Revision of the Genus Crioprosopus Audinet-Serville, and description of three new genera of Trachyderini (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae)
Author
Eya, Bryan K.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3914
4
351
405
journal article
42257
10.11646/zootaxa.3914.4.1
1c1d9c46-4b72-45f0-91f4-5f417dfe7279
1175-5326
242646
39F1E905-0D93-4D6A-AF1B-D622F29B6A54
Callistochroma
Eya
, gen. nov.
Type
species:
Callistochroma viridipennis
(
Latreille, 1811
)
The following species are included in
Callistochroma
:
C. cacica
(
Bates, 1885
)
comb. nov.
,
C. chrysiptera
sp. nov.
,
C. flavofasciata
(Chemsak & Hovore, 2001)
comb. nov.
,
C. lampros
(
Bates, 1885
)
comb. nov.
,
C. rutilans
(
Bates, 1869
)
comb. nov.
,
C. viridipennis
(
Latreille, 1811
)
comb. nov.
, and
C. viridipurpurea
sp. nov.
Description.
Form moderate-sized to large, slightly tapering posteriorly; integument shining; pubescence sparse, long, erect, short, pale, dense at sides of meso-metasterna and abdomen. Head small; front short, deeply impressed transversely, each side with a deep pit, median line deep, extending onto vertex between a swollen area between eyes; mandibles arcuate, acute at apices; palpi short; genae small, subtruncate at apices; antennal tubercles broad, moderately elevated, apices rounded; eyes moderately large, finely faceted, upper lobes small, well separated; antennae 11-segmented, slender (male: extending beyond elytra; female: shorter than body to extending beyond elytra), scape conical, sparsely, finely punctate, carinate over basal ½ to ¾, segments from fourth densely clothed with very short, appressed, pale pubescence, basal segments with a few, short, erect, black hairs beneath, segments 3 and 4 slightly enlarged at apices, remaining segments laterally carinate, third segment usually longer than first, eleventh feebly appendiculate. Pronotum broader than long; sides with tubercle at middle or slightly behind, (males: disc with sides of apical ½ densely, confluently punctate, basal ½ almost impunctate (
Fig. 11
); females: disc usually glabrous (
Fig. 12
); prosternum narrow (male: each side above coxae with a narrow, transverse, deeply punctate area; female: prosternum with sexual punctation reduced), pubescence, pale, erect, intercoxal process narrower than coxal cavities, arcuate, abruptly declivous behind, coxal cavities wide open behind; mesosternum with intercoxal process narrower than coxal cavities, very prominently produced with a blunt apex, abruptly, concavely declivous anteriorly (
Fig. 13
), sides very finely clothed with silvery pubescence; metasternum with very fine pale pubescent at sides. Scutellum glabrous, longer than wide, acutely pointed apically. Elytra about twice as long as broad or longer, sides slightly tapering; punctures very fine, sparse; pubescence obsolete, except at apices and lateral margin; apices obliquely angulate, sutural angle rounded or acute, exterior angle dentate. Legs slender; hind femora linear, finely, sparsely punctate; tibiae slender, apically with two short spines, internally with a row of short, suberect hairs; hind tarsi slender, first segment about as long as following two segments together, third segment cleft to base. Abdomen finely pubescent at sides, segments 1–4 nearly glabrous in middle except for few erect hairs.
Remarks and diagnosis.
In the description of
Crioprosopus
Audinet-Serville
and
Callona
Waterhouse
by
Bates (1885)
and
Linsley (1962)
, respectively, they suggested a second group of metallic species that was generically distinct from these two genera; however, a new genus was not proposed. According to
Bates (1880
:76 and 1885:319), this group can be distinguished by the following characteristics: (1) very polished elytra; (2) very prominent mesosternum; (3) thorax of the male having the sculpture confined to a limited area towards each anterior angle; and (4) thorax in the female being quite smooth. This second group of
Crioprosopus
is herein referred to as
Callistochroma
. Some of the key features that distinguish
Callistochroma
from
Crioprosopus
Audinet-Serville
are shown on
Figs. 11–18
.
Crioprosopus
, in general, have more robust shorter antennae and the apices of the elytra rounded or truncate and usually without outer armature. Most of the metallic
Crioprosopus
species have a more densely clothed ventral vestiture. While the punctures found on the pronotal disc in male
Callistochroma
are limited to the area towards each anterior angle, the disc of male
Crioprosopus
is punctate throughout to the base. Also, the metallic species of
Callistochroma
can be distinguished from the metallic
Crioprosopus
by the differences in degree of sexual dimorphism, i.e., in the shape and size of the prothorax. In
Callistochroma
the overall prothoracic shape and size is similar in both sexes (i.e., the lateral margin of prothorax in both sexes have postmedian tubercles, and the side of the apical half, which is rounded or obtusely tuberculate). In the metallic species of
Crioprosopus
, males have an inflated prothorax with broad and obtuse lateral tubercles or sides dilated or rounded, while the females have a smaller glabrous disc. Many of the female examples with metallic green or blue elytra from
Mexico
labeled “
Callona rutilans
” in collections appear to be
Crioprosopus
species because these examples do not have the protuberant mesosternal process found in
Callistochroma
, and share the characters of ventral vestiture, shorter antennae, and the rounded or more truncated elytra apices of
Crioprosopus
. In general, considering the distribution of these two genera, most of the
Callistochroma
appears to be distributed southeast from
Nicaragua
into northern South
America
, whereas
Crioprosopus
is predominantly distributed from
Costa Rica
northward into North
America
and mainly centered in southern
Mexico
. One of the few species of
Callistochroma
with its distribution extending into central
Mexico
(Colima) is
C. rutilans
, and
Crioprosopus
with its distribution extending into South
America
is
C. tricolor
.
Etymology.
The etymology of the genus
Callistochroma
is
Callisto
(or
Kallisto
) Καλλιστώ, Greek for “most beautiful” and
chroma
χρῶΜα "color."