Three new species, a lectotype designation, and taxonomic and geographic notes in Eburiini (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Cerambycinae)
Author
Botero, Juan Pablo
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2015
2015-10-29
148
1
22
journal article
22373
10.5852/ejt.2015.148
7419d79a-1639-4302-b56a-ac5b140c9cf2
2118-9773
3787546
E0FC6DF1-FB2B-4724-8502-85A939DF3129
Genus
Eburia
Lacordaire, 1830
Eburia
Lacordaire, 1830: 177
.
Type
species:
Cerambyx quadrimaculatus
Linnaeus, 1767
.
Dissacanthus
Hope, 1835: 107
.
Type
species:
Cerambyx quadrimaculatus
Linnaeus, 1767
.
Coeleburia
Thomson, 1861: 237
.
Type
species:
Coeleburia semipubescens
Thomson, 1861
(by monotypy).
Dissacantha
Thomson, 1864: 240
(error).
Type
species:
Cerambyx quadrimaculatus
Linnaeus, 1767
(original designation).
Drymo
Thomson, 1864: 242
.
Type
species:
Coeleburia pulverea
Chevrolat, 1862
(monotypy).
Coeleburia
–
Thomson 1864: 240
. —
Martins 1997: 78
.
Dissacanthus
–
Lacordaire 1868: 295
.
Drymo
–
Lacordaire 1868: 292
. —
Martins 1997: 78
.
Eburia
–
Audinet-Serville 1834: 8
. —
Laporte 1840: 243
. —
Blanchard 1845: 146
. —
LeConte 1850: 11
;
1873a: 178
;
1873b: 302
. — Blanchard
in
Gay 1851: 462. —
Strauch 1861: 129
. —
Thomson 1861: 237
;
1864: 239
, 449. —
Lacordaire 1868: 293
. —
Bates 1870: 264
;
1880: 19
. —
Chenu 1870: 311
. —
LeConte & Horn 1883: 287
. —
Leng 1884: 115
. —
Blatchley 1910: 1022
. —
Bradley 1930: 229
. —
Knull 1946: 191
. —
Linsley 1962: 54
. —
Arnett 1962: 862
, 880. —
Chemsak & Linsley 1963: 213
. —
Gilmour 1968: 107
. —
Zayas 1975: 60
. —
Martins & Napp 1979: 93
. —
Villiers 1980: 275
. —
Monné 1993: 21
;
2005: 140
;
2012: 17
. —
Martins 1997: 78
;
1999: 225
. —
Noguera 2002: 6
. —
Bousquet 2007: 619
. —
Touroult 2012: 72
;
2014: 88
.
Eburia
(
Eburia
)
–
Martins 1997: 78
.
Type
species:
Cerambyx quadrimaculatus
Linnaeus, 1767
(by subsequent designation
Hope 1843: 189
).
Type
species
Cerambyx quadrimaculatus
Linnaeus, 1767
(by subsequent designation
Hope 1843: 189
).
The genus
Eburia
was proposed by
Lacordaire (1830)
and characterized by
Thomson (1861)
in having antennomere III without sulcus, just shorter than IV, antennomere XI longer than X, prothorax with lateral spines, mesosteral process without tubercle and metafemora not reaching the elytral apex. Currently, the genus is comprised of 87 species and two subgenera: the nominative subgenus,
Eburia
(85 species), and the subgenus
Eleutho
Thomson, 1864
(two species). The genus
Eleutho
was described by
Thomson (1864)
for a single species,
Eleutho consobrina
(Jacquelin DuVal, 1857)
, and later synonymized by
Martins (1999)
with
Eburia
.
Vitali (2007)
, describing the species
Eburia
(
Eleutho
)
consobrinoides
(
Fig. 2A
), realized a great similarity of this species with
Eburia consobrina
and proposed that
Eleutho
should be considered as a subgenus of
Eburia
. According to
Vitali (2007)
, this subgenus is characterized “by deeply excavate scape, spined prothorax and extremely developed antennomere XI”.