Do the Palaearctic subgenera of Podistra Motschulsky, 1839 really occur in North America: description of P. (Pidostria), subgen. nov. (Coleoptera: Cantharidae)
Author
KAZANTSEV, SERGEY V.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-04-06
5263
3
389
400
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5263.3.4
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5263.3.4
f3240ade-bd36-4688-934f-da3f8f453ac3
1175-5326
7804322
9842EE1A-841D-4608-B3D0-7A825717CF73
subgenus
Pidostria
subgen. nov.
type
species
Telephorus insipidus
Fall, 1907
insipida
Fall, 1907: 235
(
Telephorus
).
USA
(
New Mexico
).
genus
Podistra
, species
incertae sedis
beauprei
Pic, 1906: 81 [replacement name].
Algeria
.
= latiuscula
Bourgeois, 1906: 97 [homonym].
japonica
Kiesenwetter, 1874: 279.
Japan
.
nonveilleri
G. Müller, 1946: 113.
Montenegro
(Komovi Mts,
2300 m
).
sanbernardensis
Fender, 1972: 16
(
Pseudoabsidia
).
USA
(
California
).
sierrae
McKey-Fender, 1950: 76
(
Absidia
).
USA
(
California
).
vaulogeri
Bourgeois, 1905: 106.
Algeria
.
Six species are included in
Podistra
incertae sedis
, as they were not available for study and/or no information was provided about their aedeagi in the descriptions.
Podistra
(
Absidia
)
pentheri
Ganglbauer, 1922
from the east Adriatic coast is excluded from
Podistra
, as the structure of its male genitalia does not allow its attribution to this genus, its aedeagus being characteristic of
Pakabsidia
. Thus,
Podistra
(
A.
)
pentheri
, although not quite fitting in the latter genus either, having male antennae with tiny glabrous areas, is tentatively transferred to it as
Pakabsidia pentheri
(
Ganglbauer, 1922
)
,
comb. nov.
Podistra longicornis
Wittmer, 1978
from Kashmir is also excluded from the genus, as the structure of its aedeagus, different from that of
Podistra
, is rather
Cantharis
-like; besides,
Podistra reductipennis
Wittmer, 1966
, near which it was placed (
Wittmer, 1978
), has already been transferred to
Cantharis
Linnaeus, 1758
(
Svihla, 1992
). Therefore,
P. longicornis
is also transferred to
Cantharis
, as
Cantharis longicornis
(
Wittmer, 1978
)
,
comb. nov.
The distribution areas of the
Podistra
subgenera are shown in
Figs 6
and
7
(those of species incertae sedis not represented).
Absidia
has the largest and practically uninterrupted range, extending from the Atlantic coast to East Siberia.
Hemipodistra
is confined to the Alps, Carpathian mountains and the eastern Caucasus, with a clear-cut disjunctive distribution pattern.
Podistra
s. str.
is almost as widespread as
Absidia
, but its distribution area is almost as disjunctive as that of
Hemipodistra
, with the bulk of its species confined to the Caucasus, only one species occurring in two isolated patches in Central Europe and two species registered also in the Far East and East Siberia.
Pidostria
subgen. nov.
is the only
Podistra
subgenus to occur in the Nearctic realm, in an isolated pocket in
New Mexico
.