
Brachypeplus
and
Selis
).
Murray (1864)
put in the subgenus
Selis
only three species:
Brachypeplus
(
Selis
)
apicalis
,
B.
(
S.
)
caudalis
Murray, 1864
and
B.
(
S.
)
cuneatus
. In the catalogue by
Grouvelle (1913)
and later
Brachypeplus
(
Selis
)
decoratus
Grouvelle, 1917
,
B
. (
S
.)
dorsalis
Grouvelle, 1897
and
B
. (
S
.)
ornatus
Grouvelle, 1914
were added in this subgenus. They have a characteristic pattern of darkened spots and infuscations on their body and elytra, and also characteristic but not unique sculpture of integument. Later
Gillogly (1962)
described
Brachypeplus kusaiensis
which according to the opinion of the describer could be assigned to both
Tasmus
and
Selis
,
coloration pattern and sculpture of the latter is completely different from six above-mentioned species, and recently two names of
B. aequalis
and
B
.
dubreuili
without clear relationship to initial members of
Selis
were interpreted in composition of this “subgenus
”
(see below). In this monograph for “
Selis
”
sensu
Murray (1864)
and “
Tasmus
”
sensu
Murray (1864)
the terms
apicalis
-group of species (
Brachypeplus apicalis
,
B. cuneatus
,
B
.
dorsalis
and
B
.
nypicola
sp. nov.
) and
basalis
- group of species (
B. basalis
,
B. binotatus
,
B. blandus
,
B. macleayi
,
B. planus
and probably
B. wattsensis
) are used.
Palaeopeplus cascus
described as a cillaeine by
Powell & Cline (2021)
from the Miocene Dominican amber without mention of any subfamiliar or generic diagnoistic character, however, one picture of the
holotype
of this species (“
Figure 2
, A”) published by these authors shows that this fossil species is a true member of the tribe
Cillaeini
s. str.
because of its rather widened laterosternites V and VI. As the authors of
Palaeopeplus cascus
did not indicate any character making it possible to assign it to any genus or any subfamily (except “all abdominal tergites fimbriate”: p. 25), as well as a proper diagnosis or comparison with cillaeines and also as the pictures of the
holotype
of this species has only characters of the genus
Brachypeplus
(shape of head, pronotum and other observable upper sclerites, position of the medium-sized eyes, structure of the antennae and exposed abdominal laterosternites, traced sculpture of integument), it has no reason to consider it as a separate genus and it would be better to treat it as
Brachypeplus cascus
comb. nov.
and respectively the generic name “
Palaeopeplus
” should be accepted as a junior synonym of
Brachypeplus
.