Orizabus pyriformis (LeConte)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5160884 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BA87C3-BC4D-FF8A-F9E9-F92494F16EDD |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Orizabus pyriformis (LeConte) |
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Fig. 6 View Figures 5-7 , 16, 17 View Figures 16-19 , 32-34 View Figures 32-35 ; Map 3
Bothynus pyriformis LeConte 1847: 88 . Type. Lectotype female ( MCZC #3718 ) here designated, labeled “[pale green disc] // Type [T] / 3718 [H, red label] // Aphonus / pyriformis / Lec. [H] // LECTOTYPE [T] / Bothynus / pyriformis / LeConte [H] / des. W. B. Warner [T], 1994 [H, red label].” The LeConte collection contains two specimens with data similar to those of the lectotype; these specimens are here considered syntypes. Type locality: “Habitat ad furcationem fluminis Platte: habitat etiam in Oregon.” The type locality is here restricted to: Nebraska, forks of the Platte River .
Aphonus pyriformis, LeConte 1856: 21 .
Pseudaphonus pyriformis, Casey 1915: 211 .
Cheiroplatys pyriformis, Saylor 1946: 18 ; Ritcher 1966: 138.
Orizabus pyriformis, Endrödi 1969: 89, 1985: 246 , Morón 1981: 136, Delgado and Deloya 1990: 305, Ratcliffe 1991: 272, Dechambre 1993: 342, Ratcliffe and Paulsen 2008: 451, Ratcliffe and Cave 2010: 11.
Pseudaphonus debiliceps Casey 1915: 211 (syn. Saylor 1946: 18). Type. Holotype female (USNM #48610); type locality: Colorado.
Pseudaphonus ovalis Casey 1915:212 (syn. Saylor 1946: 18). Type. Holotype (USNM #48611); type locality: Ft. Wingate, New Mexico.
Pseudaphonus repens Casey 1915:212 (syn. Saylor 1946: 18). Type. Holotype female (USNM #48613); type locality: Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Pseudaphonus lucidus Casey 1915:213 (syn. Saylor 1946: 18). Type. Lectotype female (USNM #48614) here designated; labeled “COLO [T] / 506 [H] // Casey / bequest / 1925 [T]// Type USNM [T] / 48614 [H, red label] // lucidus / Csy. [H] // LECTOTYPE / Pseudaphonus / lucidus / Casey / des. W. B. Warner, 1994 [H, red label]”. Four (2 males, 2 females) of the additional specimens in the Casey collection have data consistent with Casey’s description (they are also the only others with USNM type labels); these four are here considered to be syntypes.
Pseudaphonus puncticollis Casey 1924:335 (syn. Saylor 1946: 18). Type. Holotype female ( USNM #48612 About USNM ); type locality: Denver , Colorado.
Diagnosis. Length 12.5 to 19.0 mm; width at humeri 6.0 to 9.0 mm, widest width 8.0 to 12.0 mm. Body shiny, very convex and pyriform ( Fig. 16, 17 View Figures 16-19 ), reddish brown to piceous. Head strongly narrowed to rounded or truncate apex; clypeal carina high, straight to shallowly emarginate in anterior view, in most specimens anteriorly concavely weakly angulate in dorsal view, straight in others; apparently apical to slightly subapical ( Fig. 6 View Figures 5-7 , 32 View Figures 32-35 ). Pronotum strongly narrowed to acute or subacute anterior angles; disc without anterior fovea, densely punctate, especially anterolaterally; anterior margin with posterior edge of bead not posteriorly prolonged at midline; posterior margin subtrilobate, with bead mostly to entirely effaced. Elytron with strial punctures coarse, shallow, umbilicate. Pygidium densely punctulate to punctatorugulose, punctures usually becoming sparser apically. Male with dorsal margin of protibiae tridentate as in female, apex transversely rounded (subtruncate). Paramera thin in dorsal view, submedially weakly dentate on external margin ( Fig. 33, 34 View Figures 32-35 ).
