Review of the Palaearctic genera of Saprininae (Coleoptera: Histeridae)
Author
Lackner, Tomáš
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2010
suppl.
2010-10-20
50
1
254
journal article
9574
10.5281/zenodo.4272127
724cb358-6f18-4816-afc7-bb42cb9b6942
0374-1036
4272127
Chalcionellus
Reichardt, 1932
Chalcionellus
Reichardt, 1932: 15
, 16.
Chalcionellus
:
REICHARDT (1941)
:155
, 262;
DAHLGREN (1969a)
:59
–63, 66–68;
DAHLGREN (1969b)
:230
–231;
WITZGALL (1971)
: 172
;
MAZUR (1973)
: 27
, 36;
KRYZHANOVSKIJ & REICHARDT (1976)
: 111
, 187;
MAZUR & KASZAB (1980)
: 7
, 48;
VIENNA
(1980)
: 116
, 163;
MAZUR (1981a)
: 71
, 94;
MAZUR (1984)
: 78
;
MAZUR (1997)
: 245
;
SECQ & GOMY (1999)
: 67
;
YÉLAMOS (2002)
: 245
, 296;
MAZUR (2004)
: 90
.
Izpaniolus
Mazur, 1972: 363
.
Type
species
Saprinus condolens
Marseul, 1864
, original designation. Synonymized by
SECQ & YÉLAMOS (1993)
: 338
.
Type
species:
Saprinus amoenus
Erichson, 1834
, original designation.
Diagnosis.
Body variously colored, often metallic; frontal stria thin, often curved outwardly, never carinate, usually interrupted (in which case first curved inwardly, thence curved outwardly and prolonged onto clypeus); clypeus in several taxa (e.g.
Chalcionellus decemstriatus
) depressed medially, laterally carinate; frontal disc punctate; eyes always convex. Pronotal foveae generally present, often a band of coarse punctation originates around them running parallel to pronotal margin; marginal pronotal stria always present and well visible, usually complete or slightly distanced on apical tenth from pronotal margin; lateral pronotal stria occasionally present (e.g.
Chalcionellus tyrius
(
Marseul, 1857
)
. If pronotal foveae are absent, clypeus usually distinctly carinate (except in some specimens of
Chalcionellus amoenus
(
Erichson, 1834
)
and
C. ibericus
Dahlgren, 1969
); pronotal hypomeron glabrous, apart from
Chalcionellus hauseri
(
Schmidt, 1890
)
where the pronotal hypomeron is setose. Pre-apical foveae always present; both sets of prosternal striae present, seldom marginal prosternal stria connecting pre-apical foveae; outer margin of protibia with 5–8 moderately large teeth topped with denticle.
Differential diagnosis.
Chalcionellus
is most similar to the genera
Hypocacculus
,
Zorius
,
Hypocaccus
, or
Pholioxenus
, but differing from them: from
Hypocacculus
by the often present pronotal foveae (if these are absent, then clypeus is margined laterally) and more convex eyes; from
Pholioxenus
it likewise differs chiefly by the presence of pronotal foveae (if these are absent, then clypeus is margined laterally, whereas in
Pholioxenus
it is never margined laterally) as well as absence of microsculpture in-between elytral punctation (often present with
Pholioxenus
), larger pre-apical foveae (usually tiny, occasionally even absent in
Pholioxenus
); from
Zorius
it similarly differs by the presence of pronotal foveae (if these are absent, then the clypeus is margined laterally, whereas in
Zorius
it is never margined laterally) as well as by the present pre-apical foveae (always absent in
Zorius
) and from
Hypocaccus
it again differs by the presence of pronotal foveae, often present microsculpture on the elytra (normally absent in
Hypocaccus
, present in several species of subgenus
Baeckmanniolus
) and the absence of chevrons or rugae on the frontal disc.
Biology.
Species of this genus are mostly found on carrion and in dung, with the exception of
Chalcionellus hauseri
(
Schmidt, 1894
)
, which lives within the desiccating stalks of
Cistanche flava
Fedtschenko & Fedtschenko, 1913
, as well as in the sand surrounding its roots (
REICHARDT 1941
,
KRYZHANOVSKIJ & REICHARDT 1976
,
KOVARIK & CATERINO 2005
). Here, these beetles prey upon the fly larvae of the genus
Eumerus
Meigen, 1822
(Syrphidae)
(
KRYZHANOVSKIJ & REICHARDT 1976
).
Distribution.
Chalcionellus
currently comprises 33 described species worldwide; one species,
Chalcionellus mersinae
(
Marseul, 1857
)
, is regarded as
incertae sedis
. This genus is distributed mostly in the Palaearctic and Afrotropical Regions, with several representatives in the Indo-Malayan Region, too.
Chalcionellus aeneovirens
(
Schmidt, 1890
)
has been introduced into
Australia
.
Chalcionellus
is absent in North and South America and except for the abovementioned species it is normally absent in Australopacific Region, too (
MAZUR 1997
).
Species examined.
Chalcionellus aemulus
(
Illiger, 1807
)
,
C. amoenus
(
Erichson, 1834
)
,
C. blanchii blanchii
(
Marseul, 1855
)
,
C. blanchii tauricus
(
Marseul, 1862
)
,
C. decemstriatus decemstriatus
(Rossi, 1792)
,
C. decemstriatus tingitanus
Reichardt, 1932
,
C. geminus
Dahlgren, 1969
,
C. hauseri
(
Schmidt, 1894
)
,
C. ibericus
Dahlgren, 1969a
,
C. libanicola
(
Marseul, 1870
)
,
C. olexai
Lackner, 2002
,
C. orcinus
Reichardt, 1932
,
C. palaestinensis
(
Schmidt, 1890
)
,
C. persicus
Lackner, 2002
,
C. sibiricus
Dahlgren, 1969a
,
C. suspectus
(
Schmidt, 1890
)
,
C. tunisius
(
Marseul, 1876
)
,
C. turcicus
(
Marseul, 1857
)
,
C. tyrius
(
Marseul, 1857
)
,
Chalcionellus
sp. (
Iraq
).
Discussion.
Phylogenetic validity of this taxon is highly questionable, in authors’ opinion. It is probably a non-natural taxon, most likely paraphyletic, with respect to
Hypocacculus
and it is characterised by only few weak synapomorphies, especially the presence of pronotal foveae. However, even these are not present in all taxa and several of its species have been shifted between
Hypocacculus
and
Chalcionellus
.
Therefore its validity should be tested in the future using modern phylogenetic methods. A species revision, an exciting and noble task in itself, would also be highly desirable in the case of
Chalcionellus
.