Taxonomic revision of the Australian Notoxinae (Coleoptera: Anthicidae)
Author
Kejval, Zbyněk
Muzeum Chodska, Chodské náměstí 96, Domažlice CZ- 344 01, Czech Republic
anthicid@seznam.cz
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2013
suppl.
2013-11-15
53
1
98
journal article
9540
10.5281/zenodo.4272709
e0acc5ae-bfff-4f31-bf35-3580e085955a
ISSN0374-1036
4272709
37E0BCFC-F84A-4B2E-B554-0DC4AE42AD15
Mecynotarsus amabilis
Lea, 1895
(
Figs 10–12
,
122
,
143
,
168
,
187
)
Mecynotarsus amabilis
Lea, 1895: 608
.
Mecynotarsus amabilis
:
PIC (1911)
: 13
(catalogue);
LEA (1922)
: 473
(catalogue, record);
UHMANN (2000)
: 146
(records);
UHMANN (2007)
: 22
(redescription, record).
Type
locality.
New South Wales
, Windsor, Hawkesbury River.
Type material.
LECTOTYPE
(hereby designated,
Fig. 122
):
♂
, ‘
amabilis Lea
TYPES Windsor [h] // 19017
Mecynotarsus amabilis Lea N. S.
Wales TYPE [h] // SAMA Database No. 25-028554 [p]’ (
SAMA
).
PARALECTOTYPES
:
2 ♀♀
, same data as
holotype
[mounted on the same card, see Remarks]’ (
SAMA
).
Additional material:
AUSTRALIA
:
NEW
SOUTH WALES:
1 ♂
1 ♀
,
Bungonia State Park
,
Shoalhaven
River
Gorge
,
5.–7.x.1985
,
C. Reid
leg. (
ANIC
)
;
2♀♀
,
15 km
NW of Moruya
,
Moruya River
,
3.x.1982
,
J. & E. Doyen
leg.(
ANIC
)
;
QUEENSLAND
:
1 ♂
1 ♀
,
Helidon
, 1890,
C. J. Wild
leg. (
QMBA
).
Redescription
(male, Shoalhaven River Gorge, ANIC). Body, legs and antennae reddish brown.
Antero-lateral margins of frons simple. Gular rugules rather distinct, anteriorly larger and ordered in row as in
Fig. 138
. Setation of head rather evenly short and appressed, very dense and finer on vertex, coarser near ventral margins of eyes, with some inconspicuous, longer, erect setae dorsally at base. Antennae moderately long; antennomeres III–V about twice, X 1.4 times as long as wide; setation mostly rather short and fine, inconspicuous, distinctly coarser on basal 1–2 antennomeres.
Pronotum 1.6 times as long as wide, its lateral margins unevenly shaped, slightly convex anteriorly, somewhat angled at widest point, and then nearly straight in narrowing towards base in dorsal view; posterior collar narrow but distinct, somewhat concealed by scaly setation. Pronotal horn rather robust, moderately long and wide, its posterior angles obsolete in dorsal view (
Fig. 143
); horn margins armed with 5 rounded lobules on each side; horn crest distinct, long and rather wide, with coarse rugules on margins, evenly lowering towards apex; submarginal rugules minute, rather ordered in long, dense row laterally; 12 distinct median rugules of different sizes, some of them contiguous to fused, and several minute granules posteriorly. Setation whitish laterally, goldish to cupreous shiny dorsally, largely appressed to subdecumbent and scaly, finer on pronotal horn dorsally, but even here dense and rather distinct; scales on pronotal disc of two sizes, all elongate and distinctly truncate apically, those longer more raised (subdecumbent); antebasal paired setae long and distinct laterally and absent medially, additional tactile setae absent.
Elytra 1.7 times as long as wide; omoplates and postbasal impression absent. Setation scaly, multi-coloured, whitish, brown, cupreous and goldish, somewhat shiny, forming dark markings (
Fig. 168
), evenly developed / ordered; scales linear, bluntly rounded to truncate apically, very densely spaced but distinct; erect tactile setae absent.
Male characters (
lectotype
). Sternum VII subtruncate and moderately angled posterolaterally (
Fig. 10
), its surface shallowly impressed medially. Tergum VIII and aedeagus as in
Figs 11, 12
.
Variation.
Body length (♂
♀
) 2.7–3.0 mm. Horn margin with 5–6 lobules on each side, 6–12 median rugules.
Differential diagnosis.
Mecynotarsus amabilis
is undoubtedly close to
M. albellus
,
M. ziczac
, and other externally similar species that have a narrower pronotum (unevenly shaped laterally in dorsal view), a distinctly setose dorsal surface of the pronotal horn, and the colour pattern of elytra as in
Figs 187
,
209
(if well-developed). It may resemble especially
M. canthariphilus
sp. nov.
by the partly goldish to cupreous shiny colouration of the scales and the finer setation of the pronotal horn, however, it differs clearly by the male characters (cf.
Figs 10–11
versus
35–37).
Distribution.
Australia
:
New South Wales
(
LEA 1895
;
UHMANN 2007
),
Queensland
(
LEA 1922
).
The records from
New South Wales
and
Queensland
by
UHMANN (2000)
are based on misidentified specimens of
M. phanophilus
Lea, 1922
,
M. setulosus
sp. nov.
, and
M. ziczac
King, 1869
. The record from
Queensland
(Gayndah) by
LEA (1922)
needs verification as the
type
series of
M. amabilis
contains two different species (see below), and some identifications of
M. amabilis
by Lea were found to be erroneous (see the material of
M. albellus
and
M. ziczac
).
Remarks.
LEA (1895)
described
Mecynotarsus amabilis
from three specimens collected from flood debris along the Hawkesbury river near Windsor. The
syntypes
examined are mounted on the same card. Two of them are seriously damaged, both lacking heads and pronota. The third one (female) is in perfect condition, however it belongs to a different species (probably
M. kingii
MacLeay, 1872
, judging from rather shortly oval elytral scales). For this reason, a
lectotype
is designated for the male
syntype
mounted near handwritten ‘TY’, and redescription of external characters is based on a male specimen from Shoalhaven River Gorge, that is quite identical with the
lectotype
in male characters.