Preliminary re-examination of genus-level taxonomy of the pollen beetle subfamily Meligethinae (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae)
Author
Audisio, Paolo
Dipartimento di Biologia Animale e dell’Uomo, Sapienza Rome University, via A. Borelli, 50, I- 00161 Rome, Italy; e-mail: paolo. audisio @ uniroma 1. it
Author
Cline, Andrew Richard
Plant Pest Diagnostics Center, California Department of Food and Agriculture, 3294 Meadowview Road, Sacramento, CA 95832 - 1448, USA; e-mail: acline @ cdfa. ca. gov
Author
Biase, Alessio De
Dipartimento di Biologia Animale e dell’Uomo, Sapienza Rome University, viale Dell’Università, 32, I- 00185 Rome, Italy; e-mail: alessio. debiase @ uniroma 1. it
Author
Antonini, Gloria
Dipartimento di Biologia Animale e dell’Uomo, Sapienza Rome University, via A. Borelli, 50, I- 00161 Rome, Italy; e-mail: paolo. audisio @ uniroma 1. it
Author
Mancini, Emiliano
Dipartimento di Scienze di Sanità Pubblica, Sapienza Rome University, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, I- 00185, Rome, Italy; e-mail: emiliano. mancini @ uniroma 1. it
Author
Trizzino, Marco
Dipartimento di Biologia Animale e dell’Uomo, Sapienza Rome University, via A. Borelli, 50, I- 00161 Rome, Italy; e-mail: paolo. audisio @ uniroma 1. it
Author
Costantini, Lorenzo
Museo Nazionale d’Arte Orientale, Servizio di Bioarcheologia e Microscopia, via Merulana 248, I- 00185 Rome, Italy; e-mail: l. costantin @ mclink. it
Author
Strika, Sirio
Museo Nazionale d’Arte Orientale, Servizio di Bioarcheologia e Microscopia, via Merulana 248, I- 00185 Rome, Italy; e-mail: l. costantin @ mclink. it
Author
Lamanna, Francesco
Dipartimento di Biologia Animale e dell’Uomo, Sapienza Rome University, via A. Borelli, 50, I- 00161 Rome, Italy; e-mail: paolo. audisio @ uniroma 1. it
Author
Cerretti, Pierfilippo
Dipartimento di Biologia Animale e dell’Uomo, Sapienza Rome University, via A. Borelli, 50, I- 00161 Rome, Italy; e-mail: paolo. audisio @ uniroma 1. it
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2009
2009-12-15
49
2
341
504
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5319334
0374-1036
5319334
35.
Horakia
Jelínek, 2000
(
Figs. 35 a–p
)
Horakia
Jelínek, 2000: 413
.
Type
species.
Horakia kubani
Jelínek, 2000: 414
(by original designation).
Generic redescription and diagnosis.
The single known species (
2.5–2.6 mm
length;
1.5 mm
width) exhibits the following combination of characters.
Body color and pubescence
: pubescence moderately long and fine, recumbent, golden on head and pronotum, darker on elytra, not obscuring the variably colored dorsal body surface (head and pronotal disk dark brown; elytra, pygidium and metaventrite blackish with faint metallic greenish iridescence on pronotal disc and pygidium), flattened sides of frons, and two diverging spots on posterior half of elytra (
Fig. 35a
) yellowish-brown; pronotal and elytral sides relatively widely flattened. SEM observations of microsetae on lateral margins of elytra and posterior margin of pronotum are unavailable.
Dorsal habitus
: body slightly convex, wide and oval (
Fig. 35a
); dorsal punctures on discal portion of pronotum smaller than eye facet, shallowly impressed and sparsely distributed; anterior margin of clypeus emarginate, simple, i.e. without small distinct medial bulge, fused with frons; frons with lateral margins moderately bulging over antennal insertions (
Fig. 35a
); circum-ocular furrows (occipital sulci) on dorsal side of head (occipital sulci) absent; eyes small-sized and moderately projecting laterally (
Fig. 35a
), pronotum with markedly distinct posterior angles, subrectangular to slightly acute, slightly directed posteriorly (
Fig. 35a
); scutellum densely punctate on most of exposed portion; elytral punctation almost completely finely transversely strigose; elytral humeral angle obtuse, not protruding laterally; elytral humeral striae indistinct; elytra apically truncately rounded in males (
Fig. 35a
), female unknown; pygidium partially exposed, moderately convex, apically rounded in males (
Fig. 35a
).
