Two new species of Macroplea Samouelle (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Donaciinae) from China, with a key to all known species
Author
Lou, Qiaozhe
Author
Yu, Peiyu
Author
Liang, Hongbin
text
Zootaxa
2011
3003
1
21
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.278456
a8fc813d-35bd-45b7-a0ca-42ef0c0cd9a6
1175-5326
278456
Genus
Macroplea
Samouelle, 1819
Macroplea
Samouelle, 1819
: 211
(
Type
species
Donacia zosterae
Fabricius, 1801
).
Apelma
Billberg, 1820
: 57
(
Type
species
Donacia zosterae
Fabricius, 1801
).
Haemonia
Dejean, 1821
: 114
(
Type
species
Donacia zosterae
Fabricius, 1801
).
Diagnosis.
Dorsum and legs yellow or brown (
Figs 1, 3
,
24, 26
,
50–53
); vertex with dense pubescence (
Figs 6
,
29
,
50–53
); antenna long, extending beyond middle of elytron (
Figs 1–4
,
50, 52, 53
), or short, not extending beyond middle of elytron (
Figs 24–27
); pronotum with setae at anterior angles (
Figs 5
,
28
,
56–59
); pronotum with distinct anterior and posterior beads (
Figs 5
,
28
,
56–59
); punctures along elytral striae arranged more or less in paired rows (
Figs 1, 3
,
50–53
), or in single rows (
Figs 24, 26
); elytron with or without spine at outer apical angle (
Figs 12
,
35
,
64–67
); metafemur slender, without tooth (
Figs 1–4
,
24–27
,
50–53
); profemur with a short linearly arranged brush of setae basally on posterior surface (
Figs 16
,
36
); metatarsus with markedly reduced pubescence, fifth tarsomere elongate, at least as long as basal three combined (
Figs 10
,
39
,
68, 70, 71
); endophallus with two ELDs fused, enclosing MEG, without pELD (
Figs 21, 22
,
47–49
,
74
, 75,
77
, 78,
81–83
).
Distribution.
Europe, northern Africa (
Algeria
), Middle Asia, Siberia, Far East,
China
and
Japan
. Distribution in
China
: Heilongjiang, Hebei,
Tianjin
, Ningxia, Gansu, Xinjiang, Jiangsu, Hubei, Sichuan, Guizhou (
Fig. 85
).
Host plants.
Ranunculus
L. (
Ranunculaceae
),
Carex
L. (
Cyperaceae
),
Brasenia
Schreb. (Cabombaceae)
,
Potamogeton
L. (
Potamogetonaceae
),
Myriophyllum
L. (
Haloragaceae
),
Ruppia
L. (
Zosteraceae
),
Zostera
L. (
Zosteraceae
),
Sparganium
L. (
Sparganiaceae
) (
Bieńkowski & Orlova-Bieńkowskaja, 2004
),
Vallisneria
L. (
Hydrocharitaceae
),
Ottelia
Pers
. (Hydrocharitaceae)
and
Hippuris
L. (
Hippuridaceae
) (recorded in this paper).
Biology.
Macroplea
is a fully aquatic genus. They live in lentic or lotic water. Both
M. appendiculata
and
M. mutica
live in brackish as well as fresh water (
Borowiec, 1984
;
Kölsch
et al.
, 2006
;
Saari
, 2007
;
Mende
et al.
, 2010
). According to
Mende
et al.
(2010
: 101), immobility (cannot swim or fly) is believed to be a specific feature of
M. mutica
. However, three specimens of
M. japana
examined in this study were collected by light trap.
Remarks.
Identification of species of
Macroplea
is difficult, despite the genus being less speciose. Many workers have used external morphology, male genitalia, ecological features, and molecular data to delimit species of this genus (
Freude
et al.
, 1966
;
Daccordi & Ruffo, 1978
;
Mohr, 1985
;
Beenen & Winkelman, 1989
;
Hayashi & Shiyake, 2001
;
Kölsch
et al.
, 2006
). We have followed many of these workers to enhance the reliability of the key. Species of
Macroplea
can be separated from those of
Neohaemonia
Székessy
in new world by the following characters: 1) vertex with dense pubescence (with a glabrous patch in
Neohaemonia
); 2) pronotum with setae at anterior angles (such setae absent in
Neohaemonia
); 3) pronotum with distinct anterior and posterior beads (such beads absent in
Neohaemonia
); 4) profemur with a short linearly arranged brush of setae basally on posterior surface (such brush of setae absent in
Neohaemonia
); 5) endophallus without pELD (pELD present in
Neohaemonia
).