Ligyrus (Ligyrus) rubripes ( Boheman, 1858 )

López-García, Margarita M. & Deloya, Cuauhtémoc, 2022, Cladistic analysis reveals polyphyly of Tomarus (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae): new classification and taxonomic revision, Zootaxa 5211 (1), pp. 1-119 : 49-50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5211.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5754769C-B747-4714-BDD9-7D5509D48BEB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7383765

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A209493B-FD6F-FFB0-AFA6-1C09FAF3BF3C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Ligyrus (Ligyrus) rubripes ( Boheman, 1858 )
status

 

Ligyrus (Ligyrus) rubripes ( Boheman, 1858)

( Figs. 15R View FIGURE 15 , 18J View FIGURE 18 , 26G View FIGURE 26 ; 35 View FIGURE 35 )

Podalgus rubripes Boheman, 1858: 57 . Original combination.

Male lectotype designated by Endrödi (1969: 54) (NHRS) “rubripes. Blm. Eug. / Bohem. // Lectotypus / ( Ligyrus ) / rubripes / Boh. / Endrody // 8840 / E91 + // 336 / 66 // Kinb. // Monte- / video // NHRS-JLKB / 000023334”

Ligyrus patagonus Steinheil, 1874: 560 . New synonym. Original combination. Female holotype (MNHN) “Patagones // patagonus / G. Steinh // ExMusaeo / E. Steinheil // Holotypus ♀ / Ligyrus / patagonus / Steinh. // MNHN / EC7092” Type locality: Patagones, Argentina. According to Endrödi (1969), the holotype is a “monstrous” specimen of L. villosus but the shape of the pronotal tubercle and metafemur and its type locality are evidence that it is a female of L. rubripes .

Ligyrus gianucai Dechambre & Lumaret, 1985: 107 . Synonym. Male holotype (MNHN) “ Sand dunes / 28 Km S. Casino Beach / Brésil 25 II 1982 // N.M. gianuca Leg. // Ligyrus gianucai n. sp. inilú / HOLOTYPE / R.-P. Dechambre det. 1984 // HOLOTYPE // MNHN / EC6731 About MNHN ”.

Description. Habitus as in Fig. 26G View FIGURE 26 . Length 12.1–16.5 mm; humeral width 5.8–9.2 mm. Color dark reddish brown. Head: Frons deeply rugopunctate, with large and sparse punctures, nearly smooth on vertex and only with sparse, small punctures. Frontoclypeal region with a carina, narrowly interrupted at middle. Ocular canthus acute, with 8 ventral setae. Clypeal surface rugopunctate to transversely rugose, striae denser than those on frons. Clypeus short, with lateral margins perpendicularly elevated, base 3 times wider than apex. Clypeal teeth triangular, separated by a tooth diameter. Mandible with 2 apical and 1 lateral, rounded tooth, tooth 1 longer and narrower than tooth 2. Maxilla subrectangular; galea with 3 dorsal and 2 ventral teeth. Apex of labrum straight to rounded. Interocular distance 3.5 times an eye width. Antennal club very long. Pronotum: Surface with large, sparse punctures. Apex with prominent tubercle and shallow to deep fovea. Elytra: First interval punctate, punctures similar to other intervals. Inner surface of apex with small transverse tubercles forming about 115 parallel lines. Abdomen: Apex of tergite IV with a diagonal line of 11 transverse parallel long carinae. Pygidial surface with small to large punctures, denser on base and anterior corners. Strongly (male) to slightly (female) convex in lateral view. Legs: Protibia tridentate; basal tooth slightly distant from others. Protarsus of male simple, inner claw simple. Metatibia triangular. Apex of metatibia entire, with 28–30 spinules. Female genitalia: Subcoxite subrectangular (2 times wider than long). Coxite subquadrate (as long as wide); surface flat. Subcoxite wider and subequal in length to coxite. Male genitalia: Spiculum gastrale thin, apex truncate. Parameres with apical 4th narrowed, without minute spines; lateral, ventral teeth short, triangular, and closer to parameral base ( Figs. 15R View FIGURE 15 , 18J View FIGURE 18 ).

Diagnosis. Ligyrus rubripes can be recognized by a short clypeus, with lateral margins perpendicularly elevated, strongly contracted towards apex; clypeal teeth triangular, long, and widely separated; frontal carina narrowly interrupted at middle; pronotum with prominent, acute tubercle and deep ( Fig. 26G View FIGURE 26 ), wide fovea (about 1.2 times interocular width); metatibia strongly triangular, without lateral constrictions; coxite surface flat; parameres with apical 4th narrowed, without minute spines; lateral teeth of parameres short, triangular ( Figs. 15R View FIGURE 15 , 18J View FIGURE 18 ).

Geographic distribution. Ligyrus rubripes is found in southern Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina.

Locality records ( Fig. 35 View FIGURE 35 ). 10 specimens examined from MN / UFRJ, MNHN, MZUSP, NHRS. ARGENTINA (2). Buenos Aires (2): Carmen de Patagones; Felipe Solá. BRAZIL (7). São Paulo (6): Guarujá; Itanhaemi; Peruíbe. Rio Grande do Sul (1): Praia do Cassino (28 km S). URUGUAY (1). Montevideo (1): Montevideo .

MN

Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

UFRJ

Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

MZUSP

Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo

NHRS

Swedish Museum of Natural History, Entomology Collections

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dynastidae

SubFamily

Dynastinae

Genus

Ligyrus

SubGenus

Ligyrus

Loc

Ligyrus (Ligyrus) rubripes ( Boheman, 1858 )

López-García, Margarita M. & Deloya, Cuauhtémoc 2022
2022
Loc

Ligyrus gianucai

Dechambre, R. - P. & Lumaret, J. - P. 1985: 107
1985
Loc

Ligyrus patagonus

Steinheil, E. 1874: 560
1874
Loc

Podalgus rubripes

Boheman, C. H. 1858: 57
1858
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