Taxonomic notes on Onthophagus (Palaeonthophagus) lemuroides d’Orbigny, 1898 and O. (P.) fortigibber Reitter, 1909 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae: Onthophagini) Stefano Ziani
Author
Ziani, Stefano
text
Insecta Mundi
2012
2012-03-23
2012
217
1
9
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.10108377
1942-1354
10108377
Onthophagus
(
Palaeonthophagus
)
lemuroides
d’Orbigny, 1898
(
Fig. 1–8
)
Onthophagus lemuroides
d’Orbigny 1898a: 177
; 1898b: 188; 1900: 296;
Olsoufiev 1900: 274
;
1918: 47
;
Boucomont and Gillet 1927: 124
;
Winkler 1929: 1033
;
Balthasar 1963: 417
;
Petrovitz 1968: 465
;
Zunino 1975: 163
;
Carpaneto 1977: 34
;
Carpaneto et al. 2000: 231
;
Tauzin 2001: 42
Onthophagus
(
Palaeonthophagus
)
lemuroides
:
Zunino 1979: 9
;
Löbl et al. 2006: 168
;
Kabakov 2006: 190
Type
locality.
“
Mésopotamie
, Perse” [
Iraq
,
Iran
].
Type material
.
Lectotype
, a male, designated by
Zunino (1975)
, and
2 paralectotypes
in MNHN (exa- mined).
Diagnostic features.
Length 4.5 to 7.5 mm. Color blackish brown, moderately shiny, with distinct isodiametric microreticulation, head and pronotum of some with cupreous or greenish lustre; elytra ochreous, usually with dark brown symmetrical v-shaped spots, some with spots joined to each other or lacking in some interstriae, some with first interstriae brown along entire length; some with entire elytral surface blackish brown, without ochreous areas, or, vice versa, the whole elytral disc yellow, spots, if present, limited to the sides (
Fig. 1–5
); pubescence pale yellow.
Head with clypeus broadly round on either side of clear median emargination, can be sinuate near obviously produced genae. Clypeofrontal carina weak or absent in males, moderately elevate but distinct, bent backward in females; occipital carina extended in a lamina ending in a pair of erect horns in major males, reduced to a narrow straight lamina in females and minor males. Clypeal and frontal surface with large setigerous punctures, in males more widely spaced on frons than on clypeus; females only with frontal surface simply punctate, clypeal surface with very coarse, transversely rugose or subrugose punctures. Setae long and erected.
Pronotum convex, declivous anteriorly, with distinct anterolateral tubercle on either side and with an anteromedian round prominence, clearly projecting further forward than the anterolateral tubercles. Anterior angles distinctly produced, sides not or very indistinctly sinuate behind them. Dorsal surface setigerously punctate, punctures broad, sub-regular in distribution, separated by 1-3 diameters on disc, becoming sparser toward base; each puncture bears a small granule at its anterior margin, and a long pale yellow seta.
Elytral striae shiny, barely impressed, with punctures slightly larger than strial width and barely crenating interstrial sides. Interstriae flat to barely convex, sometimes the 4
th
interstria more convex than the others, all, except the sutural interstria, rather regularly biserially granulate; granules slightly smaller than strial punctures; posterior margin of each granule with a small, indistinct, setigerous puncture; setae pale yellow, thin, shorter than pronotal ones.
Pygidium with widely spaced, setigerous punctures; setae yellow, long, thin.
Inner angle of protibial apex with a small denticle strongly curved downward in males, females lacking denticle.
Parameres (
Fig. 6–7
) short, slightly sinuate along sides, latero-apical spatulae not bent ventrally, obviously diverging apically, without latero-proximal denticle, latero-apical angle round. Lamella copulatrix (
Fig. 8
) typical of the subgenus
Palaeonthophagus
, horseshoe shaped and clearly emarginate at one side, right lobe with a strongly sclerotized plica ventrally bent.
Figures 1-8.
Onthophagus
(
Palaeonthophagus
)
l
emuroides
d’Orbigny, 1898.
1)
Lectotype male.
2)
Male (IR-Lorestān, Nehāvand Kosio Āb, 1860 m).
