Revision of Bondariella Hustache & Bondar (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), with descriptions of the first species from the Amazon and notes on natural history
Author
Valente, Roberta De Melo
Author
Júnior, Mariano Brandão Cordeiro
text
Zootaxa
2015
4018
2
201
227
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4018.2.3
25ff35c4-bb29-44b8-a9cf-e19da81b8422
1175-5326
243295
065A82FD-3F0A-43DF-AEF4-168BDFBF866F
Bondariella
Hustache & Bondar, 1942
(
Figs. 1–10
)
Bondariella
Hustache & Bondar, 1942
:
in
Bondar 1942: 19; Bondar 1942: 21 (key to species);
Bondar 1943
: 370
(natural history);
Bondar 1949
: 209
(key to species);
Wibmer & O’Brien 1986
: 316
(catalogue).
Type
species:
Bondariella mimica
Hustache & Bondar, 1942
(
in
Bondar 1942: 21), by original designation.
Diagnosis
.
Bondariella
species (
Figs. 1–2
) are small (
1.9–2.7 mm
) squamose weevils that can be recognized by a combination of diagnostic traits—viz. mandibles (
Fig. 3
C) not crossed, not dentate or sinuous on inner and outer faces, symmetrical, triangular (dorsal view), smooth; prosternum (
Figs. 3
H–I) unarmed, no folds, fossa or punctures, concave apically, but not excavate immediately anterior to procoxae, only medially slightly concave and bearing small discrete lateral carina along the margins of the pleurasternal suture; femora unarmed; tibiae uncinate (
Fig. 3
E), tarsal claws separated at base; pygidium covered by elytra; body (
Figs. 1–2
) elongate with subparallel sides, surface rugulose (not smooth), punctuate and covered by appressed non-overlapping scales, virtually uniform in color, shape and size throughout; scutellum and elytral striae glabrous or at most with scattered microscopic scales (very sparse); parameroid lobes of tegmen (male terminalia) covered by long setae on distal region (as
Fig. 4
E); rostrum, scrobe, antennal scape and antennal insertion evidently sexually dimorphic. Female: rostrum (
Figs. 1
,
2
,
3
B) tumid (lateral view), stout and squamose only on base (0.1–0.3 times), from thereon abruptly cylindrical and extremely thin, smooth and glabrous; antennal insertion basal (0.1–0.3 times); scrobe very deep and short, extending only along the stout region of the rostrum, with basal margin concavely projected over distal margin of eye; antennal scape (
Fig. 3
B) short and strongly clavate, almost globose and reaching the eye. Male: rostrum (
Figs. 1–2
,
3
A) throughout stout, punctate, squamose, carinate; antennal insertion premedian to median; scrobe shallow, almost as long as rostrum and not projected over eye; antennal scape (
Fig. 3
A) elongate, only slightly clavate distally and not reaching the eye.
Comparative notes and remarks.
From other baridine weevils with a smooth inner mandibular face and squamose body (including undescribed species collected from Amazonian palms, personal observation), species of
Bondariella
are distinguished by the combination of the following character states: claws separated at base, pygidium covered by elytra, prosternum without spines, sulcus, folds or punctures, rostrum shorter than pronotum, outer mandibular face smooth, vestiture of appressed uniform non-overlapping scales throughout but glabrous or subglabrous on scutellum and elytral striae, and body elongate-subparallel (dorsal view), very slightly convex dorso-ventrally. Superficially,
Bondariella
can resemble small species of
Geraeus
Pascoe
and
Linogeraeus
Casey
(both in the sense of Alonso-Zaragaza &
Lyal 1999
, and
Prena 2009
) by the smooth inner mandibular face, closely squamose vestiture, claws free at base and pygidium completely covered by elytra. In fact, species of
Bondariella
key to couplet
43 in
Anderson (2002: 743–744, Key to the Neartic genera of
Baridinae
)
and from there they trace either to
Geraeus
and
Linogeraeus
since
Bondariella
species have prosternum with vestiture on median line directed backwards (as
Geraeus
) and prosternum lacking a longitudinal fold on each side (as
Linogeraeus
). However, both genera differ from
Bondariella
by the convex elliptical shaped body; rostrum longer than or as long as pronotum; prosternum variously with spine and/or sulcus, fold, fovea, fossa, and generally truncate apically; vestiture denser, with overlapping scales, generally clothing the scutellum and sometimes variegate or not uniform. Also some species of
Geraeus
and
Linogeraeus
have a sexually dimorphic rostrum but the females have rostrum flat dorso-ventrally (not cylindrical) from base, scrobe longer than in
Bondariella
,
not reaching the eye and scape elongate (not globose). Additionally, specimens dissected of both genera have parameroid lobes glabrous instead of setose on distal region as for
Bondariella
species (see also
Prena 2009
: 137).
