Synopsis of the Oryctini (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae) from the Brazilian Amazon
Author
Alvarez, Héctor Jaime Gasca
Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia-INPA Coordenação de Pesquisas em Entomologia Av. André Araújo, 2936 - Petrópolis CEP 69011 - 970 Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil
Author
da, Claudio Ruy Vasconcelos
Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Coordenação de Pesquisas em Av. André Araújo, 2936 - Petrópolis CEP 69011 - 970 Manaus, Amazonas
Author
Fonseca
Amazônia-INPA Entomologia Petrópolis, Brazil
Author
Ratcliffe, Brett C.
University of Nebraska State Museum W 436 Nebraska Hall Lincoln, NE 68588 - 0514, USA
text
Insecta Mundi
2008
2008-12-05
2008
61
1
62
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5352440
1942-1354
5352440
Strategus surinamensis hirtus
Sternberg 1910
(
Fig. 90-94
)
Strategus hirtus
Sternberg 1910: 100
Strategus kolbeanus
Prell 1934: 164
(synonym)
DESCRIPTION.
Length:
18.1-40.3 mm
(males);
33.2-37.8 mm
(females). Width: 13.0-
19.7 mm
(males);
16.6-18.5 mm
(females). Color: Castaneous to piceous.
Figure 90-93.
Strategus surinamensis hirtus
.
90)
Habitus.
91)
Male head and pronotum (scale line: 5 mm).
92)
Parameres frontal view.
93)
Parameres lateral view (scale line: 1 mm).
Males.
Head
: Frons with surface strongly punctate, with 2 strong, conical, transverse and widely separated tubercles. Eye canthus with surface punctate to rugose, apex rounded. Clypeus with narrow, weakly acuminate apex; surface rugose, slightly punctate. Antenna with 10 segments, club subequal in length to segments 2-7. Mandibles with 3 lobes; basal lobe small, apex rounded; middle lobe large, subtriangular, apex rounded; apical lobe small, triangular, apex rounded.
Pronotum
: Base with rugopunctate band, band reduced to basal bead at middle. Surface finely punctate, punctures small. Sides with punctures larger in size or with a rugose band at lateral margin. Fovea deep, usually with a longitudinal carina extending posteriorly from base of anterior horn. Majors (
Fig. 91
) with anterior horn long, slender, curving forward, apex rounded. Posterior horns long, stout, laterally compressed, apex rounded. Minors not seen, presumably with a typical reduction of anterior and posterior horns.
Elytra
: Sutural stria strongly impressed, distinctly crenulate. Surface granulate, sparsely punctate, punctures small; occasionally with 1-3 feebly impressed striae. Sides with 2-3 short rows of moderately deep, ocellate punctures behind humerus.
Pygidium
: Surface
finely granulate, moderately punctate, punctures small. Occasionally with a band of setigerous punctures in apical half. Lateral angles rugose.
Legs
: Protibia quadridentate. Apex of posterior tibia with 2-3 teeth, median tooth reduced, with rounded apex. First tarsomere of posterior tarsus elongated, quadrangular.
Venter
: Prosternal process densely setose, long, apex rounded.
Parameres
: Oval, slightly variable in degree of curvature, apex setose (
Fig. 92-93
).
Figure 94.
Distribution of
Strategus surinamensis hirtus
in Brazilian Amazonia.
Females.
As males except in the following respects:
Head:
Frons rugose. Mandibles similar in size, middle lobe smaller.
Pronotum
: Sides in basal half with lateral margin rugose to punctate. Anterior half rugose. Fovea reduced, moderately deep, surface strongly rugose to punctate. Tubercles conical, transverse.
Pygidium
: Surface
completely rugose to punctate, densely setose, setae long. Apex with 2 small bands of setae. In lateral view, basal half convex, apical half moderately concave.
DIAGNOSIS.
Strategus surinamensis hirtus
can be separated from
S. surinamensis surinamensis
by the granulate to moderately punctate surface of the pygidium, the small punctures on pronotum and elytra, and by its geographic distribution south of the Amazon River.
DISTRIBUTION.
Strategus surinamensis hirtus
is distributed from the Amazon River south to
Argentina
, with records in
Perú
,
Bolivia
and
Paraguay
(
Ratcliffe 1976
).
LOCALITY RECORDS
.
(
Fig. 94
)
35 specimens
examined (
11 males
,
24 females
). Specimens were seen from the following collections
: INPA, MZSP, MPEG.
ACRE
(9): Feijó,
Rio Branco
.
AMAZONAS
(3):
Benjamin Constant
,
BR
319 km
335,
BR 319
Km 350
.
MATO GROSSO
(7):
Chapada dos Guimarães
(Fazenda Buriti),
Barra dos Bugres
(Reserva Ecológica
Serra das Araras), Barra do Tapirapé.
PARÁ
(16): Belém, Itaituba (Rio Tapajós), Santarém, Serra Norte (igarapé Fofoca).
TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION.
January (1), February (1), September (1), October (3), November (14), December (12)
BIOLOGY.
Adults are attracted to lights. In
Brazil
, they have been taken in coconut nurseries (
Vayssiere 1965
). According to
Lourenção et al. (1999)
,
S. surinamensis hirtus
is a pest of 13 species of
Arecaceae
in several places in
São Paulo state
, causing great damage and death to palm trees.
In Peruvian Amazonia, adults attacks the young leaves and stem bases of the palm,
Bactris gasipaes
Kunth
, where they form galleries of
30 cm
in depth. The larvae grow in rotten trunks feeding on organic matter (
Couturier et al. 1996
).
In the Brazilian Amazon, adults have been collected from secondary vegetation areas, areas of seasonal whitewater inundation forest (várzea), and ombrophilous forests at elevations ranging from sea level to 200 meters.