Bruchidius uberatus ( Fåhraeus, 1839 ), Fahraeus, 1839

Delobel, Alex, Ru, Bruno Le, Genson, Gwenaëlle, Musyoka, Boaz K. & Kergoat, Gael J., 2015, Molecular phylogenetics, systematics and host-plant associations of the Bruchidius albosparsus (Fåhraeus) species group (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae, Bruchinae) with the description of four new species, Zootaxa 3931 (4), pp. 451-482 : 473

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3931.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DCDE8326-74F5-4C80-B802-8A05C0B4C4A7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5629628

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DA87F3-FFB3-FFD8-17D7-FEAF730EF92A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bruchidius uberatus ( Fåhraeus, 1839 )
status

 

Bruchidius uberatus ( Fåhraeus, 1839)

Bruchus uberatus Fåhraeus, 1839:40

Bruchus baudoni Caillol, 1908:8 (synonymy in Decelle, 1966:111) Bruchidius baudoni (Caillol) : Pic, 1913:17

Bruchidius uberatus (Fåhraeus) : Decelle, 1966:110

Material examined. Egypt: 1♂ Philae, 8.v.2002, ex Vachellia nilotica (G. Fédière) [ CBAD, CBGP]; 3♂, 1♀, Bahareya, 21.xii.2000, ex V. n. tomentosa [1♂ 0 0 201, 1♀ 02614] (G. Fédière) [ CBAD]; 1♂, Bahareya, 19.ii.2003, ex V. nilotica [1♂ 06303] (G. Fédière) [ CBAD, CBGP]; 1♂, Maadi, 22.xii.2000, ex V. n. tomentosa [1♂ 01301] (G. Fédière) [ CBAD]. Senegal : 1♀, Dakar-Hann, 16.xii.1994, ex Senegalia senegal, (M. Tran) [ CBAD]; Richard-Toll, 21.iii.1999, ex V. n. adansonii [specimen U41 used for DNA extraction] (M.T. Gueye) [ CBGP]; Popenguine, 31.xi.1994, ex V. nilotica (H. & A. Delobel) [ CBAD]; 3♂, 2♀, M’Bour, 21.xii.1994, ex V. nilotica (H. & A. Delobel) [ CBAD]; M’Bour, 18.i.1995, ex V. n. adansonii (H. & A. Delobel) [ CBAD]; Bandia, 18.i.1995, ex V. n. (H. & A. Delobel) [ CBAD]; Ross-Bethiot, 20.v.1995, ex V. n. tomentosa (H. & A. Delobel) [ CBAD]. United Arab Emirates: 1♂, Hatta, 4-11.iv.2006, light trap [1♂ 03810] (A. van Harten) [ CBGP].

A medium to large-sized (2.6–4.7 mm) species, body light to dark brown, antennae and four anterior legs testaceous, often darkened, posterior legs reddish brown; pronotum with dense white setae on basal lobes and two lateral dots; elytra with white elongated spots separated by brown to black intervals in odd interstriae, even interstriae yellowish to largely dark brown; last visible tergite entirely white or with a median line of white setae, dark spots at base and middle, apex largely dark; female usually darker than male. Other distinctive morphological traits are as follows: antenna short, strongly serrate from segment 4 in male; base of interstria 4 bulging, with two wide teeth; first ventrite with small basal patch of erect setae; last visible tergite strongly turned under apically in male; in female antenna shorter, serrate from segment 5, last visible tergite regularly convex except faint bulge beyond middle, often almost bare, shining, without foveae.

Genitalia ( Figs. 25–26 View FIGURES 25 – 26 ): Median lobe elongated, almost cylindrical (maximum width excluding basal hood/ total length = 0.14), basal hood moderately widened; ventral valve large, subtriangular, with two lateral groups of 6 setae; no hinge sclerite; basal half of internal sac with 12–16 large thorn-like sclerites with broad base and blunt tip, followed by two median, hooked circular sclerites, then a pair of large thorn-like sclerites; posterior part of internal sac with a cluster of stout spicules; apical third with dense setation, ending in a setose tube; gonopore not sclerotized; basal strut narrow, with large keel; lateral lobes cleft to about 3/4 their length; apex straight, bearing about 18 short and long setae. In female, vagina long, entrance of bursa copulatrix with dorsal ovoid sclerite bearing a strong thorn-like spine oriented posteriorly, its surface lined with minute teeth.

Biology. Examined material was reared from the seeds of Vachellia nilotica (including V. n. tomentosa and V. n. adansonii ) and Senegalia senegal . Also occasionally obtained from seeds of Vachellia flava , V. tortilis , and V. sieberiana in Mali and Senegal ( Nongonierma 1978) .

Discussion. As underlined beforehand B. uberatus is morphologically closely related to B. haladai .

Distribution. Angola ( Decelle 1975), Burkina Faso ( Nongonierma 1978), Egypt, Guinea ( Zacher 1936), India ( Allard 1895), Ivory Coast ( Gillon et al. 1992), Mali, Mauritania ( Nongonierma 1978), Namibia ( Zacher 1936), Republic of South Africa ( Van Tonder 1985), Senegal , Sudan ( Fåhraeus 1839), and United Arab Emirates.

DNA

Department of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Chrysomelidae

SubFamily

Bruchinae

Genus

Bruchidius

Loc

Bruchidius uberatus ( Fåhraeus, 1839 )

Delobel, Alex, Ru, Bruno Le, Genson, Gwenaëlle, Musyoka, Boaz K. & Kergoat, Gael J. 2015
2015
Loc

Bruchidius uberatus (Fåhraeus)

Decelle 1966: 110
1966
Loc

Bruchus baudoni

Decelle 1966: 111
Pic 1913: 17
Caillol 1908: 8
1908
Loc

Bruchus uberatus Fåhraeus, 1839 :40

Fahraeus 1839: 40
1839
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