identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03317EF9CA2E5F8C8A5500195E3FEBBA.text	03317EF9CA2E5F8C8A5500195E3FEBBA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Charaphloeus aeneus (Grouvelle 1876) Bento & Zeballos & Rafael 2025	<div><p>Charaphloeus aeneus (Grouvelle, 1876) comb. nov.</p><p>Fig. 1 A – C</p><p>Laemophloeus aeneus Grouvelle, 1876: 492, plate 8: fig. 9 (original combination) (nec Laemophloeus aeneus Sharp, 1885 [preoccupied name, now Parandrita aenea); Kessel, 1923: 93 (checklist); 1926: 72, 86 (key, checklist); Hetschko, 1930: 21 (catalogue); Blackwelder, 1945: 419 (checklist).</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Lectotype (here designated) • deposited at MNHN, labelled: “ n. Fribou [ Nova Friburgo] / Deyr ” (brown, handwritten) // “ Type ” (light brown, printed) // “ Aeneus / A. Grouv. Ann Fr. / p. ” (light brown, printed) // “ Muséum Paris / 1917 / coll. A. Grouvelle ” (white, printed) // “ SYNTYPE ” (red, printed) // “ SYNTYPE / Laemophloeus / aeneus Grouvelle, 1876 ” (white, printed) // “ MNHN, Paris / EC 51936 ” (white, printed with QR code) .</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>BRAZIL. Rio de Janeiro: Nova Friburgo (Grouvelle 1876).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Based on the analysis of the types of both species, Charaphloeus aeneus comb. nov. closely resembles C. frequens (Sharp, 1899) because of the general body form and colour light to dark brown, but it is distinctive by the frontoclypeal suture nearly straight (V-shaped in C. frequens) and the anterior margin of clypeus with shallow antennal emarginations (deep, incised antennal emarginations in C. frequens) (syntypes of C. frequens imaged in Bremer (2023; figs 1–4)).</p><p>Even though there is no size variation in the original description of this species, we accept the only available original specimen as a syntype due to the absence of explicit evidence that Grouvelle (1876) based his description on a single specimen. This specimen is here designated as the lectotype (Fig. 1 A) of C. aeneus in order to ensure nomenclatural stability. Hetschko (1930) recorded this species from Rio Grande do Sul, but this likely represents a misinterpretation of its type locality in Rio de Janeiro state.</p><p>Nomenclatural note.</p><p>Although Laemophloeus aeneus Sharp, 1885 is a junior primary homonym of Laemophloeus aeneus Grouvelle, 1876, the former was subsequently transferred to Parandrita LeConte &amp; Horn, 1880 by Sharp (1908) and has remained in use without replacement. According to Article 23.9. 5 of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (1999): “ When an author discovers that a species-group name in use is a junior primary homonym of another species-group name also in use, but the names apply to taxa not considered congeneric after 1899, the author must not automatically replace the junior homonym; the case should be referred to the Commission for a ruling under the plenary power and meanwhile prevailing usage of both names is to be maintained ”. Regarding its applicability to this case, Article 23.9. 5 is not satisfied because both nominal species remained congeneric until 1908 (i. e. after 1899), when the junior homonym was transferred to Parandrita . Hence, a new replacement name (nomen novum) for Parandrita aenea is required under the provisions of the ICZN Articles 57.2 and 60 to solve the primary homonymy and best serve nomenclatural stability. However, we follow current usage of the name until a future revision of Parandrita, which is the best place to address the issue (ICZN 1999).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03317EF9CA2E5F8C8A5500195E3FEBBA	Public Domain	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.		Plazi	Bento, Matheus;Zeballos, Leandro;Rafael, José Albertino	Bento, Matheus, Zeballos, Leandro, Rafael, José Albertino (2025): Reclassification of four South American species of Laemophloeus Dejean, 1835 into Charaphloeus Casey, 1916 (Coleoptera, Laemophloeidae). Contributions to Entomology 75 (2): 289-297, DOI: 10.3897/contrib.entomol.75.e160042