Otherwise
Bondariella
species key most closely to
Nicentrus
in
Casey (1922: 270, key to Brazilian genera of Limnobarini)
by the body flat dorso-ventrally, elongate-subparallel and closely squamose, prothorax tubulate anteriorly and slightly narrower than elytra, mandibles non-decussate, narrower and feebler and, prosternum not sulcate or spinose. Indeed, Hustache recognized males of
Bondariella
as a new species of
Nicentrus
and the females as a new genus of baridine (Bondar 1942: 19–20), and Bondar (1942: 21) considered the genus
Bondariella
close to
Nicentrus
. However, species of
Nicentrus
have mandibles more or less obviously dentate on inner margin, prosternum truncate apically and with two evident anterior foveae, scutellum with a evident spot of scales (generally overlapping) and, in several species the body vestiture is variegate or not uniform. Furthermore, in
Nicentrus
the sexual dimorphism is very slightly evident and both sexes have rostrum throughout stout, squamose, carinate and strongly punctuate, scrobe elongate with antennal insertion beyond the middle of the rostrum and, antennal scape elongate and only slightly clavate distally.
Bondar also compared the genus
Bondariella
to
Euterpia
Bondar (Bondar 1942: 25)
and
Hustachea
Bondar
(Bondar 1942: 32, 34) by the elongate shaped body and the association of larvae and adults with palm flowers from
Brazil
, in addition to similar sexually dimorphic rostrum of
Bondariella
and
Hustachea
[(only
Hustachea campestris
, Bondar
and
Hustachea bondari
(Hustache)
]. But species of
Hustachea
and
Euterpia
are virtually glabrous (in
Hustachea campestris
scales are restricted to sternum and lateral region of pronotum), the prosternum is truncate apically and it can have spines (in male) or foveae. Besides in
Euterpia
the mandibles are dentate on inner face and the integument is yellowish throughout (not reddish brown or reddish black as
Bondariella
) while in
Hustachea
the pygidium is exposed, the integument is variegate on the elytra and the sexual dimorphism differs from
Bondariella
since female
Hustachea
has a rostrum with the abruptly thin region starting only from basal ½, scrobe extending until basal ½ and not projected over anterior margin of eye, antennal insertion premedian to median and scape more elongate, not globose.
Finally, the six constituent species of
Bondariella
agree well with the original description of the genus presented in Bondar (1942: 20–21), except by antennal club that is 3–articulated instead of 4–articulated and by the female rostrum, which is curved in the four previously known species but straight in the two new species described here. Moreover the abdominal tergites, male terminalia and sclerolepidia of
Bondariella
species are described for the first time, and photos of the habitus and SEM images of details are also provided for the first time.
Redescription. Male
(
Figs. 1–9
).
Length of pronotum + elytra
:
1.9–2.7mm
.
Habitus
: body elongatesubparallel in dorsal view; very slightly convex in lateral view.
Integument
(
Figs. 1–3
): reddish brown to reddish black, variously lighter to darker; eyes black; in some species antennae and legs or antennae, legs and elytra evidently lighter; rugulose (except on distal 1/5 of rostrum); punctate, each puncture rounded, deep and with a evident scale. Punctures deeper and larger on pronotum and pro-, meso- and metasternum, becoming very close and striolate on hypomeron. Scales appressed, ribbed, larger than its puncture, non-overlapping, just reaching the edge of the adjacent point, yellowish or whitish, elongate (base as long as apex) to spatulate (base narrower than apex); arranged into 1–3 rows on elytral intervals; directed obliquely toward center of the disc on pronotum and upwards on hypomeron; larger and/or denser locally on epipleura (mesepimeron, mesepistenum, metepimeron, metepistenum and lateral region of metasternum); longer and narrower on pro-, meso- and metasternum; denser on elytral intervals II and III; scales sometimes decumbent.
