Review of Australian Scirtes Illiger, Ora Clark and Exochomoscirtes Pic (Coleoptera: Scirtidae) including descriptions of new species, new groups and a multi-gene molecular phylogeny of Australian and non-Australian species
Author
Watts, Chris H. S.
Author
Cooper, Steven J. B.
Author
Saint, Kathleen M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-11-14
4347
3
511
532
journal article
31542
10.11646/zootaxa.4347.3.5
e13b422a-b2cb-4622-bc80-065c002669f6
1175-5326
1048629
BC6C045D-9B16-4233-8C5C-D2BB53B25E03
Scirtes elegans
species group (
Yoshitomi 2009
)
Yoshitomi (2009)
defined the
S. elegans
group as “having the tegmen connected to an asymmetrical penis”. We add: first segment of labial palpus as long as second, mandible incisivus long, metatrochanter elongate, caudal margin of sternite 7 moderately concave. The relationship between tegmen and penis perhaps could be described as having the elements of each complexly intermingled (
Fig. 21
). Within the group the female of only one species is known—that of the only Australian species,
S. albamaculatus
,
from North
Queensland
. Assuming that the female of
S. albamaculatus
is representative of the group we could also add: members are dark coloured with white/cream macula or stripes on the elytra and females with elytral excitators (Fig. 31) and a ring-like bursal sclerite (
Fig. 6
). No larvae have been described.
The
Scirtes elegans
group as presently defined has only three species,
S. elegans
from
Malaysia
,
S. albamaculatus
from
Australia
and
S. albotaeniatus
Yoshitomi
from
Guam
.
The sequence data place
S. albamaculatus
as unique within Australian
Scirtes
. However, it also strongly links
S. albamaculatus
to
S. teruhisai
Yoshitomi & Ruta
from Borneo (
Fig. 1
) which is the only representative of the species-rich Southeast Asian
S. flavoguttatus
group (Yoshitomi & Ruta 2010; Ruta
et al.
2014) included in our study. This placement is not unexpected as a number of species currently placed in this group have female excitators, pale colour patterns on the elytra, all have fused tegmen and penis and some, e.g.
S. sarawakensis
Ruta & Yoshitomi
, have an aedeagus approaching the complexity seen in
S. albamaculatus
.
The form of the mandible and labial palpus also point to membership of the
S. flavoguttatus
group. With the discovery of additional species in the
S. flavoguttatus
group in Southeast Asia (Ruta
et al.
2014) the distinction between these two groups has become rather tenuous and relies on the asymmetric rather than symmetric penis. The strong linkage of
S. albamaculatus
and
S. teruhisai
by the sequence data suggests that the two species belong in the same species group. However, with only one species of each group available to us we feel it is premature to formally combine these species groups on the results of this study.