Madeiracalles, 2010
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00609.x |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B7F473-142A-FFCA-03E4-FC67F236F9B3 |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar |
scientific name |
Madeiracalles |
status |
gen. nov. |
MADEIRACALLES STÜBEN & ASTRIN GEN. NOV.
( FIGS 14A–E View Figures 2–22 , 25–32 View Figures 25–32 , 34 View Figures 33–34 )
Type species: Acalles dispar Wollaston, 1854
Wollaston, 1854, 1857, 1865; Lundblad, 1958; Stüben, 2002b; Stüben et al., 2003; Stüben & Astrin, 2009 in press.
Compilation of the species of the genus
Madeiracalles achadagrandensis (Stüben, 2002) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles albolineatus ( Wollaston, 1854) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles cinereus (Wollaston, 1860) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles coarctatus ( Wollaston, 1857) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles dispar ( Wollaston, 1854) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles festivus ( Wollaston, 1857) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles histrionicus ( Wollaston, 1857) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Porto Santo
Madeiracalles machadoi ( Stüben, 2006) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles nodiferus ( Wollaston, 1854) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles portosantoensis (Stüben, 2002) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Porto Santo
Madeiracalles pulverosus (Gemminger, 1871) (nec. Acalles pulverulentus Wollaston, 1854 View in CoL ) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
= Acalles oblitus Wollaston (1854) View in CoL syn. ( Stüben & Astrin, 2009 , in press)
Madeiracalles saxicola ( Wollaston, 1854) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Deserta Grande (including type locality), Madeira
Madeiracalles terminalis ( Wollaston, 1854) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
= Acalles terminalis View in CoL var. b Wollaston (1854) syn. (Stüben, 2002)
Madeiracalles tolpis (Stüben, 2002) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles tristaensis (Stüben, 2002) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles ) – Madeira
Madeiracalles vau ( Wollaston, 1854) comb. nov. (formerly: Acalles View in CoL ) – Madeira
Description
Size: 2.5 ( M. tolpis )– 7.2 mm ( M. nodiferus )
Head: Eyes circular; the reddish-brown rostrum of the ♂ with dense and oval punctures, the basal third covered with brown scales; length: approximately two-thirds of length of pronotum. The rostrum of the ♀ more slender, conspicuously longer (four-fifths of length of pronotum), with finer and less dense punctures and basal third only spaciously covered with scales.
Pronotum: 1.04–1.14¥ (-1.22¥ M. tristaensis ) as long as wide; widest in the middle; outline rounded evenly oval or ‘bellied’ (as in robust specimens of M. pulverosus ). Disc of pronotum with aggregations of dark brown bristles sticking out vertically on both sides of the often only fine mid groove or shallow middepression.
Elytra: Elongated, ‘canoe-like’: 1.27–1.51¥ (1.53–1.68¥ M. tristaensis ) as long as wide; widest directly in front of the middle (or at the end of the basal third); elytra, often rounded elliptically, the anterior sixth part steeply sloped towards the base of elytra; towards the apex beginning with a lateral depression (somewhat concave on the flanks), the apex itself elongated ‘beak-like’. The integument is very variable. Between a more or less unicoloured dark brown and a light brown or beige basic colouring there are all imaginable changes and crossovers, although always with a light, v-shaped fascia on the elytral slope and often with a diffuse pale-white scutellar mark at the base. Moreover, most of the species have a light falciform fascia extending from the sixth interval at the base to the scutellar stripe in the middle of the elytra. Elytra with numerous protuberances covered with bristles, the biggest, often elongated and high-piled aggregations of bristles are situated on the second interval of the elytral slope.
Legs: Long; front femur reaching posterior margin of eye; tibia with short, often ‘erinaceous’ distant bristles; femur with sloping, raised bristles; tibia annulated with belts of dark brown to black scales.
Venter: Second abdominal sternite as long as sternites 3 and 4 combined.
Aedeagus: Median lobe always with very long capillary bristles ( Figs 25–27 View Figures 25–32 ); endophallus very small and ‘complex’, besides the inverse v-shaped basic structure there is (except for three minor variances) a clearly cognizable basic pattern ( Figs 28–32 View Figures 25–32 ).
Differential diagnosis and discussion: According to the structure of the internal sac there are only subtle differences amongst most Madeiracalles species ( Figs 28–32 View Figures 25–32 ); the interspecific variability is much higher in the Canarian clade. As a result of this, splitting up the morphologically very ‘homogeneous’ genus Madeiracalles into subgenera does not make sense, especially when striving for comparability/ equivalence of supraspecific taxa in all Macaronesian Cryptorhynchinae . See also the ‘Key to the genera and subgenera of Macaronesian Cryptorhynchinae’.