Rostrum
(
Figs.1–2
,
3
A) 0.7–0.9 times as long as pronotum; curved to almost straight (lateral view); moderately flattened dorsoventrally; punctures and scales smaller from antennal insertion to apex; with three long evident irregular carinae, extending from base to almost apex, moderately flattened, one dorsomedian and two dorsolateral, dorsomedian carina very flat at anntenal insertion; one striola above scrobe; epistoma (
Fig. 3
C) flat, strongly lobed medially, with two long lateral scales.
Scrobe
lateral; oblique; shallow; lateral margins carinate, extending from eye to apex of rostrum; basal and distal margins open, not-carinate.
Antennae
11–articulated; antennal insertion premedian (0.4) to median (0.5). Scape (
Fig. 3
A) elongate, 0.6–0.9 times as long as funicle, longer than article I of funicle (1.7–2.2 times), polished, slightly clavate distally, not reaching eye (distant by 0.1– 0.2 times its length), directed to middle of eye in idealized position. Funicle 7–articulated; articles polished, bright; each one with a subapical row of setae, longer on distal articles and suberect on articles IV–VII; article I 2.5–3.0 times as long as article II; article II 1.5–2.0 times as long as article III; article III–VII subequal in length and progressively wider. Club 3–articulated, pubescent, oval-elongate, 1.5–1.7 times as long as wide, separate and very distinct from funicle; articles with subapical row of short setae; article VIII 2.5–3.0 times as long as article IX; article IX 0.7–0.8 times as long as article X.
Head
(
Fig. 3
A) rounded, transverse; sparsely punctate; ventrally finely striolate; dorsally covered by scales, denser in front especially between eyes; fovea absent; postocular sulcus not evident.
Eyes
(
Fig. 3
A) laterally positioned in head, very large, oval, not prominent; interocular distance subequal to eye diameter.
Pronotum
(
Figs. 1–2
) trapezoidal, 1.2–1.4 times wider than long; widest on basal ½; punctures on disc large and closely spaced (distant by 0.3–0.7 times their own diameter) or small and distantly spaced (distant by 1.3 times their own diameter); surface granulose between punctures; scales subequal in length throughout or becoming smaller toward the disc; median line evident or absent; distal margin truncate; collar not evident to slightly evident and marked by darker strip of punctures; basal margin bisinuous, carinate, 0.8 times as wide as humeri; lateral margins rounded, convergent to apex.
Scutellum
trapezoidal, exposed, glabrous or bearing very sparse microscopic scales.
Prosternum
(
Fig. 3
H) unarmed, no folds, fossa, fovea or punctures; concave apically; with evident row of long translucent fimbriated scales along distal margin; collar large to narrow, evident, marked by deep puncture and evident groove; basisternum moderately to very convex, in front procoxae medially slightly concave and bearing small discrete lateral carina along the margins of the pleurasternal suture; sternacostal suture between basisternum and sternellum evident; sternellum large, flat, with a deep central cleft which forms a bilobed (heart-shaped) process of the intercoxal prosternal process; procoxal cavity separated, positioned near basal margin.
Mesosternum
trapezoidal, medially flat.
Metasternum
with median sulcus evident, medially concave; sclerolepidia (
Fig. 3
D) present along metanepisternal sutures, except for anterior and posterior one sixth, consisting of small, posterodorsally directed scales, longer than wide, split into two distinct lobes which each have long digit arising from it apically, as described by
Lyal
et al.
(2006
, cf. Fig. 16b) as the digitate 2A
type
.
Legs
(
Figs. 1–2
). Prothoracic slightly longer than meso- and metathoracic legs. Procoxae rounded, interprocoxal distance slightly shorter (0.8–0.9 times) or larger (1.2–1.3) than procoxal diameter. Femora subequal in length; unarmed; slightly flattened laterally; clavate, especially profemora; in some species ventral face with discrete comb of long golden suberect setae on basal 1/3, more evident on meso- and metafemora. Tibiae cylindrical, finely carinate, straight margins or sinuous, apically slightly expanded, more evident in metatibiae, which can be strongly expanded and bearing a comb of long golden setae on distal ½; apical surface (
Fig. 3
E) with outer and inner setose fringes well-developed, with uncus evident (larger in protibae), triangular, arising from inner angle and covered by tuft of setae; protibae slightly longer, and meso- e metatibae subequal in length. Tarsomeres: I elongate, clavate; II triangular, transversal; III bilobed; IV reduced in size and inconspicuous; V curved, elongate; tarsomere I 1.7 times as long tarsomere II, tarsomere II subequal in length to tarsomere III; tarsomere V 1.5 times as long tarsomere III. Tarsal claws separated at base, divergent, simple, falciform.
