Pachybrachis viduatus
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1649/0010-065X-69.1.25 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0385AB33-7A66-7814-FF6A-FB58FB2F90FF |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Pachybrachis viduatus |
status |
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Pachybrachis viduatus species-group
Group Diagnosis. Moderate to large species, length (2.35–3.63 mm); dorsum glabrous with dark coloration black, usually extensive; color patterns distinctive, fairly stable as maculae or vittae; eyes of both male and female widely separated (0.36–0.69 mm); front without ocular lines; antennae exceptionally long and slender, attaining or surpassing declivity in males; terminal antennomere linear; protarsal claws of male not enlarged; anterior femora swollen; anterior tibia unmodified, with apical spur absent or so greatly reduced as to appear absent. Median lobe of male genitalia with median basal plate simple; en-face outline with apicolateral margin broadly and evenly rounded to abruptly rounded; nodule absent to distinct, narrowly to broadly triangular when distinct; ventral surface of shaft flattened, inflated, with or without distinct keel; beard setae short in patch or in wisp; penicilli absent.
Remarks. We propose this species-group to include five named Nearctic species, P. m-nigrum , P. picturatus (Germar) , P. pulvinatus Suffrian , P. trinotatus (Melsheimer) , and P. viduatus , and the four new species presented below. Within the Nearctic Pachybrachis fauna, the lack of an apical spur on the anterior tibia appears to be a unique synapomorphy for the group.
The nine species that comprise the viduatus species-group are divided into three species complexes, each consisting of species that are similar in external appearance:
P. m-nigrum complex: dorsum with pale yellow and black patch-work pattern ( Figs. 4–6 View Figs ).
1. P. deceptor Riley and Barney , new species 2. P. m-nigrum (Melsheimer)
P. trinotatus complex: dorsum mostly black (rarely not), with reddish or yellowish pronotal maculae ( Figs. 12–14 View Figs ).
P. viduatus complex: dorsum yellowish, elytra with heavy, black vittae ( Figs. 7 View Figs , 15–18 View Figs ).
5. P. bloxham Riley and Barney , new species 6. P. chester Riley and Barney , new species 7. P. kentuckyensis Riley and Barney , new species 8. P. picturatus (Germar)
9. P. viduatus (F.)
Biology. Almost nothing is known of the biology of the members of the viduatus species-group. Adults have been associated with various plants, summarized in Clark et al. (2004) or newly reported below under each species. The plant genus Hypericum L. ( Clusiaceae ) is a confirmed adult association and probably the adult food plant for five included species, and it is a suspected plant association for a sixth species. Larvae and larval habits are unknown.
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