Omolabus Jekel in north and central America (Coleoptera: Attelabidae)
Author
HAMILTON, ROBERT W.
text
Zootaxa
2005
2005-05-19
986
1
1
60
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.986.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.986.1.1
7e37edb4-214d-4b5f-ba6f-82871e6f8bb9
11755334
5056385
Omolabus
Jekel, 1860
Omolabus
(
Omolabus
) Jacob, 1936
158
Omolabus
(
Xestolabus
)
Jekel, 1860
192
Omolabus
(
Thyreolabus
)
Jekel, 1860
195
Type
species.
Attelabus bifoveatus
Jekel, 1860
203, original designation.
Type
holder.
Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Oxford,
England
[?]. Most Jekel
types
are thought to be in Oxford but I have not seen any of them.
Generic description. Body
smooth, shiny; color varying from entirely red or entirely black to reddish, greenish, or yellowishbrown; pubescence lacking above except for few inconspicuous widely spaced erect setae along margins of elytra.
Head
conical, widest at base, sometimes distinctly elongate in male, sometimes with paired denticles in male, sometimes with pair distinctly raised dorsobasal areas in male; eyes prominent, more or less reniform, sometimes more rounded or oval, varying from not at all protuberant to strongly protuberant.
Rostrum
arcuate, as long as or longer than head, widened beyond antennal insertions, weakly to moderately punctured, usually with postlabial armature in male.
Antennae
usually inserted dorsolaterally in the basal portion of the rostrum, sometimes inserted at middle; club usually elongatecompact, sometimes shortcompact, subequal to or shorter than the funicle.
Pronotum
more or less conical, usually widest at base, in dorsal view sides weakly to distinctly rounded outward, usually with small shallow widely spaced punctures and smooth shiny interspaces, sometimes with coarse punctures separated by rugose interspaces, sometimes with pair of pitlike foveae or with unique disk sculpture, sometimes with anterolateral projections or weak postoccular lobes, sometimes with anteroventral spinelike “chest” denticles in male; anterior collar usually distinct, set off by weak constriction; basal carina narrow, usually widened through middle.
Scutellum
usually prominent, wider than long, 4 or 5sided; lateral sides incurvate, basal angles attenuate; posterior margin broadly rounded or angled at middle.
Elytra
usually as wide as long, sometimes longer than wide, usually widest across humeri, in dorsal view parallelsided or narrowed posteriorly from humeri to apices; striae small, round, moderately to deeply impressed at base, sometimes appearing channeled at base, shallowly impressed beyond base, usually distinct throughout, becoming less so beyond middle of elytra; intervals beyond base usually wide, flat, sometimes with minute punctures; humeri varying from simple protuberant to obliquely truncated and/or denticulate, sometimes with prominent dorsal posthumeral humplike protuberances.
Thoracic pleura and sterna
usually with coarse punctures.
Abdominal sterna
usually with irregular small punctures; punctures more numerous laterally; ventrites rarely with paired setose patches in female.
Legs
with procoxae prominent, subconical, usually set near posterior margin of prothorax in both sexes, more so in male, sometimes near middle in female; profemora strongly enlarged, unarmed in both sexes, usually swollen evenly in both sexes, sometimes ventrally angulate in female or male, sometimes with strigate ventral protuberance in male.
Male
genitalia
with aedeagal pedon short; apodemes long; endophallic transfer apparatus (TA) large, complexly articulated, with variably unique transfer process.