21F42E3F77985A95B5E84EB6ADF8A646.text	21F42E3F77985A95B5E84EB6ADF8A646.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Charaphloeus deletus (Grouvelle 1896) Bento & Zeballos & Rafael 2025	<div><p>Charaphloeus deletus (Grouvelle, 1896) comb. nov.</p><p>Fig. 1 D – F</p><p>Laemophloeus deletus Grouvelle, 1896: 191 (original combination); Kessel 1923: 93 (checklist); 1926: 70, 80, 88 (key, note, checklist); Hetschko 1930: 27 (catalogue); Blackwelder 1945: 419 (checklist).</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Lectotype (here designated) • deposited at MNHN, labelled: “ cidad de Cond / - eouba [ Condeúba]. Bahia ” (green, handwritten) // “ Type ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ Laemophloeus / deletus / Grouv [Grovelle] ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ TYPE ” (red, printed) // “ Muséum Paris / 1915 / coll. A. Grouvelle ” (white, printed) // “ SYNTYPE ” (red, printed) // “ SYNTYPE / Laemophloeus / deletus Grouvelle, 1896 ” (white, printed) // “ MNHN, Paris / EC 51920 ” (white, printed with QR code) .</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>BRAZIL. Bahia: Condeúba (formerly known as Santo Antônio da Barra).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Charaphloeus deletus is similar to C. aeneus in overall body shape and colouration. However, they can be distinguished from each other by the first and second elytral cells absent in C. deletus (well-defined in C. aeneus) and by the antennomeres subglobose in C. deletus (more elongate in C. aeneus), the latter of which may reflect a secondary sexual difference, as the sex of the lectotypes could not be conclusively determined. Therefore, the validity of both as distinct species should be re-assessed through a comprehensive revision of the genus.</p><p>The size variation in the original description of this species indicates that more than one specimen composes the type series. However, only one original specimen was found and is here designated as the lectotype of this species (Fig. 1 D). There is an additional, unlabelled specimen whose type status is unverified.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/21F42E3F77985A95B5E84EB6ADF8A646	Public Domain	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.		Plazi	Bento, Matheus;Zeballos, Leandro;Rafael, José Albertino	Bento, Matheus, Zeballos, Leandro, Rafael, José Albertino (2025): Reclassification of four South American species of Laemophloeus Dejean, 1835 into Charaphloeus Casey, 1916 (Coleoptera, Laemophloeidae). Contributions to Entomology 75 (2): 289-297, DOI: 10.3897/contrib.entomol.75.e160042
1A897AF973E357CD82562D5619EDD89C.text	1A897AF973E357CD82562D5619EDD89C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Charaphloeus gounellei (Grouvelle 1896) Bento & Zeballos & Rafael 2025	<div><p>Charaphloeus gounellei (Grouvelle, 1896) comb. nov.</p><p>Fig. 2 A – C</p><p>Laemophloeus gounellei Grouvelle, 1896: 190 (original combination); Kessel 1926: 89 (checklist); 1923: 93 (incorrect subsequent spelling to L. grouvellei); Hetschko 1930: 31 (checklist); Blackwelder 1945: 419 (checklist).</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Lectotype • male (here designated) deposited at MNHN, labelled: “ S Antonio / Bresil ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ Type ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ Laemophloeus / gounellei / Grouv ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ Muséum Paris / 1915 / coll. A. Grouvelle ” (white, printed) // “ SYNTYPE ” (red, printed) // “ SYNTYPE / Laemophloeus / gounellei Grouvelle, 1896 ” (white, printed) // “ MNHN, Paris / EC 51927 ” (white, printed with QR code) . Paralectotype • at MNHN, labelled: “ S Antonio / Bresil ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ Type ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ Muséum Paris / 1915 / coll. A. Grouvelle ” (white, printed) // “ SYNTYPE ” (red, printed) // “ SYNTYPE / Laemophloeus / gounellei Grouvelle, 1896 ” (white, printed) // “ MNHN, Paris / EC 51927 ” (white, printed with QR code) .</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>BRAZIL. Bahia: Condeúba (formerly known as Santo Antônio da Barra).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>This species is very similar to C. deletus comb. nov., with which it may be conspecific, as both were described from the same locality and exhibit no conspicuous morphological differences. However, a detailed morphological study including male genitalia is required to clarify the identity of both species. Charaphloeus gounellei comb. nov. also closely resembles C. convexus (Grouvelle, 1876) from Guatemala (see Bremer (2023: fig. 12)) in the general body shape and colouration, but C. gounellei comb. nov. has shorter mandibles and longer antennomeres than C. convexus .</p><p>The original description of Laemophloeus gounellei Grouvelle, 1896 lists “ Cidade de Condeúba (Bahia) ” as the type locality. Under the type specimens, the labels “ S Antonio ” (Fig. 2 A) correspond to the historical name of Condeúba (Bahia, Brazil), which was formerly known as “ Santo Antônio da Barra ” prior to the proclamation of the Republic in 1889, the same period in which these specimens were likely collected by Pierre Emile Gounelle during his travel to the Brazilian state of Bahia (Condeúba) (Millot 1920). The two specimens are thus recognised as composing part of the type series, the male of which is here designated as the lectotype of this species (Fig. 2 A – C).