The species of Madeiracalles represent a monophyletic group forming the so-called ‘Madeiran clade’ (cf. Fig. 1A View Figure 1 ). This group is distinguished from the Canarian genera by (1) the conspicuously long and slender, capillary bristles on the median lobe of the aedeagus ( Figs 25–27 View Figures 25–32 ); and (2) the ‘complex’ inverse v-shaped structure of the endophallus, which shows a clearly comprehensible basic pattern and is doubtlessly homologous amongst the species of Madeiracalles ( Figs 28–32 View Figures 25–32 ).
Biology and ecology: On the Canary Islands, instances of radiative cospeciation of some Cryptorhynchinae with their host plants (of the genera Aeonium , Sonchus , and Tolpis ) have been ascertained ( Sprick & Stüben, 2000; Stüben, 2000c). However, on Madeira there is no evidence for such an evolution. No Madeiran cryptorhynchine species is known to develop on Aeonium and Sonchus . Madeiracalles pulverosus lives on Tolpis succulenta (the name seems to suggest it, but Madeiracalles tolpis does not belong in this rootdrilling group, even though it develops in thin twigs of Tolpis succulenta ). Madeiracalles pulverosus shows the same larval development and breeding behaviour as Sonchiacalles muelleri of the Canary Islands. The larvae and pupae of M. pulverosus behave in the same way in the chambers (made of latex and agglutinated small stones) at the root neck of Tolpis succulenta ( Stüben, 2002b) as those of Sonchiacalles muelleri , e.g. on Tolpis calderae (La Palma) or Tolpis proustii (El Hierro) ( Stüben, 2000a, 2008a) ( Figs 33, 34 View Figures 33–34 ). Nevertheless, the dendrogram shows that the two species are not directly related (cf. Fig. 1A View Figure 1 ), which takes us to the conclusion that this seemingly complex behavioural pattern has obviously evolved in parallel.
We suggest that in the colonization of Porto Santo (and later of Madeira), the same evolutive pattern took effect as on the Canary Islands. In addition, in this archipelago, the pioneer species were those xerothermophilic ones preferring the coastal succulent belt, e.g. the ancestor of the extremely xerothermophilic Madeiracalles portosantoensis (from the Pico do Castelo on Porto Santo) or the succulicole, coastal M. pulverosus that develops in the root neck of Tolpis succulenta on the sun-exposed rocks of Madeira during summer. The colonization of the shady and moist laurel forests of Madeira obviously started much later (even if according to the phylogenetic analysis the extremely xerothermophilic Madeiracalles saxicola , which develops in Euphorbia piscatoria and has been described from the arid island Deserta Grande, does not fully fit in; cf. Fig. 1A View Figure 1 ). Today most of the Cryptorhynchinae of Madeira are highly adapted to the laurel forest, e.g. Madeiracalles cinereus ( Fig. 14A View Figures 2–22 ) that lives in the trade wind zone of the moist laurel forest and develops in thin twigs of a dendriform species of Euphorbiaceae , Euphorbia mellifera ( Stüben, 2002b; Stüben & Astrin, 2009 in press) ( Fig. 14C View Figures 2–22 ).
Etymology: The name Madeiracalles refers to the Madeiran clade as recovered in our analysis for the monophyletic group of former Acalles s.l. species from the archipelago of Madeira.
Distribution: Endemic to the archipelago of Madeira.
CALACALLES PEYERIMHOFF, 1925 View in CoL
( FIGS 15A–E, 16A–E View Figures 2–22 )
Type species: Acalles (Calacalles) theryi de Peyerimhoff, 1925 – Morocco (including type locality) , Portugal
Wollaston, 1864; de Peyerimhoff, 1925; Uyttenboogaart, 1939; Roudier, 1954; Bahr, 2000; Behne, 2000; Stüben et al., 2001; Stüben, 2002b, 2003b, 2004b, c, 2005b; Germann & Stüben, 2006; Astrin & Stüben, 2008.
Compilation of the subgenera and species of the genus Calacalles of the Macaronesian Islands
Calacalles s.s.
