Afrophloeus, a new genus of African weevils of the tribe Embrithini (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Entiminae), with description of a new species and notes on the composition of Embrithini
Author
Borovec, Roman
Author
Oberprieler, Rolf G.
text
Zootaxa
2013
3693
3
365
378
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.223111
118c9348-fc89-43ae-9664-8dc9e5ad29f9
1175-5326
223111
F145FA89-A00B-4A85-A7FB-7C1F4680ACA3
Tribe
Embrithini
Marshall
Embrithini
Marshall
, 1942: 3
.
Type
genus:
Embrithes
Schoenherr, 1842
.
Diagnosis.
Entiminae
with short to long rostrum dorsally separated from head by broad V-shaped depression or sharp V-shaped sulcus (sometimes obscured by vestiture); trisetose mandibles; glabrous, often posteriorly sharply carinate epistome; bare or squamose frons; usually dorsolaterally placed scrobes but with antennal sockets visible in dorsal view, only occasionally concealed by lateral edges of epifrons (
Glyptosomus
,
Peritelomus
Faust
), sometimes entirely dorsally placed (
e.g.
,
Ellimenistes
,
Sympiezorhynchus
,
Zeugorygma
); usually 7-segmented funicles (6- to 4-segmented in some
Afrophloeus
,
Heisonyx
,
Lalagetes
,
Bryochaeta
Pascoe
,
Syntaphocerus
J. Thomson
), segment 2 often the longest; protruding to flat eyes; laterally straight anterior pronotal margin, not extended into ocular lobes; elytra with 10 distinct, regular striae or with 12 or more irregular ones; wingless (hence scutellar shield and humeri absent); tibiae without spurs, with short mucro (sometimes not protruding out of fringing setae) or no mucro (mainly genera with multistriate elytra); metatibial apices with narrow or broad, densely setose (rarely squamose) corbel; tarsal claws connate in basal half, usually subparallel, occasionally single (
Heisonyx
).
Remarks.
Although the tribe
Embrithini
is at present not satisfactorily delimited by any unique character(s), this diagnosis serves to distinguish it from all tribes of
Entiminae
in Africa as these are currently conceived. From all “brachyderine” tribes (
Blosyrini
,
Brachyderini
,
Cneorhinini
,
Dermatodini
,
Tanymecini
), “leptopiines” (
Afroleptops
Oberprieler
,
Leptostethus
Waterhouse
,
Spartecerus
Schoenherr
),
Sitonini
and the “otiorhynchine” tribes
Ectemnorhinini
,
Episomini
and
Otiorhynchini
it is most readily distinguishable by its trisetose mandibles, and from the other tribes with trisetose mandibles (
Cyphicerini
,
Oosomini
, “
Peritelini
”,
Tanyrhynchini
and
Trachyphloeini
) it differs in having metatibial corbels and/or connate claws. In line with this diagnosis and in order to constitute the tribe in a more natural way, we here transfer to
Embrithini
the genera
Bryochaeta
,
Cosmorhinus
,
Cycliscus
,
Glyptosomus
,
Porpacus
— whose claws
Marshall
(1942) mistakenly interpreted as being separate — and
Syntaphocerus
from
Oosomini
and
Bicodes
,
Goniorhinus
,
Holorygma
,
Lecanophora
Aurivillius
,
Neobicodes
Hustache
,
Sympiezorhynchus
and
Zeugorygma
from
Myorhinini
, where they were respectively listed by Alonso- Zarazaga & Lyal (1999). All these genera have ten elytral striae. Two genera listed in
Embrithini
by Alonso- Zarazaga & Lyal (1999) do not accord with this diagnosis and are therefore here excluded from this tribe: the South African
Epibrithus
Marshall
, which has no metatibial corbels and the rostrum not dorsally separated from the head (
Marshall
1955), and
Rhyncholobus
Gahan
from
Christmas Island
(
Australia
) in the Indian Ocean, which has multisetose mandibles and quite a different configuration of rostral structures. The tribal placement of these genera in
Entiminae
remains uncertain for the moment. Together with
Afrophloeus
, the new genus described below, the tribe
Embrithini
now comprises 67 genera, 49 with ten elytral striae and 18 with more. A proper separation of such two groups is, however, unwarranted, as
e.g.
Amphitmetus
Kolbe, with ten striae, is in other characters much more similar to multistriate genera such as
Dicasticus
Pascoe
,
Entypotrachelus
Kolbe
and
Peritmetus
Kolbe
than it is to other (mainly southern African) genera with ten striae. As indicated by Oberprieler (1995), a number of other Africa genera may belong in
Embrithini
as well, but the tribe is in need of a thorough taxonomic and phylogenetic study to delineate it as a natural (monophyletic) group and determine all its constituent genera.