One genus, four different stories: evolutionary history, bionomics and biogeography of the monotypic tribe Stenostomatini (Coleoptera: Oedemeridae)
Author
Poloni, Riccardo
CEFE, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE, IRD, Montpellier, France
riccardo.poloni@gmail.com
Author
Bologna, Marco A.
Dipartimento di Scienze, Università Roma Tre, Viale G. Marconi 446, 00146 Roma, Italy & NBFC, National Biodiversity Future Center, Palermo 90133, Italy
Author
Riccieri, Alessandra
Dipartimento di Scienze, Università Roma Tre, Viale G. Marconi 446, 00146 Roma, Italy
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2024
2023-08-21
200
3
705
719
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad084
journal article
296800
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad084
3c2de6da-f980-4076-bb90-110c89d33fb5
0024-4082
11240298
Stenostoma cossyrense
Bologna, 1995
(
FIGS 1A, F
,
2A, B
,
6A
)
Stenostoma melitense
– pars,
Bologna, 1984: 57
.
Stenostoma cossyrense
Bologna, 1995: 516
, figs 1, 4–10.
Stenostoma cossyrense
–
Vazquez, 2002: 108
, 178 fig. d.
Type
locality:
[
Italy
,
Sicily
] ‘
Pantelleria
,
Tracino’
(
Bologna 1995
)
.
Type
specimens:
We examined all
type
specimens from Pantelleria (Tracino;
Lago
di Venere
; Cala 5 denti) (
MAB
,
MZP
and
MVE
) (
Bologna 1995
).
Short description:
For an extended description, see
Bologna (1995)
. Body length:
6.3–8.2 mm
. Metallic green in colour, with a bronze tinge. Head only slightly rostrate, almost as long as wide (
Fig. 1F
). Pronotum not elongated, slightly cordiform, as long as wide, not prolonged towards the head and widened in the fore-third. Elytra with sub-humeral costa faint and hardly visible. Female pygidium rounded at apex (
Fig. 1A
). Aedeagus short, less narrowed and curved than in
S. melitense
, with a blunt apex that is stockier than in the previous species (
Fig. 1B
).
According to molecular analyses (see below), this species seems not to be distinguishable genetically from
S. melitense
Cameron, 1907
, but morphologically it is greatly different because of the shape of the head (not distinctly rostrate), of thepronotum (distinctly widened in the middle) and of the male genitalia (with apex of parameres curved and apical portion of aedeagus scarcely curved forwards).
Distribution:
Endemic to Pantelleria Island (Trapani province,
Sicily
,
Italy
), in the western portion of the Sicilian Channel, central Mediterranean.
Ecology:
this species inhabits rocky and arid scrubland and semi-cultivated habitats, from sea level [Cala 5 denti; Lago di Venere (also called Bagno dell’acqua or Bagno di Venere); P. Audisio and B. Massa, pers. comm.] to sub-coastal areas <
350 m
a.s.l. (Tracino; Piana di Ghirlanda; C. Muscarella and M. Pavesi, pers. comm.;
Fig. 6A
). Adults are floricolous, observed on different species belonging to different plant families (M. Pavesi and P. Audisio, pers. comm.), and were recorded feeding on
Apiaceae
[
Ammi majus
Linnaeus (
Bologna 1995
)
;
Ammi
sp.
(C. Muscarella, pers. comm.)]. They were also collected using yellow plastic dishes (C. Muscarella, pers. comm.), which are frequently used to collect anthophilous insects. The courtship and copulation, both with the male dorsal in position on the female, were observed on the host flowers in Piana di Ghirlanda. The ascertained phenology is May–July (
Bologna 1984
,
1995
; new records by P. Audisio, S. Sabatelli, C. Muscarella and M. Pavesi; Supporting Information, Table S2).