Taxonomic and nomenclatural changes in Cassidinae (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae)
Author
Sekerka, Lukáš
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2016
2016-07-15
56
1
275
344
journal article
56063
10.5281/zenodo.5305725
31cb15bf-28f5-4b27-86df-6a1b28cbce41
0374-1036
5305725
E24F1028-C6AC-4323-9ED5-C9B7FF3434ACD
Alurnus dallieri
Pic, 1926
Alurnus costalis
v.
Dallieri
Pic, 1926: 9
(original description).
Alurnus costalis
v.
bipartitus
Pic, 1926: 9
(original description),
syn. nov.
Alurnus tricolor
Uhmann, 1927: 134
(original description; primary junior homonym of
A. tricolor
Olivier, 1789
),
syn. nov.
Alurnus horni
Uhmann, 1935: 90
(new substitute name for
A. tricolor
Uhmann
),
syn. nov.
Type localities.
Alurnus costalis
v.
bipartitus
: ‘Equateur’;
A. costalis
v.
Dallieri
: ‘Equateur’;
A. tricolor
: ‘Ecuador’.
Type material examined.
Alurnus costalis
v.
bipartitus
:
HOLOTYPE
: pinned, ‘
Equateur
[w, hw by Pic, s] || type [yellow, hw by Pic, s] || TYPE [r, p, cb] ||
v. bipartitus
| mihi [w, hw by Pic, s]’ (
MNHN
).
Alurnus costalis
v.
Dallieri
:
HOLOTYPE
: pinned, ‘
Equateur
[w, hw by Pic, s] || sous condition | ex Clermont [w, hw by Pic, s] ||
Alurnus
| costalis v. | nov Dallieri | mihi [w, hw by Pic, s] || type [yellow, hw by Pic, s] || Museum Paris | Coll. M. Pic [w, p, cb] || HOLOTYPE [r, p, cb]’ (
MNHN
).
Remarks.
PIC (1926)
described two varieties,
A. costalis
var.
dallieri
Pic, 1926
and
A. costalis
var.
bipartitus
Pic, 1926
, from
Ecuador
.
UHMANN (1927)
described
A. tricolor
from
Ecuador
and noted that it is similar to
A. costalis
Rosenberg, 1898
. However, the name was preoccupied by
A. tricolor
Olivier, 1789
, leading
UHMANN (1935)
to propose a new substitute name
A. horni
for his species.
STAINES (2013)
revised the genus, considered
A. horni
valid, retained
var.
bipartitus
under
A. costalis
and raised the rank of the
var.
dallieri
to species and placed it among taxa with pubescent pronotum and smooth elytra without costae.
Types
of both Picʼs varieties have sparsely pubescent pronotum and elytra with elevated ribs and are conspecific with
A. horni
. The
var.
bipartitus
has the basal half of elytra yellow and the apical part blood red, just like
A. horni
while
var.
dallieri
has completely red elytra. Besides colouration, there is no other character to separate these forms. Although the two varieties were described in the same publication, because of STAINESʼ (2013) act
A. dallieri
has the priority according to the Principle of the first reviewer (
ICZN 1999
: Article 24.2). Therefore I consider
A. horni
and
A. costalis
var.
bipartitus
as junior subjective synonyms of
A. dallieri
.
As mentioned above
STAINES (2013)
misinterpreted
A. dallieri
and wrongly placed it in the key. Hence this species should replace
A. horni
in the key and has to be deleted from the couplet 8. In the latter key,
A. costalis
is separated from
A. horni
(=
A. dallieri
) and
A. chapuisi
Uhmann & Jolivet, 1952
, a third species with pubescent pronotum and costate elytra, by the setose vertex and each elytron with six costae vs. vertex not setose and elytra with four or five costae. However, these characters are variable at least in
A. dallieri
, which may also have six costae on each elytron, four main and two shortened additional ones more or less visible between the second and third, and third and fourth costae, respectively. Also it has short but distinct pubescence on vertex so the main distinguishing character is the density of vestiture on pronotum, which completely covers it in
A. costalis
while in the two other species it is very sparse.
Alurnus dallieri
is known only from
Ecuador
while
A. costalis
seems to be restricted to
Colombia
.
ROSENBERG (1898)
described
A. costalis
based on
one specimen
from
Colombia
(Juntas, Río Dagua) and two from
Ecuador
(Cachabí) and noted that the latter differ from the
type
in the sparsely pubescent pronotum and that the pubescence was probably rubbed off. I have not examined these
two specimens
but it is likely that they belong to
A. dallieri
due to the sparsely pubescent pronotum.
STAINES (2013)
published as
A. costalis
also
three specimens
from
Ecuador
, one without further locality data and two from Cachabí and Cachabí to Paramba. I have not examined these specimens but they most likely belong to
A. dallieri
as
ROSENBERG (1898)
mentioned specimens from the same locality having sparsely pubescent pronota.
Distribution.
Ecuador
(
PIC 1926
,
UHMANN 1927
).