Revision of the genus Peltonotus Burmeister (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae) from Southeastern Asia
Author
Jameson, Mary Liz
University of Nebraska State Museum, Division of Entomology, Lincoln, NE U. S. A., 68588 - 0514 mjameson 1 @ unl. edu
Author
Wada, Kaoru
Musashimurayama Daini Junior School, 1460 Midorigaoka, Musashimurayama-shi, Tokyo 208 - 0012 Japan kwada 007 @ hotmail. com
text
Zootaxa
2004
2004-05-04
502
1
1
66
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.502.1.1
journal article
4845
10.11646/zootaxa.502.1.1
76aa06a8-f646-4c5a-b596-54bfd8875223
11755334
5030148
E1B410F1-0859-41D3-B0EF-E57DD1C4383F
Genus
PELTONOTUS
Burmeister
(
Figs. 1
–67)
Peltonotus
Burmeister, 1847: 47
.
Type
species:
Peltonotus morio
Burmeister 1847: 47
(by monotypy).
Description.
Scarabaeidae
,
Dynastinae
. Form (
Figs. 1–13
): Subovate, sides subparallel, propygidium exposed or not beyond apex of elytra, pygidium exposed, apex of elytra broadly rounded. Length from apex of clypeus to apex of pygidium 12.0–22.0 mm; width at midelytra 6.0–11.0 mm. Head (
Figs. 14–18
): Frons and clypeus in lateral view nearly flat. Surface of frons and clypeus variably sculptured, setose, and/or velutinous. Clypeal apex quadrate or rectangular, corners weakly rounded, apex with bead; bead with or without weak, medial tubercle. Frontoclypeal suture weakly impressed, incomplete (about length of one eye diameter). Eye canthus flat, not projecting anteriorly. Labrum produced anteriorly beyond apex of clypeus (about half length of clypeus); apex bilobed, broadly emarginate, or deeply, narrowly emarginate. Mandibles project anteriorly beyond apex of labrum, weakly concave, external edge straight or rounded, apex angulate or rounded, inner margin with 1–2 weak teeth.
Mentum
(
Figs. 19–28
) broadest at middle, length about twice width; apex acute, quadrate, or rounded, weakly notched at middle; labial palpomere 2 greatly enlarged (twice width of palpomere 3) or simple and with or without setae; labial palpomere 1 punctate or not, with or without setae. Maxilla (
Figs. 29–30
) with 6 teeth; 3 basal teeth contiguous or not, 2 middle teeth (ventral tooth articulated), 1 apical tooth; malar region with or without lamellate setae; stipes with simple, thickened, or spatulate setae; palpus 4segmented, second segment simple or enlarged. Antenna 10segmented, club subequal to or slightly longer than segments 2–7. Pronotum: Form evenly rounded at margins, widest at middle, beaded; base rounded, longest at midbase, beaded or not. Surface variably punctate, setose, and/or velutinous. Lateral margin with or without setae. Scutellum: Triangular, nearly as wide as long, base declivous at pronotum. Elytral sutural length: 3.0–5.0 times length of scutellum. Mesepimeron: Weakly exposed at base of elytron, flangelike. Scutellum: Triangular, slightly longer than wide, base declivous at pronotum. Elytra: Surface variably punctate, setose, and/or velutinous. Epipleuron of female (
Figs. 51–64
) simple or expanded; apex of expansion (in ventral view) simple or variably incised. Propygidium: Exposed or not beyond apex of elytra. Pygidium: Shape evenly convex, surface variably sculptured, setose, and/or velutinous. Anal opening of female quadrate or weakly rounded. Venter: Prosternal keel produced to middle or apex of procoxae, shape triangular or quadrate; apex projecting anteriorly at about 80–90° with respect to ventral plane. Mesometasternal apex invaginated, not produced or keellike. Mesocoxae nearly contiguous. Sternum setigerously punctate; setae long to moderately long, sparse or moderately dense, tawny. Sternites 1–4 subequal in length, sternite 5 about twice as long as sternite 4; all with transverse band of tawny setae at midsternite; setae moderately long. Last sternite with apex sinuate (male) or rounded (female). Legs (
Figs. 31–36
): Foretibia of male tridentate, bidentate or subparallel; lateral margin with or without velutinous setae. Foretibia of female weakly divergent from base, tridentate, teeth subequally developed. Foretarsomeres 1–4 of male expanded apically, dorsal and ventral apices with or without velutinous setae, foretarsomere 5 of variable length. Foretarsomeres 1–4 of female simple, foretarsomere 5 subequal in length to foretarsomere 4; apex of foretarsomere 5 enclosed (claws not independently movable). Foreclaws of male with inner claw variably modified in shape, subequal in length to tarsomere 5; outer claw more slender than inner claw and variably curved, claws independently movable; apex of larger claw with or without apical nib, apex of smaller claw simple. Foreclaws of female subequal in size, apices simple, angled toward venter or not, 1/2 to 3/4 length of metatarsomere 5, not independently movable. Unguitractor plate of male foretarsus extending beyond apex of tarsomere; form falcate, gracile, or cylindrical; empodium bisetose; plate simple in female. Mesotibia of male with margins subparallel, with median carina, apex truncate or rounded; divergent from base in female. Meso and metatibial claws simple, equal, not independently movable, empodium bi or trisetose. Metatibia weakly divergent from base, with median carina, apex truncate or rounded with 2 spurs; spurs curved or straight, cylindrical (males) or semicylindrical (females). Metatibial claws simple, equal, not independently movable, empodium bi or trisetose. Metatrochanter: Apex not produced. Metacoxa: Apex subquadrate. Male Genitalia (
Figs. 37–50
): Parameres hinged laterally, diagnostic at species level. Internal sac with spines, diagnostic at species level. Female gonocoxites: Sclerotized and diagnostic for some species.
Diagnosis. The genus
Peltonotus
(Dynastinae)
is separated from
Neohyphus
and
Melanhyphus
(which it has been allied with) based on the apex of the labrum that projects anteriorly beyond the clypeus (
Figs. 14–18
; retracted under the clypeus in
Neohyphus
and
Melanhyphus
); the maxilla that possesses a movable tooth (
Figs. 29–30
; lacking in
Neohyphus
and
Melanhyphus
); form of the mentum (
Figs. 19–28
); and frontoclypeal suture not raised (raised in
Melanhyphus
; not raised in
Neohyphus
).
Distribution (
Figs. 65
–67). Southeastern Asia including
Nepal
,
India
,
Myanmar
,
Laos
,
Vietnam
,
Cambodia
,
Thailand
, peninsular
Malaysia
, Bornean
Malaysia
, and
Indonesia
(
Sumatra
,
Java
, Borneo).
Remarks. In the original description, the genus
Subpeltonotus
Ghai
et al.
, 1988
, was compared with
Peltonotus
. Based on our analyses,
Subpeltonotus
is congeneric with
Parastasia
Westwood
(
Rutelinae
:
Rutelini
) rather than
Peltonotus
(see discussion under “History of Classification”).