Resurrection and review of the genus Knowltonia Fisher, with description of a new subspecies of Chrysobothris Eschscholtz and new species of Acmaeodera Eschscholtz from North America (Coleoptera: Buprestidae)
Author
Westcott, Richard L.
Author
Barr, William F.
text
Zootaxa
2007
1481
49
58
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.273778
ad3548bb-3021-483f-a52b-ebb48d4b99fb
1175-5326
273778
Genus
Knowltonia
Fisher
, resurrected status
Knowltonia
Fisher, 1935
:117
.
Chrysobothris
:
Cazier, 1938
:17
(synonymy);
Fisher, 1942
:17
(synonymy).
Type
species:
Knowltonia biramosa
Fisher
, by original designation.
Gender: feminine.
Description
.
Head
with clypeus broadly, shallowly, triangularly to arcuately emarginate; eyes separated on vertex by 1.2 to 2.2 times the eye width at middle of head.
Antenna
with 11 antennomeres, none being laterally compressed; first antennomere elongate and expanded apically; second antennomere short and globular; third antennomere of male elongate, strongly, sometimes acutely expanded on one side or weakly bifurcate at apex, of female elongate, expanded apically with the outer angle distinctly acute to right-angled; antennomeres 4–10 of male densely setose, biramous or slightly to strongly asymmetric, of female short with ventral lobes moderately to widely separated, truncate to slightly rounded apically; antennomere 11 of male forked or asymmetric at apex, of female elongate-oval, usually truncate to subtruncate, or sometimes vaguely acute at apex.
Pronotum
with front margin truncate to feebly bisinuate and broadly, shallowly arcuate at middle; disk subflattened, laterally convex or swollen, lateral margins ventrad, widely and distinctly indicated, entire or disappearing shortly before front angles, not visible from above.
Elytra
without or with vague longitudinal carinae, lacking foveae and pubescence; basal margin of each elytron strongly, evenly angulate; lateral margins finely, indistinctly serrate; sutural margins terminating in a tiny acuminate spine or a right-angled tooth; apices broadly rounded, not attaining apex of abdomen, exposing in part 1 or 2 abdominal terga.
Legs
with profemoral tooth elevated, acute to very narrowly rounded at apex, not serrulate; foretibia of male unmodified.
Underside
with prosternum flattened at middle, swollen at sides, front margin subtruncate to broadly arcuate, narrowly reflexed or with a reflexed lobe at middle; abdomen with lateral margins entire, ventrites without distinct lateral callosities, fifth ventrite lacking an elevated submarginal ridge.
Discussion
:
Fisher (1935)
described
Knowltonia
and related it to
Chrysobothris
. However, he did not discuss any distinguishing character except to say “..differs from all the known genera of
Buprestidae
in having strongly biramose antennae.” He assumed that the single specimen before him was a male. In his paper describing
C. alleni
,
Cazier (1938)
discussed
Knowltonia
and regarded it as a synonym of
Chrysobothris
, although we consider his reasoning faulty because it was partly based on incorrect association with such species as
C. prasina
Horn
and
C. platti
Cazier
(the latter presently in
Sphaerobothris
Semenov-Tian-Shanskij & Richter), and he lacked sufficient material for such a diagnosis.
Fisher (1942)
formally synonymized
Knowltonia
under
Chrysobothris
. His rationale was that he had overlooked Horn’s (1886) male antennal figure for
C. atrifasciata
LeConte
, and that “..more material of
Chrysobothris
has been available for study and this peculiar character of the males has been found in
atrifasciata
,
biramosa
,
and
alleni
..” To our way of thinking that is no reason for synonymy; it simply enlarges the genus
Knowltonia
.