Calacalles affinis Bahr, 2000 View in CoL – Tenerife
Calacalles atomarius Bahr, 2000 View in CoL – Tenerife
Calacalles exiguus Bahr, 2000 View in CoL – Tenerife (including type locality), La Palma
Calacalles fuerteventurensis Bahr, 2000 View in CoL – Fuerteventura (including type locality), Lanzarote
Calacalles minutus Bahr, 2000 View in CoL – La Gomera (including type locality), Tenerife
Calacalles pumilio Bahr, 2000 View in CoL – Tenerife (including type locality), La Gomera
Calacalles pusillus Bahr, 2000 View in CoL – Tenerife (including type locality), La Gomera, Gran Canaria
Calacalles seticollis Wollaston, 1864 View in CoL – El Hierro (including type locality), La Palma, Tenerife, La Gomera
= Acalles wollastoni palmensis Roudier, 1954 View in CoL syn. Bahr, 2000: 121
= Acalles zumpti Uyttenboogaart, 1939 View in CoL syn. Bahr, 2000: 122
Calacalles subcarinatus (Israelson, 1984) View in CoL – Azores : Flores (including type locality), Faial, São. Jorge, Terceira, Pico, São. Miguel, Santa Maria
Calacalles wollastoni (Chevrolat, 1852) – Madeira (including type locality), Porto Santo
= Acalles cylindricollis Wollaston, 1964 View in CoL syn. Wollaston, 1865: 280
Crateracalles Stüben, 2004 subgen.
Type species: Acalles droueti Crotch, 1867
Calacalles (Crateracalles) droueti (Crotch, 1867) – Azores: Flores (including type locality), Faial, Pico
Calacalles (Crateracalles) azoricus (Stüben, 2004) – Azores: Faial (including type locality)
Discussion: The genus Calacalles was revised several years ago for the species of the Canary Islands ( Bahr, 2000). Stüben (2004b) added the subgenus Crateracalles from the Azores. The transfer from Acalles to Calacalles was mainly motivated (1) by the extraordinary size (the specimens of this subgenus are three times longer than the specimens of Calacalles s.s.); (2) by the characteristics of the elytra (with strong bristle-tufts) and pronotum (with a saucer-shaped rim of thorns); and (3) by their different host plant interactions. Although these criteria all left some uncertainty regarding the transfer, only the similar ‘shellshaped’ structures of the internal sac of the aedeagus retain some morphological significance for the inclusion in Calacalles (cf. Figs 15B, 16B View Figures 2–22 ).
The molecular analysis of the set of available species confirms (maximal support value) the genus Calacalles as a natural group. Even the noticeably large species C. droueti and C. azoricus of the islands Faial, Pico, and Flores are now corroborated as part of the genus. The reconstruction shows that the subgenus Calacalles s.s. is paraphyletic with regard to the subgenus Crateracalles (cf. Fig. 1A View Figure 1 ).
However, there remain numerous questions and issues. It is doubtful whether – after investigating further Canarian samples – the hypothesis of Bahr (2000), who proposed a ‘multi-insular’ distribution for several Calacalles species , will hold. The claim of synonymy for Calacalles wollastoni palmensis ( Roudier, 1954) is questionable, as is the usefulness of some exoskeletal characters that provide only scarce criteria for a convincing species discrimination (e.g. antennae with six or seven antennomeres, respectively; or elytra projecting above the pronotum).
According to our molecular analysis, the Macaronesian Calacalles s.s., which are amongst the smallest Cryptorhynchinae (cf. Fig. 15A View Figures 2–22 ; body lengths of 1.5– 2.5 mm), are derived from an ancestor species of those Calacalles living in North Africa and on the Iberian Peninsula as well as on the adjoining islands. Calacalles moraguesi (Desbrochers, 1898) of Mallorca and Menorca (analysed in this study) is closely related to Calacalles theryi ( de Peyerimhoff, 1925) of the Atlantic coastal belt of Portugal and Morocco.
Preliminary studies towards a revision of the genus Calacalles are currently being undertaken (J. J. Astrin & P. E. Stüben, unpubl. data).
Differential diagnosis: Distinguishing Calacalles from the other genera of Macaronesian Cryptorhynchinae is not difficult and can be carried out quickly with the ‘Key to the genera and subgenera of Macaronesian Cryptorhynchinae’ (see below).
Distribution: Macaronesian Islands (except Selvagens), Iberian Peninsula (including Balearic Islands), North Africa.
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Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
Madeiracalles
Stüben, Peter E. & Astrin, Jonas J. 2010 |
Acalles wollastoni palmensis
Bahr F 2000: 121 |
Acalles zumpti
Bahr F 2000: 122 |
Acalles cylindricollis
Wollaston TV 1865: 280 |