3)
Male (TR-Malatya, 10 km S Tepehan, 1200 m).
4)
Female (TR-GümüŞhane, Bayburt, 2000 m).
5)
Male (TR- Malatya, ReŞadiye geçidi, 1510 m).
6)
Parameres, dorsal view (drawing by Ivo Gudenzi).
7)
Parameres, lateral view (drawing by Ivo Gudenzi).
8)
lamella copulatrix.
Distribution.
Turkey
,
Iraq
,
Iran
(
Löbl et al. 2006
).
Syria
(
Kabakov, 2006
)
Material examined.
IRAN
: “
Persia
”,
1 male
(
paralectotype
,
MNHN
)
;
EŞfahān prov.
,
Zāghel
,
21.v.1977
,
1 male
(
Baraud
collection,
MNHN
)
;
“
Dasht-Arghan
”,
30.iv.1971
,
R. Naviaux
leg.
1 male
(
Baraud
collection,
MNHN
)
;
Lorestān prov.
,
Zagros Mts.
,
Nehāvand Kosio Āb
,
1860 m
,
6.v.2008
,
T. Hácz
,
K. Székely
and
K. Vig
leg.
8 males
and
6 females
(
LNCB
), and
2 males
(
SZCM
)
;
Lorestān prov.
,
Bongale
,
1600 m
,
15.iv.1999
,
L. Nadai
leg.
1 female
(
SZCM
)
;
Büyer Ahmad prov.
,
3 km
N Sisaht
,
2700 m
,
10.v.1998
,
G. Fábián
and
K. Székely
leg.
1 male
(
SZCM
)
;
Lorestān prov.
,
10 km
SW Dorud
,
1400 m
,
10.v.2002
,
D. Gianasso
leg.
1 female
(
SZCM
)
;
Lorestān prov.
, Kuh- e
Oshturan
,
2000 m
,
22.v.2005
,
G. Sama
leg.
1 female
(
SZCM
)
;
Lorestān prov.
,
Azna
,
Arak
,
2083 m
,
22.v.2005
,
G. Sama
leg.
1 male
(
SZCM
)
.
IRAQ
: “
Mesopotamie
”,
1 male
and
1 female
(
lectotype
and
paralectotype
,
MNHN
)
.
SYRIA
: “
Syrie
”,
1 female
(
Baraud
collection,
MNHN
)
.
TURKEY
:
Niğde prov.
,
Aladağlar
,
2000 m
,
26.vii.1990
,
C. Thomè
leg.
1 female
(
Baraud
collection,
MNHN
)
;
Adıyaman prov.
,
Nemrut Dağı
,
1.v.1998
,
1 male
(
SZCM
)
;
Malatya prov.
,
ReŞadiye
geçidi,
1510 m
,
13.iv.2004
,
S. and R. Ziani
leg.
64 males
and
45 females
(
SZCM
)
;
Malatya prov.
,
10 km
S Tepehan
,
1200 m
,
S. and R. Ziani
leg.
1 male
and
2 females
(
SZCM
)
;
GümüŞhane prov.
,
Bayburt
,
2000 m
,
3.vii.1992
,
S. and R. Ziani
leg.
2 males
and
4 females
(
SZCM
)
;
Erzurum prov.
,
Kop Dağı
geçidi–
Kandilli
,
2500 m
,
3.vii.1992
,
S. and R. Ziani
leg.
4 males
and
3 females
(
SZCM
)
;
Hakkâri prov.
,
Uludere
,
16.iv.2006
,
S. and R. Ziani
leg.
1 female
(
SZCM
)
;
Siirt prov.
,
10 km
N
Şırnak
,
1500 m
,
16.iv.2006
,
S. and R. Ziani
leg.
1 female
(
SZCM
)
.
Remarks.
The record of
O. lemuroides
from
Syria
appears doubtful.
Kabakov (2006)
stated to have examined
two females
labelled generically
Syria
, and “
Syrie
” is also on the label of a specimen I studied in MNHN. Most probably
Syria
is to be considered in its historical sense, i.e. those territories once encompassed in the
Ottoman Empire
, presently belonging to
Turkey
.