Species of the genus Notaris Germar, 1817 (Coleoptera, Curculionidae) from Siberia and Russian Far East
Author
Legalov, Andrei A.
text
Ecologica Montenegrina
2021
2021-11-14
47
18
27
http://dx.doi.org/10.37828/em.2021.47.3
journal article
10.37828/em.2021.47.3
2336-9744
13250130
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5025CA05-0BBA-47B0-B7D2-E9CAF9C77C54
Notaris
(
Erirhinus
)
aethiops
(Paykull, 1792)
(
Figs. 1A
,
2A
,
3
)
General distribution
. Boreal zone of Eurasia and North America.
Distribution in Asian
Russia
. Western Siberia (
Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug
,
Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug
,
Tyumen Oblast
,
Tomsk Oblast
,
Novosibirsk Oblast
,
Kemerovo Oblast
,
Altai Krai
,
Altai Republic
, Republic of
Khakassia
:
40 km
WNW of Tashtyp; Karasibo River –
new record
;
Krasnoyarsk Krai
,
Tyva Republic
), Eastern Siberia (
Irkutsk Oblast
, Zabaikalskii Krai,
Sakha
(Yakutia) Republic), Far East (?
Chukotka
Autonomous Okrug,
Kamchatka Oblast
,
Magadan Oblast
,?
Amur Oblast
,?
Khabarovsk Krai
,?
Primorsky Krai
).
Figure 2.
Notaris
spp.
, aedeagus, dorsally: a –
N
.
aethiops
; b –
N
.
eversmanni
; c –
N
.
altaica
, holotype; d –
N
.
daurica
; e –
N
.
oryzae
; f –
N
.
scirpi scirpi
; g –
N
.
scirpi mandschurica
; h –
N
.
acridulus
. Scale bar for a-d, f-h = 0.5 mm.
Remarks
. This species is common in the boreal regions of Western Siberia and in the tundra-steppes of South-eastern Altai. Several localities are known in Yakutia (
Averensky 1999
) and in the North-East of
Russia
(
Korotyaev 1980
). This species is recorded for the
Amur Oblast
,
Khabarovsk
and
Primorsky
Krais (
Egorov et al. 1996
), but the finds in these regions were absent in the earlier works of A.B.
Egorov (1976
,
1977
,
1981
). This species is recorded for
Chukotka
(
Anderson, 1997
), but the data on the finding from this region in the works of
Korotyaev (1980)
, and
Khruleva and Korotyaev (2012)
is absent also. It was distributed in the Pleistocene of Western Siberia (including the southeast) (
Zinovyev 2011
;
Legalov et al. 2016
;
Zinovyev et al. 2016
;
Gurina et al. 2018
,
2019
) and the North-East of
Russia
(including
Chukotka
) (
Kiselev and Nazarov 2009
;
Kuzmina and Matthews 2012
).
Figure 3.
Distribution of
Notaris aethiops
in Asia.
Subgenus
Asionotaris
subgen. n.
http://zoobank.org/
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
74E5FF5D-8A1E-408A-A390-AF04CF3366DC
Type
species
–
Erirhinus altaicus
Legalov, 1997
Diagnosis.
Body black-brown, almost glabrous or covered with sparse setae. Rostrum long, curved, usually without middle carina. Mandible quite large, with external tooth. Antennal scrobes directed to eye, glabrous. Eyes transverse-oval, not protruding from contour of head. Forehead subequal or slightly wider than rostrum base. Antennae inserted in apical one-third. Scape long, not reaching eye. Antennal club compact. Pronotum bell-shaped, densely punctate. Prosternum with weak postocular lobes. Scutellum distinct. Elytra suboval. Humeri smoothed. Elytral striae distinct. 9th elytral stria long, not fused with 10th stria at level of metacoxa. Interstriae wide, flattened. Procoxal cavities contiguous. Metepisternum narrow. Ventrite 5 without anal setae. Pygidium covered by elytra. Procoxae conical. Femora clavate, without teeth. Tibiae narrow, uncinate, with small spurs or they reduced. Tarsi long. Tarsomeres 1 and 2 wide-conical. Tarsomere 3 bilobed. Claws free.
Etymology
. From Asia and “
Notaris
”.
Comparison.
The new subgenus differs from the subgenus
Erirhinus
in the smoothed humeri and small or reduced tarsal spurs.
Composition.
N
.
(
A
.)
maerkeli
(Boheman, 1843)
,
N
.
(
A
.)
eversmanni
Faust, 1882
,
N
. (
A
.)
discreta
Faust, 1882,
N
.
(
A
.)
distans
Faust, 1890
,
N
.
(
A
.)
imprudens
Faust, 1885
,
N
.
(
A
.)
nivalis
Faust, 1882
,
N
.
(
A
.)
altaica
Legalov, 1997
, and
N
.
(
A
.)
oberti
Faust, 1885
concern to this subgenus.