Curculionoidea (weevils) of New Caledonia and Vanuatu: Basal families and some Curculionidae
Author
Kuschel, Guillermo
John T. Huber
text
Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle
2008
197
99
250
journal article
978-2-85653-605-6
1243-4442
Genus
AULETOBIUS
Desbrochers
Auletobius
Desbrochers des Loges, 1869: 323
, 396.
Type
species:
Involvulus sanguisorbae
Schrank.
DISTRIBUTION. —
Auletobius
has over one hundred described species, mostly under
3 mm
long, distributed over all biogeographical regions, 54 of them Australian (Zimmerman 1994a). Whether the world-wide distribution is due to small size, old age or an artificial assemblage of disparate elements has still to be determined.
DESCRIPTION. — The genus, as at present, may be defined as follows: head transverse, often somewhat constricted behind eyes. Eyes large, strongly protruding. Rostrum straight or curved, cylindrical or widening apicad. Antennae inserting shortly behind middle or at base of narrow section of rostrum. Elytra with largely irregular punctation, lacking scutellary striole. Tibiae straight, with spur formula 1-1-1. Abdomen sexually dissimilar, male with two fused ventrites, female with three fused ventrites; sternite 7 (pygidium) not or hardly exposed. Tergite
9 in
male totally membranous, lacking lateral rods. Vagina in female with a pair of long, slender pouches (mycetomes) on either side, as illustrated by Zimmerman (1994a).
Voss (1933) proposed nine subgenera, on largely weak and unreliable characters. Because he missed designating
type
species, his names were unavailable. The Australian species were placed, without exception, in what he called
Parauletes
,
which included the
type
species of
Metopum
.
The species before me from
Australia
and
New Caledonia
differ from those present from the northern hemisphere as follows: antennae inserting well basad of midlength of rostrum (measured from anterior margin of eyes to epistome), reaching eyes with segment 2; funicle thin throughout, with all segments longer than wide, and none appreciably wider than others. Prothorax rather abruptly constricted to a relatively wide collar at basal angles. Metepisternum usually smooth and glabrous against elytra, usually with a rather distinct shallow depression along middle, with dense punctation in the depression. Tegminal apodeme weakly expanded at apex. Sternite
8 in
female with a laterobasally, rather strongly angulate blade.
These features apply to the Australian
Auletobius suturalis
species group. The group is part of the subgeneric taxon
Metopum
Agassiz (1846)
, a replacement name for
Metopon
G. R.
Waterhouse (1842
, non Walker 1834), to which the species from
New Caledonia
also belongs.