Scythropopsis melanostictica (White, 1855), comb. nov.

(Figs. 35-39)

Acanthoderes melanosticticus White, 1855: 361 .

Psapharochrus melanosticticus; Lacordaire, 1872: 751; Monné, 2005: 208 (cat.); Monné et al., 2010: 246 (distr.); Monné, 2019: 301 (cat.).

Acanthoderes melanosticta; Gemminger, 1873: 3146 (cat., error); Blackwelder, 1946: 611 (cat.); Zajciw & Seabra, 1968: 72 (distr.); Zajciw, 1969b: 610 (distr.), 1970a: 5 (distr.).

Acanthoderes (Psapharochrus) melanosticta; Aurivillius, 1923: 387 (cat.); Buck, 1959: 604 (distr.); Gilmour, 1965: 615 (cat.); Monné, 1994: 65 (cat.); Mermudes & Monné, 2001: 331 (error); Monné et al., 2017: 30 (morphology).

Acanthoderes (Psapharochrus) melanostictus; Monné & Giesbert, 1994: 231 (checklist).

Pteridotelus contaminatus Thomson, 1865: 544; Gemminger, 1873: 3144 (cat.); Thomson, 1878: 15 (type); Aurivillius, 1923: 383 (cat.); Blackwelder, 1946: 610 (checklist); Gilmour, 1965: 611 (cat.); Monné, 1994: 53 (cat.); Monné & Giesbert, 1994: 237 (checklist); Monné, 2005: 215 (cat.); Monné & Hovore, 2006: 211 (checklist); Monné, 2019: 308. Syn. nov.

Audinet-Serville (1835) included some species in his new genus Acanthoderes which indicated it was masculine gender ( Acanthoderes varius (Fabricius, 1787), and Acanthoderes griseus (Fabricius,1792)) .However,it is actually feminine gender, as previously correctly indicated by Gemminger (1873) and Blackwelder (1946). Gemminger (1873) corrected the gender in only part of the species neglecting to do so for Acanthoderes melanosticticus .

Lacordaire (1872) transferred A. melanosticticus to Psapharochrus Thomson, 1864 . As Aurivillius (1923) considered Psapharochrus a subgenus of Acanthoderes, A. melanosticticus was mentioned in this subgenus until recently by nearly all authors, even after Psapharochrus had been considered a distinct genus. In Acanthoderes melanostictica the size of the ommatidia is very small (Figs. 37-38) and the elytra have distinct carina (Santos-Silva & Nascimento, 2018), hence it belongs to Scythropopsis Thomson, 1864 . It also has the protibiae distinctly widened toward apex (Fig. 39), as in the type species of the genus.

Thomson (1865) described two species, in different genera, with the same name: Psapharochrus contaminatus (Fig. 40), and Pteridotelus contaminatus (Fig. 36). Monné & Giesbert (1992) synonymized Psapharochrus contaminatus with Acanthoderes melanostictus [sic]: “ Acanthoderes melanostictus White, 1855: 361 / Acanmoderes [sic] contaminatus Thomson, 1865: 543, new synonymy .” However, Psapharochrus contaminatus is not equal to Scythropopsis melanostictica (Fig. 35), rather it is Pteridotelus contaminatus that is the true synonym of the latter.

Material examined (all from MZSP): BRAZIL, Minas Gerais (new state record): Poços de Caldas, 1 female, 11.XI.1954, J.J. Ferraciolli col .; Passa Quatro, 1 female, 14.XI.1916, Zikán col.; (Fazenda dos Campos), 1 male, 30.XII.1917, Zikán col. São Paulo: São Paulo, 1 female, 05.XII.1914, collector illegible; 1 female, 1915, no collector indicated; ( Ipiranga), 1 male, 2 females, no date and collector indicated ; 1 female, 25.I.1957, collector illegible; ( Jabaquara) , 1 female, 13.II.1974, L.R. Fontes col .; Campinas, 1 female, XI.1919, collector illegible . Paraná: Guarapuava, 1 female, III.1953, H. Schneider col .; 1 female, I.1960, H. Schneider col .; Ponta Grossa, 1 female, XII.1938, Camargo col .; 1 male, 1941, Machado col .; Rio Negro, 1 female, 07.I.1924, no collector indicated; 1 male, 22.XII.1924, no collector indicated; 1 female, I.1926, no collector indicated; 1 female, 09.III.1927, no collector indicated; Curitiba, 1 male, 05.II.1936, no collector indicated . Santa Catarina: São Bento do Sul, 1 male, XI.1924, A. Maller col .; 1 female, II.1950, formerly Dirings col .; 1 male, II.1952, formerly Dirings col .; 2 females, II.1960, formerly Dirings col .; ( Rio Vermelho), 1 male, XII.1949, formerly Dirings col .; 2 females, I.1950, formerly Dirings col .; 1 male, I.1952, formerly Dirings col .; 1 male, II.1952, formerly Dirings col .; 1 female, X.1952, formerly Dirings col .; 1 male, XII.1952, formerly Dirings col .; 1 male, I.1958, formerly Dirings col .; 6 males, 4 females, III.1960, formerly Dirings col .; 2 females, I.1961, formerly Dirings col .; 1 female, III.1961, formerly Dirings col .; 1 female, I.1962, formerly Dirings col .; Timbó, 4 males, 3 females, X.1958, formerly Dirings col .

Known geographical distribution (Monné, 2019; Tavakilian & Chevillotte, 2019; new record): Brazil (Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Paraná, Santa Catarina, Rio Grande do Sul).