Ventral habitus
: antennal furrows delimited by moderately bulged genae, arcuately convergent posteriorly (
Fig. 35b
); mentum subpentagonal; prosternal antennal furrows on anterior margin of prosternum absent (
Fig. 35b
); prosternal process flat, moderately narrow, shallowly arcuately emarginate apically (
Fig. 35d
), subapical dilated portion ~1.5× as wide as maximum width of 1
st
antennomere; lateral borders of prosternal process not delimiting impressed furrows, distally terminating at predistal lateral expansions (
Fig. 35d
); posterior margin of mesoventrite simple, not medially incised; sexual dimorphism likely absent in impressions on metaventrite, absent in males; first two visible abdominal ventrites simple in males, without tufts of setae; caudal marginal lines of metacoxal cavities simple, parallel and contiguous to posterior margin of metacoxal cavities; arched impressions on basal portion of last visible abdominal ventrite absent.
Fig. 35.
Horakia
Jelínek, 2000
:
a–p –
H. kubani
Jelínek, 2000
.
a
– male habitus;
b
–ventral view of head and prosternum;
c –
dorsal view of head;
d
– prosternal process;
e–f
– male genitalia;
g
– major sclerites of endophallus;
h
– labrum;
k
– male protibia;
m
– male mesotibia;
n
– male metatibia;
p
– male antenna. Drawings
a–p
modified from
JELÍNEK (2000a))
. Refer to
JELÍNEK (2000a)
for scale.
Appendages
: male 1
st
antennomere ~1.0× as long as width of protibiae (
Fig. 35a
); 3
rd
antennomere long and thin in males, ~5× longer than wide, 3.5× longer and much thinner than 2
nd
antennomere (
Fig. 35p
); 4
th
antennomere relatively short, 2× longer than wide, 5
th
antennomere long and thin in males, ~4× longer than wide; antennal club compact, long, moderately loose, comprising last 4 antennomeres in males (unknown, but presumably 3- segmented in females), wider than protibiae; labial palpi long and slender in both sexes (
Fig. 35b
), terminal segment ~2.7× as long as wide; maxillary palpi long and slender in both sexes (
Fig. 35b
), terminal segment ~3.4× as long as wide; mandibles mid-sized, apex arcuate and acuminate with subapical tooth; tarsal claws simple, not toothed at base; tarsi of normal size and shape, 0.6–0.7× as long as corresponding tibiae (
Fig. 35a
); protibiae with a series of small, fine, sharp teeth on apical portion of lateral margin (
Fig. 35k
), almost rectilinear outer margins and flatly arcuate inner margins; lateral margin of meso- and metatibiae bearing a single and regular row of long thin pegs (
Figs.
35m
, n
), without U-shaped sinuosity at distal third; meso- and metatibiae moderately long and slender, not markedly subtrapezoidal or axeshaped; tarsal plates of prolegs moderately wide in males; posterior margins of metafemora simple in males, without tubercles or projections.
Male genitalia
: processes along inner side of parameres absent (
Figs. 35e–f
), with deep and wide V-shaped excision along distal margin, without deep median longitudinal desclerotization from proximal portion of tegmen extending to medial distal V-shaped excision; median lobe of aedeagus long, without lateral emargination, sharply acuminate distally, without distal minute excision or emargination; main sclerites of internal sac small, narrow, lyriform, moderately sclerotized, ~4–5× shorter than aedeagus (
Fig.
35g
).
Female genitalia
(
ovipositor
): unknown.
Etymology.
Horakia
was named for a Czech entomologist, Jan Horák (Prague), who collected the
type
specimens in
Thailand
(
JELÍNEK 2000a
). Gender feminine.
Biology.
The biology of the single inclusive species is unknown (
JELÍNEK 2000a
). Both specimens in the
type
series were collected in indigenous mountain forests of northern
Thailand
on inflorescences of large trees of a local species of
Castanopsis
(D. Don) Spach (Fagaceae)
, which is attractive to beetles in general.
Horakia
larvae may be associated with male inflorescences of a mountain forest palm (
Arecaceae
), as analogously observed in the two related genera
Kabakovia
and
Cryptarchopria
known from the region. The specific host is probably the Mountain fishtail palm,
Caryota gigas
W. J. Hahn ex Hodel
, which is a large, endangered species that inhabits middle altitude (
1200–1800 m
a.s.l.) indigenous forests of northern
Thailand
and northeastern
India
,
Myanmar
(
Burma
), southern
China
, and
Laos
(
RIFFLE 2008
). However this assumption is speculative and requires further fieldwork to substantiate.
Phylogenetic position.
Available morphological data provide good evidence of a sister-group relationship of
Horakia
and
Cryptarchopria
, with
Kabakovia
being likely sister to this clade (
JELÍNEK 2000a
). A weaker relationship to members of
Meligethinus
could also be postulated. No molecular data is currently available.
Taxonomy and geographic distribution.
This genus includes a single species from northernwestern
Thailand
(
JELÍNEK 2000a
).
Horakia kubani
Jelínek, 2000 NW
Thailand