Epimetopidae

Fikáček, Martin, Matsumoto, Keita, Perkins, Philip, Prokin, Alexander, Sazhnev, Alexey, Litovkin, Stanislav & Jäch, Manfred A., 2021, The family Epimetopidae (Coleoptera: Hydrophiloidea): review of current knowledge, genus-level phylogeny, and taxonomic revision of Eupotemus, Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae (Acta. Ent. Mus. Natl. Pragae) 61 (1), pp. 1-34 : 16

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.37520/aemnp.2021.001

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9CB2C16A-E2B7-4C17-A310-D538AA061911

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038BAE5E-FFD3-A229-F968-FB05FD20F7A6

treatment provided by

Carolina (2021-06-28 15:42:10, last updated by Plazi 2023-11-03 02:07:46)

scientific name

Epimetopidae
status

 

Key to genera of Epimetopidae View in CoL

1. Elytra with scutellary stria, odd intervals with series of elevated tubercles, never with keels ( Fig. 15 View Fig ). Pronotum without longitudinal keels ( Fig. 14 View Fig ). Aedeagus with very long curved conical phallobase and complex multilobate parameres ( Figs 6V–Z View Fig ). Male sternite IX O-shaped ( Fig. 6U View Fig ). Asia. ..................................... .............................. Eumetopus Balfour-Browne, 1949 View in CoL

– Elytra without scutellary stria, odd intervals with longitudinal keels which may be interrupted here and there ( Figs 9 View Fig , 10 View Fig , 12 View Fig , 16 View Fig ). Pronotum with longitudinal keels ( Figs 9 View Fig , 10 View Fig , 12 View Fig , 16 View Fig ). Aedeagus with simple flat open phallobase and simple parameres ( Figs 6D–H, L–R View Fig ). Male sternite IX U- or V-shaped ( Figs 6C, K View Fig ). Africa and America. .................................................... 2

2. Procoxal cavities open posteriorly ( Fig. 3A View Fig ). Male sternite IX V-shaped ( Fig. 6C View Fig ). Median lobe with a single ventral projection which is simple or bifid at apex ( Figs 6G–H View Fig ). Africa. .............................................. ........................................... Eupotemus Ji & Jäch, 1998 View in CoL

– Procoxal cavities closed posteriorly ( Figs 3G, I View Fig ). Male sternite IX U-shaped ( Fig. 6K View Fig ). Median lobe either without any projections, or with a pair of projections ( Figs 6L–R View Fig ). America. .................................................... ...................................... Epimetopus Lacordaire, 1854 View in CoL

BALFOUR-BROWNE J. 1949: Notes on the subfamily Epimetopinae (Col., Palpicornia) with the description of a new genus and of three new species. Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society of London, Series B 18: 12 - 18.

LACORDAIRE T. 1854: Histoire naturelle des Insectes. Genera des Colopteres ou expose metodique et critique de tous les genres proposes jusqui'ici dans cet ordre d'insectes. Librairie encyclopedique de Roret, Paris, xx + 486 pp.

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Fig. 15. Elytral sculpture and male genitalia of Eumetopus Balfour-Browne, 1949. A–H – elytral sculpture, same specimens as in Fig. 14: A – E. acutimontis Ji & Jäch, 1998; B – E. asperatus (Champion, 1919); C – E. bullatus (Sharp, 1875); D – E. flavidulus (Sharp, 1890); E – E. maindroni (Régimbart, 1903); F – E. schuelkei Jäch, 2002; G – E. tibialis Ji & Jäch, 1998; H – E. weigeli Skale & Jäch, 2003. I–L – male genitalia of examined specimens, large basal portion of the phallobase omitted (dorsal and lateral view): I – E. acutimontis from Vietnam; J – E. flavidulus from India: Andhra Pradesh; K – E. maindroni from India: Gujarat; L – E. weigeli from India: Uttarakhand.