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1A897AF973E357CD82562D5619EDD89C	Public Domain	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.		Plazi	Bento, Matheus;Zeballos, Leandro;Rafael, José Albertino	Bento, Matheus, Zeballos, Leandro, Rafael, José Albertino (2025): Reclassification of four South American species of Laemophloeus Dejean, 1835 into Charaphloeus Casey, 1916 (Coleoptera, Laemophloeidae). Contributions to Entomology 75 (2): 289-297, DOI: 10.3897/contrib.entomol.75.e160042
011760CBF16A58C1A125C7BB9E31D035.text	011760CBF16A58C1A125C7BB9E31D035.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Charaphloeus pilatei (Grouvelle 1876) Bento & Zeballos & Rafael 2025	<div><p>Charaphloeus pilatei (Grouvelle, 1876) comb. nov.</p><p>Figs 2 D – I, 3, 4</p><p>Laemophloeus pilatei Grouvelle, 1876: 496, plate 9: fig. 15 (original combination); Kessel 1923: 93 (checklist); 1926: 73, 91 (key, checklist); Hetschko 1930: 39 (checklist); Blackwelder 1945: 419 (checklist).</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Lectotype • male (here designated) deposited at MNHN, labelled: “ n. Fribo [ Nova Friburgo] / Deyr ” (brown, handwritten) // “ Type ” (light brown, printed) // “ Pilati / A. Grouv. Ann Fr. / p. ” (light brown, handwritten) // “ Museum Paris / 1917 / coll. A. Grouvelle ” (white, printed) // “ SYNTYPE ” (red, printed) // “ SYNTYPE / Laemophloeus / pilatei Grouvelle, 1876 ” (white, printed) // “ MNHN, Paris / EC 51926 ” (white, printed with QR code) .</p><p>Additional material.</p><p>BRAZIL • Santa Catarina, Nova Teutônia, VIII. 1967, Fritz Plaumann (leg.) (♀, DZUP, # 325368) ; Brazil, Paraná, Ponta Grossa, 28. II. 2000, Ganho and Marinoni (legs.) (♂, DZUP, 325614) .</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Elytra maculate, each with a broad, longitudinally elongate lateral pale macula expanded medially towards the sutural stria. Male posterior tarsi pentamerous. Male endophallus with a medially coiled, long apical sclerite.</p><p>Re-description of male.</p><p>(Figs 2 D – I, 3 A – D) Body length 2.4 mm, width at mid-elytra 0.9 mm; pronotal width 0.8 mm (widest point), medial length 0.5 mm; elytral width 0.4 mm (mid-elytron), length 1.3 mm. Body elongate, subparallel sided. Colouration. Head, pronotum, mouthparts and antennae light to dark brown, with mandibular apices and apical antennomeres darker; elytral ground colour light to dark brown, with large longitudinal, somewhat P-shaped pale macula expanded medially towards the sutural stria; venter light to dark brown. Head (Fig. 3 A) large, 1.6 times wider than long, shorter and slightly narrower than pronotum; surface moderately punctate, with punctures as large as eye facets, each bearing a minute seta. Frontoclypeal suture well defined laterally, medially effaced. Frons broad, with interocular width 8.3 times wider than transverse eye diameter. Median longitudinal line absent. Sublateral lines carinate, slightly curved. Clypeus 3 - emarginate, with mandibular emargination broad. Labrum (Fig. 4 B) large, as wide as labral emargination of clypeus, with anterior margin parabolic; surface moderately setose, with setae as long as labrum length (Fig. 4 B). Mandibles (Fig. 4 C, D) robust, elongate, slightly smaller than head and distinctly exposed beyond labrum, with two large apical teeth; incisive margin with one obtuse subapical tooth and one small, rounded medial tooth at right mandible (large, acute at left mandible; Fig. 4 C, D); prostheca membranous and densely pilose; molar area divided into two parts: a small, strongly sclerotised, toothed area; and a large, poorly-sclerotised and microdenticulate area bearing about 10 rows of minute rounded denticles. Maxilla (Fig. 4 E) elongate, with stipes as long as cardo and nearly straight externally; lacinia slender, with apex curved inwards and bifid; galea wide and longer than lacinia, with apex densely covered with long, apically curved setae; palp 4 - segmented, palpomere 2 longer than 3, palpomere 4 elongate, longer than palpomeres 1–3 combined. Labium (Fig. 4 A) large, with prementum broadly rounded, moderately covered with hair-like setae varying in length and short, spine-like apical setae; mentum short, stripe-shaped, transverse; submentum large, with apical angles narrowly rounded; palp 3 - segmented, with