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 rostratum
Fabricius, 1787
(F I G S 1D, E, I, L, 2G–M, 6E, F)
Rhinomacer caeruleus
Petagna, 1787
Specimens Insectorum ulterioris
.
Calabriae –
144, pl. 72, fig. 34 (
nomen praeoccupatum
by
Rhinomacer coeruleus
Geoffroy
in Fourcroy, 1785: 114).
Leptura rostrata
–
Fabricius 1787
Mantissa Insectorum
, 1: 159, 23.
Necydalis ceramboides
–
Rossi 1794
,: 99 (
nomen praeoccupatum
by
Necydalis ceramboides
Forster 1771: 47
).
Stenostoma rostratum
–
Latreille 1810: 217
.
Stenostoma coeruleum
–
Seidlitz 1899: 5
: 964
.
Stenostoma coeruleum schatzmayri
–
Magistretti 1941: 77
;
Bologna 1981: 212
.
Stenostoma coeruleum coeruleum
–
Bologna 1981: 207
, figs 1, 3–9.
Stenostoma rostratum
–
Vazquez 1993: 118
;
Vazquez 2002: 106
, 178 Fig. b.
Stenostoma rostratum rostratum
–
Švihla 2005: 72
.
Stenostoma rostratum septentrionale
–
Švihla 2005: 72
.
Type
locality:
Rhinomacer coeruleus
: [
Calabria
,
Italy
]Brancaleone;
L. rostrata
: [
Algeria
]
Ammi Moussa
[according to
Švihla 2005
; but this interpretation is questionable, with this locality being far from the coast, and also the note (‘
Ammi
mains Africae Dom. Vahl’.) by Linnaeus could indicate on plants of
Ammi
(
Apiaceae
), along the African seas (‘mains’); in any case, the
type
locality can be identified along the Maghreb coasts where Vahl collected];
N. ceramboides
[
Tuscany
,
Italy
]: Etruria;
S. c. schatzmayri
: [
Israel
]
Tel Aviv
;
S. r. septentrionale
: not specified.
Type specimens:
We examined
one paratype
of the form
S. c. schatzmayri
(
MVR
)
.
Short description:
For an extended description, see
Mulsant (1858)
,
Bologna (1981)
and
Švihla (2005)
. Body length:
7–12 mm
. Colour of the body blue or greenish. Head distinctly rostrate, twice as long as wide (
Fig. 1I, L
). Pronotum subcylindrical, slightly enlarged at the base and at two-thirds of its length and protruding anteriorly (
Fig. 1I, L
). Aedeagus long and thin, only slightly narrowed towards the apex, similar to
S. melitense
but less curved (
Figs 2H, L, M
). The shape of the aedeagus is variable in both subspecies.
Taxonomic notes:
Latreille (1810)
, describing the new genus
Stenostoma
, ascribed to it
Leptura rostrata
, but this binomial association was not used in the literature for several years.
Vazquez (1993)
first evidenced that the name
Rhinomacer caeruleus
was preoccupied and consequently resurrected Latreille’s binomial.
According to
Švihla (2005)
, the species is polytypic, and the nominate form is distributed in the southern Iberian Peninsula, north-western Africa (from
Morocco
to
Tunisia
),
Israel
, Sporades islands and Crete, but is apparently absent from in
Libya
and
Egypt
, two countries relatively well explored. The form
S. c. schatzmayri
was simply considered as a synonym of the nominotypical subspecies by
Švihla (2005)
. The subspecies
S. r. septentrionale
was not described formally by
Švihla (2005)
, and neither
types
nor
type
locality were specified, but it was considered only as a new name for
R. caeruleus
. It is distributed along the northern coasts of the Mediterranean (from
Spain
to
Italy
and the Tyrrhenian islands,
Croatia
,
Montenegro
, Corfu and the Peloponnese). No information on the taxonomic position of the Atlantic populations (
Morocco
,
Portugal
,
Spain
and
France
) was proposed by
Švihla (2005)
.