Elytra
elongate, 1.2–1.5 times longer than wide, 1.9–2.4 times as long as pronotum; widest on basal ½; humeri evident; distal margin jointly rounded; with ten sulcate deep punctate striae, punctures distant by more than 2.0 times their own diameter, glabrous or bearing sparsely microsetae; striae IX and X much deeper and becoming closely on distal region; striae X incomplete; intervals flattened, margins slightly carinate on intervals IX–X; sutural interval with 1–2 rows of scales; remaining intervals with 1–3 rows of scales on base, becoming one or two rows toward apex, intervals II and III broader and with denser scales.
Abdominal tergites
(
Figs. 3
F–G, 4A, 5A, 6A, 7A, 8A, 9A) sclerotized, convex, with eight visible tergites; laterotergites separated and subdivided into three (
Fig. 3
G) or four smaller sclerites (
Fig. 3
F); tergites I–IV with median and spiracular tergites separated; median fissure incomplete (not reaching distal margin of tergite IV,
Fig. 3
F) or complete (reaching distal margin of tergite IV,
Fig. 3
G); tergite I with median sclerites subdivided into three smaller sclerites: two anterior smaller and, one posterior narrower and bearing two evident fovea; tergites V–VIII with median and spiracular sclerites not separated; tergites V–VII (
Figs. 3
F–G) with anterolateral small dark toothlike projection, internal face with transversal discrete indented row near anterior margin, more evident on tergite V–VI; tergite VII trapezoidal, lateral margin rounded and posterior margin concave; tergite VIII (pygidium) covered by elytra, with lateral margins subparallel, posterior margin rounded. Setation (dorsal surface): median sclerites—tergite I lacking spiculate patches, tergites II–III with only median spiculate patches, tergite IV with lateral and median spiculate patches (
Figs. 4
A, 5A, 6A, 7A) or with only median spiculate patches (
Figs. 8
A, 9A), tergites V–VI with lateral and median spiculate patches, tergite VII with only lateral spiculate patches, tergite VIII lacking spiculate patches; spiracular sclerites—tergites III–VI with spiculate patches, less evident on tergite III, spiculate patches absent in the remaining spiracular sclerites; fan-like setae—covering tergites VII–VIII, each setae with 3–5 long lobes projecting from apex; plectra—arranged diagonally on tergite VII in: one basal distantly spaced pair (
Fig. 9
A), two distantly spaced pairs (
Fig. 8
A) or in two rows, each one with seven distantly spaced (
Figs. 4
A, 5A, 7A) or ten closely spaced (
Fig. 6
A) plectra.
Ventrites
(
Figs. 4
B, 5B, 6B, 7B, 8B, 9B) I and II medially fused, concave and covered by thinner sparsely scales (only on ventrite I in
B. torresi
); ventrites III–V separated, evidently denticulate along anterior margin (
Figs. 7
B, 8B); posterior margin of ventrite I evident, becoming concave and evanescent medially; posterior margin of ventrites II–IV carinate, truncate medially, curved laterally. Ventrite I 1.1–1.4 times as long as ventrite II; ventrites I–II combined 1.7–2.3 times as long as III–IV combined; ventrites III–IV subequal in length. Ventrite V 0.8–0.9 times as long as III–IV combined; transversely oblong (3.1–3.6 times wider than long,
Figs. 4
B, 5B, 6B, 7B) or trapezoidal (2.5–2.6 times wider than long,
Figs. 8
B, 9B); flat and lacking tufts of scales (
Figs. 4
B, 5B, 6B, 7B, 8B) or evidently concave on mesodistal region and with each lateral margins of the concavity bearing a distal tuft of slightly longer scales (
Fig. 9
B); lateral margins convergent to apex; distal margin rounded or slightly sinuous.
Terminalia
.
Sternum VIII
consisting of two semicircular (
Figs. 4
C, 7C), trapezoidal (
Figs. 5
C, 6C) or subquadrate (
Figs. 8
C, 9C) sclerites, transversally orientated, connected via membrane, each sclerite bearing six setae on posteroventral margin (
Figs. 4
C, 5C, 6C, 7C) or glabrous (
Figs. 8
C, 9C).