We are unaware of further published data under the genus
Knowltonia
, though
Bellamy and Volkovitsh (1997)
briefly mentioned it. For some years we and some of our colleagues have considered that it should be recognized at least to subgeneric level. Meanwhile those authors elevated the formerly Old World subgenus
C. (
Sphaerobothris
) to genus rank, including in it the North American
C. platti
and
C. ulkei
LeConte. Superficially
, those species resemble species of
Knowltonia
but are readily separated by their antennae, which are like those found in most species of
Chrysobothris
, with no sexual difference and the third antennomere not at all angulate apically. Although the facies of
Sphaerobothris
seems to distinguish it from
Chrysobothris
, nevertheless the apparent primary character used by
Bellamy and Volkovitsh (1997)
to separate them, the width on the vertex between the eyes, is not reliable. In
Chrysobothris
, this distance was stated to be “equal or less than width of eye”. We examined 25 North American species and found the width to vary from 0.31 – 2.08 times the width of the eye. We found this to range from 1.20 – 2.00 in
12 specimens
of
S. platti
. The character does not appear to be sexual, and it may prove useful in separating some species, at least in
Chrysobothris
and
Knowltonia
. We found problems with other characters given in the key to separate
Sphaerobothris
from
Chrysobothris
, and subgenera of the former; however, that is beyond the scope of this paper. Nevertheless, we mention it to help justify our position with regards to
Knowltonia
, which is clearly separable, in a key or otherwise, based on the unique antennal structure of the male. To our knowledge, Fisher’s (1935) statement about that character remains true for New World species; however, two species in the unrelated Australasian genus
Castiarina
Gory and Laporte
have a similar antennal modification.
Members of the genus
Knowltonia
are moderately elongate and convex beetles, most being various shades of metallic green dorsally (
Fig. 1
), often with cupreous or, more rarely, bluish overtones; others vary from coppery to dark brown. The elytra usually have violaceous black markings, but may be immaculate. Ventrally, the color varies from light green to dark brown. All species of
Knowltonia
have been associated with the plant genus
Atriplex
, from which they have been reared and/or collected. However, there has been considerable misidentification of these beetles.
Males are easily distinguished and separated from those of
Chrysobothris
and
Sphaerobothris
by their unique antennae. Other than by facies, which does not always readily separate them from the latter genus, females can almost always be separated from those genera by the shape of antennomere 3. We examined
117 specimens
of
Knowltonia
and found antennomere 3 to be distinctly dilated ventrally (
Fig. 6
), usually produced triangularly or as a blunt tooth. Though variable, usually the antennae can be considered serrate from antennomere 3; however, on one specimen of
K. calida
(Knull)
this is not so distinct, approaching the odd species of
Chrysobothris
in form. Antennomere 11 usually is distinctly narrower and more elongate than antennomere 10, not at all laterally compressed and usually more or less truncate at apex where sometimes it is distinctly acute. One specimen each of 57 species of
Chrysobothris
and two species of
Sphaerobothris
was examined, representing most if not all the presumed groups of the former found in North
America
. In all but three species of
Chrysobothris
the third antennomere is either essentially parallel-sided or slightly swollen apically. Of those three, said antennomere is indistinctly, in two cases more or less acutely, expanded ventrally (
Fig. 9
), but in no case would we term the antennae serrate from antennomere 3. Antennomere 11 is quadrate, rarely elongate-quadrate, almost always distinctly rounded apically, usually not narrower or more elongate than antennomere 10. The outer antennomeres, including antennomere 11 are laterally compressed in most species of
Chrysobothris
.
Based on material examined, although most represents
K. atrifasciata
and
K. calida
, we suspect that additional taxa exist. However, considering general variability, the similarity of male genitalia, the lack of comprehensive samples of specimens from between known populations of the various phenotypes, and that even the limits between described species seem blurred, we feel this is not the appropriate time for descriptive work. It may be that
Knowltonia
is like the genus
Crossidius
LeConte
(
Coleoptera
:
Cerambycidae
), species of which occur in the same habitats and are highly polytypic. Unfortunately, unlike most species of
Crossidius
,
Knowltonia
are not commonly collected.
The following key applies almost entirely to populations in the
U.S.
and should be used with caution for specimens from
Mexico
. The user is strongly encouraged to use this key in conjunction with the species treatments to follow.