The primary types of Bisaltes (Bisaltes) Thomson of the Museu de Zoologia Universidade de São Paulo, with notes and synonymies regarding other species of this subgenus and Bisaltes (Craspedocerus) Aurivillius (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae Lamiinae)
Author
Santos-Silva, Antonio
Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Author
Bezark, Larry G.
0000-0003-0165-552X
521 46 Street, Sacramento, California, 95819, U. S. A. bezbycids @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 0165 - 552 X
bezbycids@gmail.com
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-07-13
5165
1
95
106
journal article
96833
10.11646/zootaxa.5165.1.4
e90bf24c-7aee-43fb-96db-81497220e0bd
1175-5326
6825623
7B0E44B8-A8F3-433E-A937-9182127E7504
On
Craspedocerus
Aurivillius, 1900
According to
Aurivillius (1900)
regarding
Craspedocerus
(translated): “antennomeres III–V tumid, dense setose ventrally;” and “Closely related to
Ptericoptus
and
Bisaltes
, but immediately distinguished from both by the elongated lower eye lobes.” Of these features, only the densely setose ventral surface of antennomeres III–V may, eventually, be used to separate this subgenus, because the other species currently included in it do not have the basal antennomeres distinctly tumid as in the
type
species (
C. poecilus
Aurivillius, 1900
(
Fig. 34
)).
Breuning (1942)
considered
Craspedocerus
as a subgenus of
Bisaltes
and reported (translated): “Very close to
poecilus
Auriv.
, but the lower eye lobes noticeably longer than the genae, prosternal process somewhat recurved backward, the metatibiae not so excessively extended; the elytra without a postmedian dark band.” Later,
Breuning (1971a)
separated
Bisaltes
(
Bisaltes
)
from
Bisaltes
(
Craspedocerus
)
in his key as follows (translated): “Antennomeres III-V not tumid,” leading to
Bisaltes
(
Bisaltes
)
; “These articles tumid,” leading to
Bisaltes
(
Craspedocerus
)
. Even so,
Breuning (1971a)
, incomprehensibly, included
B. pictus
Breuning, 1940
(
Fig. 33
) in
Bisaltes
(
Bisaltes
)
and
B. ptericoptoides
Breuning, 1942
(
Fig. 32
) in
Bisaltes
(
Craspedocerus
)
, although both have a similar general appearance and identical antennal shape.
Galileo & Martins (2003)
transferred
B. pictus
to
B.
(
Craspedocerus
). Furthermore, still more incomprehensibly,
Breuning (1971b)
included
B. columbianus
Breuning,
1971
in
Bisaltes
(
B.
), although the antennae are identical to that of
B. poecilus
. It is important to note that there are other species currently included in
Bisaltes
(
Bisaltes
)
with the ventral surface of the basal antennomeres somewhat densely setose, as for example,
B.
(
B.
)
adustus
(
Burmeister, 1865
)
.