Spiculum gastrale
1.9–2.9 times as long as median lobe, elongate and narrowed (
Fig. 4
D) or short and widened (
Figs. 5
D, 6D, 7D, 8D, 9D); anteriorly variously expanded, strongly reflexed dorsally, concave, ladle-like; stylus curved to almost straight, narrow or moderately wide, posteriorly bifurcate, Y-shaped; furcal arms sclerotized to weakly sclerotized, apically diverging, lacking setae, symmetrical or slightly asymmetrical, not clavate (
Figs. 4
D, 5D, 6D, 7D, 9D) or abruptly clavate to apex (
Fig. 8
D).
Tegmen
sclerotized to weakly sclerotized; 1.8–2.4 times as long as median lobe; basal piece O-shaped, dorsally closed, encircles the aedeagus, with two dorsal parameroid lobes free (not connected medially on base,
Figs. 4
E, 5E, 6E, 7E) or connected medially on base (
Figs. 8
E, 9E); each parameroid lobe 0.6– 0.7 as long as median lobe, less sclerotized than basal piece, dorsoventrally flattened, elongate, narrow, not clavate, clothed with long setae on 0.3–0.8 distal region; ventral tegminal apodeme narrow, elongate and reflexed dorsally (
Figs. 4
E, 6E, 7E, 8E, 9E) or wide, short and straight to apex (
Fig. 5
E), 0.7–1.0 times as long as median lobe, monofurcate, medially positioned in basal piece.
Aedeagus
: median lobe slightly convex in lateral view; short and wide (1.7–2.0 times longer than wide,
Figs. 4
F, 5F, 6F, 8F, 9F) or elongate and narrow (2.5 times longer than wide,
Fig. 7
F); apex acutely rounded, acutely truncate or strongly acute; lateral margins sclerotized, narrow to large; sides variously parallel, sinuous, ovate or sinuous and expanded dorsally; endophallus membranous or sclerotized, clothed with sparse diminute spinules, in some species with an anterior pair of membranous bags bearing numerous spinules (
Figs. 4
F, 5F, 6F); ostium in some species evident, distal to medially positioned (
Figs. 4
F, 5F, 6F, 7F, 8F); orificial plates evident in some species and consisting of two weakly scletorized plates, triangular to subtriangular (
Figs. 4
F, 6F, 7F). Apodemes of aedeagus narrow; 1.5–2.0 times as long as median lobe; sinuous, not sclerotized on basal region (0.2–0.5), from thereon to apex almost straight and sclerotized.
Female
(
Figs. 1–2
,
3
B, I, 10).
Length of pronotum + elytra
:
1.9–2.6mm
.
Rostrum
(
Figs. 1–2
,
3
B): stout and squamose only on base (0.1–0.3 times), from thereon abruptly and extremely thin, cylindrical, smooth, glabrous and, strongly curved and long (0.8–0.9 times as long as pronotum,
Figs. 1
,
2
A) or straight and short (0.5–0.6 times as long as pronotum,
Figs. 2
B–C, 3B); carinae and striolae absent.
Antennal insertion
basal (0.1–0.3 times).
Scrobe
(
Fig. 3
B) very deep and short, extending only along the stout region of the rostrum, basal margin concavely projected over distal margin of eye.
Antennae
: scape short, extremely clavate, almost globose (
Fig. 3
B), 0.2–0.5 times as long as funicle, shorter (0.5–0.7 times) or longer (1.8 times) than article I of funicle, reaching anterior margin of eye.
Eyes
(
Fig. 3
B): interocular distance larger than eye diameter (1.2–1.5 times).
Pronotum
1.1–1.4 times wider than long; collar slightly to evidently marked by darker strip of punctures.
Basisternum
flat to slightly concave medially.
Metasternum
flat to slightly concave medially.
Interprocoxal distance
larger (1.2–1.3) or slightly shorter to as long (0.9–1.0 times) as procoxal diameter.
Femora
lacking comb of setae.
Elytra
1.3–1.5 times longer than wide, 1.9–2.4 times longer than pronotum.
Abdominal tergites
(
Fig. 10
A): with seven visible tergites; tergite VII trapezoidal, lateral margins strongly convergent to apex, posterior margin rounded, covered by elytra.
