Longitarsus, Berthold, 1827

Prathapan, K. D. & Viraktamath, C. A., 2009, Revision of Tegyrius (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Galerucinae: Alticini), with descriptions of eight new species, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 157 (2), pp. 326-358 : 356-357

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00510.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10546002

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E7375E-FFCF-FFB1-FCFD-9E673A939922

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Longitarsus
status

 

LONGITARSUS View in CoL PICEUS (KIMOTO) COMB. NOV.

Tegyrius piceus Kimoto, 2001: 66–67 ; 2005: 98.

KEY TO THE SPECIES OF TEGYRIUS

1. Elytra straw brown, with the anterior third piceous: the piceous colour extending backwards along the lateral and sutural margins ( Fig. 1 View Figures 1–5 )........................................................................................ T. agasthyai sp. nov. Elytra unicolorous: black, brown, or red...............................................................................................2 2. Pronotum black, elytra red–brown ...................................................................................................... 3 Pronotum and elytra concolorous ........................................................................................................ 4 3. Antennae yellow; apex of aedeagus deeply emarginate in ventral view ( Fig. 28 View Figures 25–31 ) ........................................... ............................................................................................... T. bicolor ( Medvedev, 2001) comb. nov. Antennae black with last and basal antennomeres tainted brown; apex of aedeagus smoothly rounded in ventral view ( Fig. 8 View Figures 6–14 ) ........................................................................ T. antennatus ( Medvedev, 2001) comb. nov. 4. Mesotibia sexually dimorphic: distinctly curved and distally enlarged in males ( Fig. 79 View Figures 79–89 ); straight in females ( Fig. 80 View Figures 79–89 ). Feed on Piper mullesua Buch. View in CoL , with globose female spikes. Restricted to Nilgiri Hills.....................5 Mesotibia not sexually dimorphic; feed on Piperaceae View in CoL with elongate spikes; not occurring in Nilgiri Hills (except T. keralaensis comb. nov., which occurs throughout southern India) ...................................................... 6 5. General colour brown; apex of aedeagus in ventral view broad, with a denticle ( Fig. 92 View Figures 90–98 ); receptacle of spermatheca neither narrowed towards duct nor broadened towards pump ( Fig. 96 View Figures 90–98 ) ...................... T. pucetibialis sp. nov. General colour black; apex of aedeagus in ventral view bifid ( Fig. 83 View Figures 79–89 ); receptacle of spermatheca distinctly narrowed towards duct and broadened towards pump ( Fig. 87 View Figures 79–89 )................................ T. nigrotibialis sp. nov. 6. Pronotum without antebasal transverse impression; posterior margin of last visible ventrite of females with a deep circular incision, bearing an acute process in the middle ( Fig. 17 View Figures 15–21 )................................ T. anupama sp. nov. Pronotum with antebasal transverse impression; posterior margin of last visible ventrite of females complete..7 7. Punctures in antebasal transverse impression not stronger than those on the rest of the pronotum; first metatarsomere sexually dimorphic, with ventrolateral side thickly adorned with short capitate setae or bud-like sensillae in males, and thin hair-like setae in females; lobe in the middle of the last visible ventrite of males with concave posterior margin ( Fig. 27 View Figures 25–31 , 33 View Figures 32–40 , 71 View Figures 69–75 ); restricted to Sri Lanka ............................................................8 Punctures in the antebasal transverse impression stronger than those on the rest of the pronotum; first metatarsomere not sexually dimorphic, ventral side with thin hair-like setae in both sexes; lobe in the middle of the last visible ventrite of males with straight or convex posterior margin ( Figs 42 View Figures 41–46 , 53 View Figures 51–60 , 82 View Figures 79–89 , 100 View Figures 99–104 ); restricted to India..............................................................................................................................................9 8. Subparallel ridges on first abdominal ventrite nearly parallel with each other ( Fig. 70 View Figures 69–75 ); aedeagus in ventral view with ridge along lateral margins ( Fig. 72 View Figures 69–75 ); outer side of spermathecal receptacle concave ( Fig. 76 View Figures 76–78 )................... ................................................................................................................... T. metallicus Jacoby, 1887 Subparallel ridges on first abdominal ventrite converge distally and fuse together ( Fig. 32 View Figures 32–40 ); aedeagus in ventral view without ridge along lateral margins ( Fig. 34 View Figures 32–40 ); outer side of spermathecal receptacle convex ( Fig. 38 View Figures 32–40 )......... .......................................................................................................................... T. buddhai sp. nov. 9. Antennae yellow; aedeagus in ventral view without wedge-like preapical ridge ( Fig. 54 View Figures 51–60 ) ................................ ........................................................................................... T. keralaensis ( Doeberl, 2003) comb. nov. At least three or four distal antennomeres piceous; aedeagus in ventral view with wedge-like preapical ridge ( Figs 43 View Figures 41–46 , 101 View Figures 99–104 , 110 View Figures 108–113 ) .......................................................................................................................... 10 10. Apex of aedeagus preapically constricted in ventral view ( Fig. 101 View Figures 99–104 ) .............................. T. radhikae sp. nov. Apex of aedeagus preapically widened in ventral view ( Figs 43 View Figures 41–46 , 110 View Figures 108–113 ) ....................................................... 11 11. Antennae extend beyond half of the elytra over the pronotum; basal six to eight antennomeres, and fore and middle legs yellow brown; lateral angulation of apex of aedeagus in ventral view not prominent ( Fig. 110 View Figures 108–113 )....... ............................................................................................................................. T. tippui sp. nov. Antennae extend up to half of the elytra over the pronotum; basal antennomeres, and fore and middle legs dark brown to piceous; lateral angulation of apex of aedeagus in ventral view prominent ( Fig. 43 View Figures 41–46 ).......................... ............................................................................................................................... T. dalei sp. nov.

Remarks: This species lacks all the salient characters of Tegyrius , especially those of the head and the subparallel ridges on the first abdominal ventrite. The fact that the first metatarsomere is half as long as the metatibia, a feature common to both Longitarsus and Tegyrius , was probably the source of the temptation for placing it in Tegyrius . Undoubtedly, this is a member of the cosmopolitan Longitarsus , as it has all the characters of the genus, including the serrulations on the dorsolateral edge of the metatibia.

Type material examined: Paratype. Labels : (1) (E. Nepal) Gupa Pokali (2900 m a.s.l.) 27°17′N, 87°30′E, Gurza (2100 m a.s.l.) 27°18′N, 87°33′E; (2) 23 June 1972, H. Makihara leg. Kyushu Univ. Col. GoogleMaps ; (3) Paratype; (4) Tegyrius piceus Kimoto sp. nov., det. S. Kimoto, 19; (5) examined by K. D. Prathapan 2007 ( KU) .

KU

Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Chrysomelidae

Loc

Longitarsus

Prathapan, K. D. & Viraktamath, C. A. 2009
2009
Loc

Tegyrius piceus

Kimoto S 2005: 98
Kimoto S 2001: 67
2001
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