The supposed two subspecies are very similar (
Švihla 2005
): the nominotypical one has finer sculptured elytra and shorter elytral pubescence than the subspecies
S. r. septentrionale
, but the difference in pubescence is subtle and can be seen only by examining numerous specimens. In some samples we examined, these differences were not recognizable and no difference in genitalia or other characters were found, even when examining numerous specimens from multiple localities. We consider that the variability of the sculpture and the pubescence can be ascribed to the intraspecific variability of a species displaying a wide range and a moderately wide morphological variability, wuch as
S. rostratum
. Other traits that vary in a considerable way are as follows: (i) size (
7–12 mm
); (ii) colour of integument (from metallic green to metallic blue); (iii) sculpture of pronotum (from deeper and denser punctures to shallower and scattered); (iv) shape of the pronotum (more or less enlarged at the base and at two-thirds of its length); and (v) male genitalia, especially the apex of the aedeagus (slender and more acuminate to bulkier and rounder) (
Figs 2H, L, M
).
For these reasons and because no molecular differences were detected among the examined populations, we consider the species as monotypic, with slightly different setation in northern and southern populations, and propose the following synonymy:
Stenostoma rostratum septentionale
Švihla, 2005
=
Stenostoma rostratum
(
Fabricius, 1787
)
syn. nov.
Distribution:
Stenostoma rostratum
is distributed with scattered populations in almost all well-preserved dune coasts of the western Mediterranean and more disjointly along the south-eastern and eastern coasts of the Basin:
Portugal
,
Spain
,
France
,
Italy
,
Croatia
,
Montenegro
,
Albania
,
Greece
(apparently only in Corfu,
Peloponnese
,
Crete
and Sporades),
Morocco
,
Algeria
,
Tunisia
,
Israel
and
Cyprus
(Kubisz and Iwan 2020), but we did not examine specimens from the last country. It has also been recorded from the Atlantic coasts of
Portugal
,
Spain
and western
France
(north to
Brittany
) and of
Morocco
(South to
Essaouira
) (
Fig. 3
). According to
Magistretti (1963)
, it is also distributed along the Black Sea Russian coasts, from where we did not examine material; Kubisz and Iwan (2020) did not consider this citation.
Ecology:
Stenoecious and halophilic element, strictly related to well-preserved coastal fore-dunes (
Fig. 6E, F
), considered as an indicator of good quality of this endangered ecosystem (
Bologna 1981
,
Agullo and Prieto 2012
).
Champion (1891)
erroneously indicated its presence in marshy habitats. Its presence is restricted to the first
30 m
of frontal, dynamic and embryonic dunes, where are spread only herbaceous plants, usually referable to the ‘Cakiletum’ and ‘Elymetum’ associations (see Biondi
et al.
1986).
This species can be considered as an oligophagous element, feeding on
Eryngium maritimum
L.,
Echinophora spinosa
L. (
Apiaceae
) and
Anthemis maritima
L. (
Asteraceae
) (
Binaghi 1964
,
Bologna 1977
,
1984
,
Vazquez 1993
,
Montalto and Bologna 2011
), and rarely recorded on other flowers of the same ecosystem, such as
Cakile maritima
Scopoli
and
Achillea maritima
L. (
Mulsant 1858
, Biondi
et al.
1986,
Vazquez 1993
; authors' observation).
The short courtship and copulation, both with the male dorsal in position on the female, were observed on the host flowers in different localities of
Italy
(observation by the authors.) and in laboratory conditions (Supporting Information,
Fig. S3
; see Results).
The ascertained phenology is April–August (observation by the authors;
Magistretti 1941
,
Binaghi 1964
,
Bologna 1977
; Supporting Information, Table S2).
Perris (1877)
briefly described the larva of this species by comparison with that of
Oedemera flavipes
(Fabricius, 1792)
and considered it as developing in the roots and the basal stem of
Eryngium maritimum
and
Achillea maritima
(
Perris 1857
,
1877
). In contrast,
Caillol (1919)
supposed that the larva develops inside bollards standing in sea water, whereas
Bologna (2010)
and
Montalto and Bologna (2011)
, on the base of personal observation in
Sardinia
(Is Arenas of Narbolia, Oristano province, M.A.B.) noted adults ovipositing on soaked or dried driftwood transported by the sea on the seashore. We also made a similar observation (A.R. and M.A.B., pers. obs.) in the same Sardinian locality of Is Arenas and in
Porto
Ferro (Sassari province) in
June 2021
. By rearing female and male individuals of
S. rostratum
in laboratory conditions (as explained in the Materials and Methods and the Results), we demonstrated that larvae develop within driftwood. Larvae obtained from laboratory experiments will be the object of a separate morphological contribution.