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Fig. 14. Habitus photographs of the known species of Eumetopus Balfour-Browne, 1949. A – E. acutimontis Ji & Jäch, 1998, paratype from China: Hainan (NHMW); B – E. asperatus (Champion, 1919), specimen from Nepal: Koshi Valley (NMPC); C – E. bullatus (Sharp, 1875), specimen from India: Maharashtra, Sawantwadi (NMPC); D – E. flavidulus (Sharp, 1890), specimen from India: Meghalaya, Bagmara (NHMW); E – E. maindroni (Régimbart, 1903), specimen from India: Maharashtra, Sawantwadi (NHMW); F – E. schuelkei Jäch, 2002, paratype from central Laos; G – E. tibialis Ji & Jäch, 1998 from Thailand, Ban Na env. (NMPC); H – E. weigeli Skale & Jäch, 2003, holotype from Nepal (NHMW). Scale bars: 1 mm.

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Fig. 6. Male genitalia and associated structures of Epimetopidae. A–H – Eupotemus Ji & Jäch, 1998 (A–F – E. smithi sp. nov.; G – E. cameroonensis sp. nov.; H – E. carinaticollis (Basilewsky, 1956)). I–R – Epimetopus Lacordaire, 1854 (I–N – E. mendeli Fikáček et al., 2011; O – E. cf. burruyacu Oliva, 1986; P – E. multiporus Perkins, 2012; Q – E. clandestinus Perkins, 2012; R – E. thermarum Schwarz & Barber, 1917). S–Z – Eumetopus Balfour-Browne, 1949 (S–Y – E. acutimontis Ji & Jäch, 1998; Z – E. bullatus (Sharp, 1875)).A, I, S – sternite VIII; B, J, T – tergite VIII; C, K, U – sternite IX; D, L, V – aedeagus dorsally; E, M, W – aedeagus laterally; F, N, X – aedeagus ventrally (basal part omitted in X); Y – sperm pump. Color coding: green – ventral projections of the median lobe; red – median lobe; blue – paramere (pale blue – dorsal lobe; dark blue – ventral lobe). Not to scale.

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Fig. 9. Habitus photographs of the species of the Eupotemus limicola species group, holotypes: A–C – E. bilobatus sp. nov.; D–F – E. cameroonensis sp. nov.; G–I – E. limicola (Delève, 1967).

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Fig. 10. Habitus photographs of the species of the Eupotemus limicola species group, holotypes (A–F) and differences between species groups in pronotal morphology (G–H). A–C – E. smithi sp. nov.; D–F – E. ophioglossus sp. nov.; G–I – pronotal sculpture: G – E. carinaticollis species group; H – E. limicola species group.

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Fig. 12. Habitus photographs of the species of the Eupotemus carinaticollis species group, holotypes: A–C – E. carinaticollis (Basilewsky, 1956); D–F – E. uluguru sp. nov.; G–I – E. taianus sp. nov.

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Fig. 16. Photographs of Epimetopus species, including two specimens of questionable provenance (E–G).A – E. flavicaptus Fikáček, Barclay & Perkins, 2011; B – E. deceptus Perkins, 2012; C – E. tridens Perkins, 2012; D – E. hintoni Balfour-Browne, 1949; E – Epimetopus sp. (ʻZambiaʼ); F–G – E. cf. burruyacu Oliva, 1986 (ʻSaudi Arabiaʼ) (F – dorsal view; G – aedeagus). Scale bars for A–F = 0.5 mm. A–D adopted from Pൾ*©κංඇඌ (2012).

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Fig. 3. Thoracic morphology of the genera of Epimetopidae. A–B, J, Q – Eupotemus smithi sp. nov.; C–D, L–O – Eumetopus schuelkei Jäch, 2002; E–F – Epimetopus mendeli Fikáček, Barclay & Perkins, 2012; G–I, P – Epimetopus costaricensis Perkins, 1979. A–I – prothorax in ventral view (B, D, F, H – detail of ventral sculpture of the pronotal hood; I – detail of closed procoxal cavity. J–L – meso- and metathorax in ventral view. M–N – elytron in ventral view (M – general view; N – detail of the ventral ridge, notice the spiny surface on inner face of the ridge (in) and on the elytral plectrum posteriorly of it (pl)). O – mesotrochanter. P–Q – details of pretarsus with the leaf-like empodial seta. Not to scale.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Epimetopidae