US Distribution. NE, SD, WY, CO, NM, TX, KS, AZ. The Arizona, Kansas, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming localities are all new state records.
Specimens Examined. 239; see appendix for locality data.
Remarks. Orizabus pyriformis is easily told from other US species except O. mcclevei by its smaller size, strongly pyriform shape, more densely sculptured pygidium, and protibiae which are apically subtruncate to transversely rounded and tridentate in both sexes. From O. mcclevei (and other species) it may be separated by the usually obtusely angulate (in dorsal view) and apparently apical clypeal carina, pronotum with mostly to completely effaced posterior marginal bead, longer paramera with weak submedial tooth, and antennal club which is shorter than the clypeus. Additionally, the frontoclypeal tubercle and prosternal process are usually more conical in O. pyriformis (though the frontoclypeal tubercle is occasionally transversely so), whereas in O. mcclevei the tubercle is normally broader and transversely subcariniform, and the prosternal process is usually more laterally compressed apically. In very worn specimens of O. pyriformis , the clypeal tubercle (and adjacent frontoclypeal suture) may appear as a rounded-- though obviously abraded-- transverse carina. It is possible that Saylor’s (1946) Colorado record for O. isodonoides refers to such a specimen. Specimens of O. pyriformis from the southern
extent of its range (e.g., Fig. 6 View Figures 5-7 ) tend to have a
broader clypeal apex (especially in females) and
hence a longer clypeal carina. Male genitalia of
specimens from the most southern localities also
tend to have apically more subfalcate paramera.
The unusual facies of this species--reminiscent
of the genus Aphonus LeConte--prompted Casey
(1915) to erect a separate genus ( Pseudaphonus )
to receive it. Unpublished DNA evidence developed
by D. Hawks and A. B. T. Smith (2005, pers. com.)
indicates that O. pyriformis may indeed belong
with Aphonus rather than Orizabus . The
“ Aphonus phenotype characters” (transversely
rounded protibial apex, pyriform shape, distinct
genital form) are also shared by O. mcclevei , O.
isodonoides, and O. ratcliffei Delgado. Further
work on the Aphonus-Orizabus-Xyloryctes com-
plex of genera may result in a different placement
of these species; however, that determination is
beyond the scope of the present paper.
The larva was described by Ritcher (1944, Map 3. Orizabus pyriformis .
1966). Orizabus pyriformis is primarily a grass-
land species and has been taken at light, but re-
mains relatively uncommon in collections.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Orizabus pyriformis (LeConte)
Warner, William B. 2011 |
Orizabus pyriformis, Endrödi 1969: 89 , 1985: 246
Ratcliffe, B. C. & R. D. Cave 2010: 11 |
Ratcliffe, B. C. & M. J. Paulsen 2008: 451 |
Dechambre, R. - P. 1993: 342 |
Ratcliffe, B. C. 1991: 272 |
Delgado, L. & C. Deloya 1990: 305 |
Endrodi, S. 1985: 246 |
Moron, M. A. 1981: 136 |
Endrodi, S. 1969: 89 |
Cheiroplatys pyriformis
Ritcher, P. O. 1966: 138 |
Saylor, L. W. 1946: 18 |
Pseudaphonus puncticollis
Saylor, L. W. 1946: 18 |
Pseudaphonus pyriformis
Casey, T. L. 1915: 211 |
Pseudaphonus debiliceps
Saylor, L. W. 1946: 18 |
Casey, T. L. 1915: 211 |
Pseudaphonus ovalis
Saylor, L. W. 1946: 18 |
Casey, T. L. 1915: 212 |
Pseudaphonus repens
Saylor, L. W. 1946: 18 |
Casey, T. L. 1915: 212 |
Pseudaphonus lucidus
Saylor, L. W. 1946: 18 |
Casey, T. L. 1915: 213 |
Aphonus pyriformis
LeConte, J. L. 1856: 21 |
Bothynus pyriformis
LeConte, J. L. 1847: 88 |