Ventrites
(
Fig. 10
B): ventrite I flat to slightly concave medially; ventrite II flat; ventrite I 1.1–1.4 times as long as ventrite II; ventrites I–II combined 2.0–2.6 times as long as III–IV combined (in
B. mucugeana
, 3.3–3.4 times); ventrite V flat, no tufts of scales; distal margin rounded.
Etymology
. Name suggested by Hustache in honour of Gregorio Bondar who collected the first specimens of
Bondariella
(see introduction for details). Gender: feminine.
Natural history
. The six constituent species of
Bondariella
are distributed in
Brazil
from the biomes of Caatinga (Bahia), Atlantic Forest (Bahia and Espírito Santo) and Amazon (Mato Grosso and Pará). They have only been recorded on palm flowers from species of the genera
Euterpe
and
Syagrus
(cited as species of
Cocos
L. by Bondar 1942, 1943, 1949 but now transferred to
Syagrus
, see
Glassman 1970
,
1987
;
Henderson
et al.
1995
,
Lorenzi
et al.
2004
). The species of
Bondariella
that occur in Atlantic Forest and Caatinga have only been recorded on flowers of
Syagrus
species, but not on
Euterpe
. On the other hand species of
Bondariella
that occur in the Amazon have only been recorded on flowers of
Euterpe
species, but not on
Syagrus
. Thus, in Atlantic Forest
Bondariella mimica
from
Syagrus schizophylla
and
Bondariella ruschiana
from
Syagrus ruschiana
were recorded; in Caatinga
Bondariella torresi
from
Syagrus vagans
and
Bondariella mucugeana
probably from
Syagrus
were recorded; and in the Amazon
Bondariella rudicula
sp. nov.
from
Euterpe oleracea
and
Bondariella crenata
sp. nov.
from
Euterpe longebracteata
were recorded.
FIGURE 1.
Habitus of
Bondariella
: lectotype male (dorsal and lateral view) and paralectotype female (lateral view). A
B. ruschiana
(♂ 2.3mm, ♀ 2.3mm). B
B. torresi
(♂ 2.6mm, ♀ 2.4mm). C
B. mucugeana
(♂ 2.6mm, ♀ 2.6mm).
FIGURE 2.
Habitus of
Bondariella
: lectotype male (dorsal and lateral view) and paralectotype female (lateral view). A
B. mimica
(♂ 2.3mm, ♀ 2.4mm). B
Bondariella rudicula
sp. nov
.
(♂ 1.9mm, ♀ 2.1mm). C
Bondariella crenata
sp. nov.
(♂ 2.1mm, ♀ 2.1mm).
FIGURE 3.
Bondariella
spp. A–F
Bondariella crenata
sp. nov.
, paratypes, male (A, C–F), female (B). A Rostrum male. B Rostrum female. C Epistoma. D Detail of sclerolepidia. E Apex of the hind tibae showing uncus. F Tergites. G
Bondariella torresi
, paralectotype male, tergites. H–I
Bondariella mimica
, paralectotype. H Male, prosternum. I Female, prosternum. Scale bars: A–B, D and F–I, 200 µm; C and E, 30 µm.
FIGURE 4.
Bondariella ruschiana
, paralectotype male. A Tergites, dorsal aspect showing plectra. B Ventrites. C Sternum VIII, dorsal view. D Spiculum gastrale, dorsal view. E Tegmen, dorsal view. F Aedeagus, dorsal and lateral view. Scale bars: A– B, 200 µm; C–D (on same scale) and E–F (on same scale), 0.25mm.
FIGURE 5.
Bondariella torresi
, paralectotype male. A Tergites, dorsal aspect showing plectra. B Ventrites. C Sternum VIII, dorsal view. D Spiculum gastrale, dorsal view. E Tegmen, dorsal view. F Aedeagus, dorsal and lateral view. Scale bars: A–B, 200 µm; C–F (on same scale), 0.25mm.
FIGURE 6.
Bondariella mucugeana
, paralectotype male. A Tergites, dorsal aspect showing plectra. B Ventrites. C Sternum VIII, dorsal view. D Spiculum gastrale, dorsal view. E Tegmen, dorsal view. F Aedeagus, dorsal and lateral view. Scale bars: A– B, 200 µm; C–F (on same scale), 0.25mm.
FIGURE 7.
