Taxonomy and natural history of the myrmecophilous genus Clinterocera Motschulsky, 1858 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Cetoniinae) from China and adjacent regions: definition of species group and revision of the C. discipennis species group
Author
Qiu, Jian-Yue
Author
Xu, Hao
text
Zootaxa
2016
4127
1
81
104
journal article
38759
10.11646/zootaxa.4127.1.4
797d978f-8112-41fc-a0dd-11a7a89a8a50
1175-5326
265702
66B1FA32-28B6-4CF5-95D7-6DE777B2C233
Clinterocera
Motschulsky, 1858
Clinterocera
Motschulsky, 1858
: 112
;
Harold 1869
: 1339
;
Westwood 1873
: 27
;
Schoch 1894
: 225
(in index);
Schoch 1896
: 360
(in key);
Schenkling 1921
: 365
(catalog);
Mao 1937
: 1097
;
Medvedev 1964
: 334
;
Krikken 1977
: 311
;
Krikken 1984
: 45
;
Kalinina 1989
;
Ma 1995
: 163
;
Sakai 1997
: 11
;
Sakai & Nagai 1998
: 160
;
Krajčík 1999
: 40
;
Fujioka 2001
: 125
;
Smetana 2006
: 299
;
Legrand & Chew Kea Foo 2010
: 86
;
Krajčík 2011
: 70
;
Krajčik 2012a
: 74
.
Type
species
Cremastochilus scabrosa
Motschulsky, 1854
.
Cholerastoma
Mohnike, 1871
: 315.
Type
species
Cholerostoma spondylidea
Mohnike, 1871
. Synonymized by
Westwood 1874
: 66.
Callynomes
Westwood, 1873
: 26
(nec
Mohnike 1873
: 241
);
Schoch 1894
: 218
(in key), 225 (in index);
Schoch 1896
: 360
(in key);
Heller 1897
: 177
(key);
Schenkling 1921
: 364
(catalog);
Niijima & Kinoshita 1923
: 184
;
Mao 1937
: 1096
;
Paulian 1961
: 9
.
Type
species
Callynomes vollenhovii
Westwood, 1873
. Synonymized by
Medvedev 1964
: 334
.
Callyomenes
(
sic
!) Westwood:
Schoch 1895
: 131
(in key), 133.
Callinomes
(
sic
!) Westwood:
Arrow 1910
: 215;
Paulian 1961
: 9;
Kurosawa 1973
: 109.
Diagnosis.
A combination of the following characters is diagnostic for the genus
Clinterocera
: Antennal
scapus strongly expanded, subspatulate (
Figs. 1–2
); clypeus anterior margin reflexed; anterior part of prementum strongly expanded, scutellate (
Fig. 3
); terminal spiracule convex (
Figs. 4–5
); tarsi with 4 tarsomeres (
Figs. 8–9
).
Redescription. General
: Body 9.0–26.0 mm long, 3.5 mm wide, subelliptical; usually black, dark gray, red, orange, orange-red; usually with setiferous punctures. Some species with white, yellow, gray, or khaki tomentum on dorsal and/or ventral surface.
Head:
Clypeus anterior margin reflexed; clypeolateral area inclined downwards; anterior margin arcuate. Antenna with 10 antennomeres; scapus strongly expanded, subspatulate (
Figs. 1–2
); club with 3 antennomeres. Anterior part of prementum strongly expanded, scutellate (
Fig. 3
); exactly mirrored with the anterior margin of clypeus, enveloping labial palpus and maxillae. Maxillae strongly sclerotized; galea unciform and lacinia knife-like. Gula narrow.
Dorsal surface:
Pronotum subcircular; scutellum triangular; elytra flat, widest at the humeral umbone, with maculae, tomentum, or costae in some species; terminal spiracle more or less convex (
Figs. 4–5
), visible from above in some species (
Fig. 4
).
Ventral surface:
Discal portion of metasternum flat with a shallow longitudinal groove in the middle; mesometasternal process nearly absent.
Pygidium:
Subelliptical, glossy or clad with tomentum.
Leg:
Thin and simple; protibia with inferior ridge; tarsi with 4 tarsomeres.
Sexual dimorphism.
Male and female usually have similar body size, but female larger than male in
C. trimaculata
. In most species, protibia with the apical tooth of inferior ridge long and curved downwards in male (
Fig. 6
), while short and extended distad in female (
Fig. 7
); abdomen with a groove on abdominal sternites
3–5 in
male, while convex in female. In the
C. jucunda
species group, the tooth on the outer margin of protibia is smaller in the male.
Distribution.
Palaearctic and Oriental Regions.
Nomenclature.
The date of two publications must be emphasized here. According to
Griffin (1936)
, the year printed on title page of Motschulsky’s
Etudes entomologiques
Volume 6 is 1857, but the actual date is
24.IV.1858
.
Krikken (1977)
indicated that Westwood’s
Thesaurus Entomologicus Oxoniensis
was published in four parts with different date. The part I including pages 1–56 and plates 1–10 published in 1873, other parts were published in 1874. According to the Article 21.4 and 21.5 (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 1999), the date of genera
Clinterocera
and
Callynomes
should be cited as
1858 and 1873
respectively.
Remarks.
There are 11 genera in the subtribe
Cremastocheilina
. Most of them distributed in the New World, with only two occur in Asia:
Clinterocera
and
Platysodes
Westwood, 1873
(
Krikken 1984
;
Krajčík 1999
). With the exception of
Clinterocera
and
Cremastocheilus
Knoch, 1801
all genera in this subtribe have very few species (
Cazier 1938
;
Howden 1971
;
Krikken 1976
;
Qiu
et al.
2015
).
Cremastocheilus
includes more than 40 species, and the behavior and morphology have been studied in some detail (
Krikken 1982b
;
Alpert 1994
;
Mynhardt & Wenzel 2010
;
Krajčík 2012b
). The shape and sculpture of the pronotum are variable and are the important characters for diagnosing species, while those in
Clinterocera
are unmodified. Although the male genitalia resemble those of
Cremastocheilus
,
Clinterocera
is considered most closely related to
Lissomelas
Bates, 1889
and
Genuchinus
Westwood, 1873
, since they share the similar external morphological features as presented in
Cazier (1938)
and other six genera see
Howden (1971)
and
Krikken (1976
,
1981
). However,
Clinterocera
can be clearly differentiated from other
Cremastocheilina
species by the tarsi with four tarsomeres (with the exception of
Cremastocheilus lengi
Cazier, 1938
), the others having the full number of five tarsomeres.