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Hylurgops longipennis Blandford 1896
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Zenodo, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Hylurgops longipennis (Blandford, 1896) (Figures 1 a, 7 f, 12 a, 15 f, 17 f, 21, 25) Hylastes longipennis Blandford, 1896: 143 (Rancho de Popocatepetl, Mexico) H. (Hylastes) longipennis , Hagedorn, 1910: 45 Hylurgops longipennis, Wood, 1982: 87 Diagnosis. Hylurgops longipennis is distinguished from the sympatric H. incomptus by the larger and fewer prothoracic punctures of two distinctly different sizes (Fig. 17 f), by the larger and coarser elytral punctures, and by the long, whitish versus yellowish setae. Description. Size. Length 3.8���4.8 (avg. 4.3 �� 0.3) mm long, 3 �� longer than wide. Color. Mature adult black, posterior face of abdominal ventrites reddish; remaining ventral sclerites black. Frons. Transverse impression indistinct, shallow; middle carina from epistomal margin to transverse impression, surface granulate, dull; vestiture whitish, hair-like setae, longer below middle impression, 3���6 �� frontal puncture diameter. Pronotum. Elongate 1.0��� 1.1 (1.09 �� 0.03), smoothly tapering anteriorly (Fig. 17 f), widest at middle; basal % of lateral margin roundly elevated, anterior fifth broadly constricted; middle line raised from base to % its length, its surface granulate, dull; discal punctures of two equally abundant sizes, larger twice diameter of smaller, punctures��� inner surface granulate, dull; interpuncture surface smooth to granulate; vestiture whitish, erect, long, length 1.5 �� width of a large discal puncture on disc, 2.5���5 �� on pronotal margins. Elytra. Bases slightly procurved, strial punctures deep, round (Fig. 12 a), half their diameter apart; interstriae as wide or slightly narrower than interstriae at disc, surface glossy, smooth to finely granulate, minutely punctured; vestiture consists of hair-like setae arising from punctures on posterior half of disc that become scale-like towards declivity and a single middle row of longer (1���5 �� width of discal puncture) hair-like setae. Declivity. The 1 st and 2 nd interstriae impressed (Fig. 15 f), with pointed granules, some &frac13; as high as declivital puncture diameter; strial punctures round, large, deep, diameter half of interstrial width; vestiture of scale-like setae on 3 to 4 rows, uniseriate setae, long, erect, slightly longer than interstrial width. Ventral sclerites. Sclerites finely reticulate. Legs. Third tarsal segment distinctly broader than 2 nd (Fig. 1 a). Aedeagus. Presenting a distinct ventral lobe (Fig. 7 f). Gallery: On the stem collar and roots of it host (Atkinson & Equihua-Mart��nez 1985 a). The pattern has not been described. Material examined. 17 specimens. MEXICO. Mexico City: Cruz Blanca, Parque Nal. Desierto los Leones (USNM). Nuevo Leon: Cerro Potosi nr. Galeana (DEBC), Mpio. Galeana NE slope Cerro Potosi (CNCI). Puebla: 11 mi. E Amecameca (USNM), Parque Nacional Iztaccihuatl-Popocatepetl, Popocateptl (USNM), Parque Nacional Zoquiapan (USNM). Hosts: Pinus hartwegii, P. leiophylla, P. patula, P. pseudostrobus. Distribution (Fig. 21). NORTH AMERICA: MEXICO. From two disjunct localities in the Sierra Madre Oriental, one northern in Nuevo Le��n and a southern from Hidalgo, to the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt. Discussion. Blandford (1896) described Hylastes longipennis from five specimens collected at Rancho Popocatepetl, Mexico. Hagedorn (1910) and Schedl (1940) treated H. longipennis as a species of Hylastes. Wood (1982) designated a female in Blandford���s series as the lectotype and placed the species in the genus Hylurgops based on its bilobed third tarsal segments and the intermixed large and small punctures on the pronotum. The species distribution appears limited to that of the primary hosts, P. hartwegii and P. montezumae, but this could be a result of insufficient collections. These pines occur discontinuously at high elevations in the Trans- Mexican Volcanic Belt, the Sierra Madre de Oaxaca, the Sierra Madre de Chiapas, and in other smaller patches. The previously known distribution of the species showed it was restricted to the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (Atkinson & Equihua-Mart��nez 1985 a, b). New records from the USNM collection expand the known distribution of this species, which seems to match that of P. hartwegii, as exemplified by its occurrence in a small population of P. hartwegii in the Cerro Potos��, Nuevo Le��n, in the Sierra Madre Oriental in Mexico.<br />Published as part of Mercado-V��lez, Javier E. & Negr��n, Jos�� F., 2014, Revision of the new world species of Hylurgops LeConte, 1876 with the description of a new genus in the Hylastini (Coleoptera: Scolytinae) and comments on some Palearctic species, pp. 301-342 in Zootaxa 3785 (3) on page 329, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3785.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/252614<br />{"references":["Blandford, W. F. H. (1896) Scolytidae. In: Godman, F. D. & Salvin, O. (Eds.), Biologia Centrali-Americana. Insecta, Coleoptera, 4 (6), pp. 81 - 144.","Hagedorn, M. (1910) Coleoptera Fam. Ipidae. In: Wytsman, P. (Ed.), Genera Insectorum, Fasc. 111. Brussels, pp. 1 - 178 + XIV plts.","Wood, S. L. (1982) The bark and ambrosia beetles of North and Central America (Coleoptera: Scolytidae), a taxonomic monograph. Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs, 6, 1 - 1359.","Atkinson, T. H. & Equihua-Martinez, A. (1985 a) Lista comentada de los coleopteros Scolytidae y Platypodidae del Valle de Mexico. Folia Entomologica Mexicana, 65, 63 - 108.","Schedl, K. E. (1940) Fauna Mexicana, 1. Insecta Coleoptera, superfamilia Scolytoidea: Scolytidae, Coptonotidae y Platypodidae Mexicanos. Anales de la Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biologicas, 1 (3 - 4), 317 - 377.","Atkinson, T. H. & Equihua-Martinez, A. (1985 b) Notes on biology and distribution of Mexican and Central American Scolytidae (Coleoptera). I. Hylesininae, Scolytinae except Cryphalini and Corthylini. The Coleopterists Bulletin, 39 (3), 227 - 238."]}
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....61f358050affb90a05a5af19e1fc8733
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5691415