Bondariella mimica
, paralectotype male. A Tergites, dorsal aspect showing plectra. B Ventrites. C Sternum VIII, dorsal view. D Spiculum gastrale, dorsal view. E Tegmen, dorsal view. F Aedeagus, dorsal and lateral view. Scale bars: A–B, 200 µm; C–F (on same scale), 0.25 mm.
FIGURE 8.
Bondariella rudicula
sp. nov.
, paratype male. A Tergites, dorsal aspect showing plectra. B Ventrites. C Sternum VIII, dorsal view. D Spiculum gastrale, dorsal view. E Tegmen, dorsal view. F Aedeagus, dorsal and lateral view. Scale bars: A– B, 200 µm; C–D (on same scale) and E–F (on same scale), 0.25 mm.
FIGURE 9.
Bondariella crenata
sp. nov.
, paratype male. A Tergites, dorsal aspect showing plectra. B Ventrites. C Sternum VIII, dorsal view. D Spiculum gastrale, dorsal view. E Tegmen, dorsal view. F Aedeagus, dorsal and lateral view. Scale bars: A– B, 200 µm; C–D (on same scale) and E–F (on same scale), 0.25 mm.
FIGURE 10.
Bondariella crenata
sp. nov.
, paratype female. A Tergites, dorsal view. B Ventrites. Scale bars: 200 µm.
We also collected insects from flowers of other species of palms from the Amazon, including species of
Syagrus
(
Astrocaryum aculeatum
G. Mey.
,
Astrocaryum gynacanthum
Mart.
,
Astrocaryum murumuru
Mart.
,
Astrocaryum paramaca
Mart.
,
Astrocaryum vulgare
Mart.
,
Attalea maripa
(Aubl.) Mart.
,
Attalea phalerata
Mart. ex Spreng.
,
Acrocomia aculeata
(Jacq.) Lodd. ex Mart.
,
Bactris acanthocarpa
Mart.
,
Bactris brongniartii
Mart.
,
Bactris campestris
Poepp. ex Mart.
,
Desmoncus polyacanthos
,
Geonoma maxima
(Poit.) Kunth
,
Oenocarpus distichus
Mart.
,
Mauritia
flexuosa
L. f.,
Mauritiella armata
(Mart.) Burret
,
Socratea exorrhiza
(Mart.) H. Wendl.
,
Syagrus inajai
(Spruce) Becc.
,
Syagrus cocoides
Mart.
,
Syagrus vermicularis
Noblick
and various unidentified species of
Bactris
Jacq. ex Scop.
). Moreover, Bondar collected insects from flowers of other species of palms from Atlantic Forest and Caatinga, including
Euterpe edulis
Mart.
and other species of
Syagrus
(
Bondar 1940a
,
1940b
,
1941a
,
1941b
, 1942, 1943, 1948, 1949, 1950:
Allagoptera arenaria
(Gomes) Kuntze
,
Allagoptera campestris
(Mart.) Kuntze
,
Attalea funifera
Mart. ex Spreng.
,
Attalea humilis
Mart. ex Spreng.
,
Attalea oleifera
Barb. Rodr.
,
Attallea attaleoides
(Barb. Rodr.) Wess.
,
Bactris setosa
Mart.
,
Butia capitata
(Mart.) Becc.
,
Butia eriospatha
(Mart.) Becc.
,
Cocos nucifera
L.,
Desmoncus polyachanthos
Mart.
,
Elaeis guineensis
Jacq.
,
Euterpe edulis
Mart.
,
Polyandrococos caudescens
(Mart.) Barb. Rodr.
,
Syagrus botryophora
Mart. (Mart.)
,
Syagrus coronata
(Mart.) Becc.
,
Syagrus flexuosa
(Mart.) Becc.
,
Syagrus petraea
(Mart.) Becc.
,
Syagrus romanzoffiana
(Cham.) Glassman
and
Trithrinax campestris
(Burm.) Drude & Griseb. ex Griseb.
). However, known species of
Bondariella
were only found on their host palm. Additional collections and future work could reconstruct the evolutionary sequence of host plant associations to species of
Bondariella
, their biogeographic trends and may show if the association with species of
Syagrus
and
Euterpe
is specific to the biomes.
Finally, Bondar (1942, 1943) observed that
B. mimica
,
B. torresi
and
B. ruschiana
complete their life cycle between the petals of male flowers of the host palm. He also was able to rear larvae of these species in the laboratory, but immatures of
Bondariella
have not been described and the role of
Bondariella
on palm flowers is not known.