palpomere 2 elongate, 3.7 times longer than palpomere 1, palpomere 3 slightly longer than palpomeres 1 and 2 combined. Genal processes absent. Antennae long, almost longer than half the body length; scape short, oblong-elongate, about 2.7 times longer than wide and distinctly shorter than antennomeres 2–3 combined; pedicel elongate, about 0.6 times the length of scape; flagellum gradually widened towards apex, with antennomeres slightly elongate and narrowest at base; club 3 - segmented comprised of antennomeres 9–11; antennomeres 4–6 subequal in length, elongate and slightly shorter than 3; antennomeres 7–8 subequal in length, subglobose; 9–11 (club antennomeres) globose, subequal in length, larger than preceding antennomeres. Pronotum (Fig. 3 A) subtrapezoidal, 1.4 times wider than long and 1.4 times wider anteriorly than posteriorly. Surface moderately punctate, not microreticulate; punctures similar in size to cephalic punctures. Lateral margins beaded, evenly curved anteriorly, constricted posteriorly. Anterior angles not produced, narrowly rounded; posterior angles acute, posterolaterally produced. Sublateral lines complete to anterior margin, carinate and deeply impressed. Anterior margin not beaded, with a row of bifid setae. Elytra (Fig. 3 A) maculate, 1.5 times longer than conjunctly wide. Inner stria of cell 1 (sutural stria) medially effaced; striae of cells 2–3 poorly defined to indistinct. Epipleuron gradually narrowed and incomplete to apex. Legs (Fig. 3 B) elongate, with tibiae slightly shorter than femurs. Femurs slender; metafemur larger than pro- and mesofemur, with medial width less than half the length. Pro-, meso- and metatarsus as long as respective tibiae, with inner surface moderately setose. Tarsal formula 5-5 - 5. Terminalia. Claspers with two transverse, rhomboidal lobes, with inner apical angles broadly rounded; apical margin with long setae (Fig. 3 D). Aedeagus (Fig. 3 C). Median lobe as wide as tegmen, with apex abruptly narrowed and acute. Parameres narrowly triangular, fused together at basal half, free at apical half, with apex acute. Endophallus with a barely sclerotised basal sclerite and a medially coiled, long apical sclerite.</p><p>Female. The female is very similar to the males and does not differ from them substantially. The internal and external genitalia are described as follows: Spermatheca globose, with a thumb-like projection; proximal gonocoxites longer than wide, weakly sclerotised; distal gonocoxites elongate, cylindrical, strongly sclerotised, as long as proximal gonocoxites, with long basal and apical setae; gonostyli club-shaped, as long as 1 / 3 of distal gonocoxites (Fig. 3 E).</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>BRAZIL. Rio de Janeiro: Nova Friburgo (Grouvelle 1876); Paraná: Ponta Grossa (new state record); Santa Catarina: Nova Teutônia (new state record).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>This is the only described species of Charaphloeus with elytral maculation, while all the other known species in the genus have unicoloured elytral surface (Bremer 2024). According to Thomas (1984), male tarsal formula is 5-5 - 4 in all the genera belonging to the ‘ Laemophloeus genus group’ (an informal group including Charaphloeus Casey, 1916, Laemophloeus (sens. str.) Dejean, 1835, Homalirhinus Chevrolat, 1833, Metaxyphloeus Thomas, 1984, Phloeipsius Casey and Rhinophloeus Sharp), except Charaphloeus, in which “ both pentamerous and heteromerous male tarsi occur ” (Thomas 1984). Males of C. pilatei also have pentamerous hind tarsi, although Bremer (2024) observed this is not a commonly found condition for the South American species, with only C. lenzbeckeri Bremer, 2024 males having 5-5 - 5 tarsal formula.</p><p>As no explicit evidence exists that Grouvelle (1876) based his description on a single specimen, the only labelled original specimen (Fig. 2 E) is accepted as part of the type series and is here designated as the lectotype of this species in order to ensure nomenclatural stability. Two additional specimens from Paraná and Santa Catarina represent new state records of C. pilatei .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/011760CBF16A58C1A125C7BB9E31D035	Public Domain	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.		Plazi	Bento, Matheus;Zeballos, Leandro;Rafael, José Albertino	Bento, Matheus, Zeballos, Leandro, Rafael, José Albertino (2025): Reclassification of four South American species of Laemophloeus Dejean, 1835 into Charaphloeus Casey, 1916 (Coleoptera, Laemophloeidae). Contributions to Entomology 75 (2): 289-297, DOI: 10.3897/contrib.entomol.75.e160042
