Atractocerinae Laporte, 1840

Lawrence, John F., 2020, The Australian Lymexylidae (Coleoptera: Tenerionoidea) with one new genus and two genera new to Australia, Zootaxa 4895 (2), pp. 211-238 : 223

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4895.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:77117CFB-AD8E-4066-819F-FA81D3D589B7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4361844

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3735BF36-A004-5D78-FF46-95D070EAFBC8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Atractocerinae Laporte, 1840
status

 

Atractocerinae Laporte, 1840

The Atractocerinae are unique among the Coleoptera in many respects, but notably in the extreme reduction of the elytra combined with the lack of transverse folds in the hind wings, which are almost completely exposed, lying over the abdomen. Based on the wing character alone, this subfamily was treated as a beetle suborder, Aplicalae, by King (1955); but Selander (1959) demonstrated that this wing type could be derived from that found in the lymexylid genus Melittomma View in CoL . Likewise, Baehr (1976) in his detailed descriptive paper on the prothoracic morphology of “ Atractocerus View in CoL sp.” commented on several structures (e.g., spinasternum, dorsal cervical sclerites, karepisternum, which “have been lost” in all other Coleoptera . Although this group appears to be derived from an ancestor well within the Polyphaga, the family Lymexylidae View in CoL being part of or sister to the large superfamily Tenebrionoidea , the adult has certainly undergone major changes in body structure.

The ideas on relationships of atractocerines to other lymexylids have not really changed from those of Wheeler (1986), with the Palaearctic genus Lymexylon Fabricius View in CoL as the sister group. It may be time, however, for a worldwide analysis to be performed based on adult and larval morphology and molecular data. This, however, is beyond the scope of the present study.

As noted in the Introduction, the subfamily now includes six extant genera: Arractocetus Kurosawa (1985) , with ten species from Japan, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, the Philippines, India, Indonesia, New Guinea and the Moluccas; Atractocerus de Beauvois (1801) , with eight species from Central and South America, the West Indies, tropical Africa, Madagascar, India, Sri Lanka, Sumatra and southern China; Fusicornis Philippi (1866) , with a single species from Chile; Hymaloxylon Kurosawa (1985) , with two species from India, Nepal and western China; Raractocetus Kurasawa (1985) , with two species from India, the Philippines, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, Indonesia and Australia (introduced with Eucalyptus into New Zealand and Chile); and Urtea Paulus (2004) with one species from northern Greece. In addition, the following fossil Atractocerinae have been reported: Cretoatractocerus grimaldii WolfSchwenninger (2011), the earliest member of the group from the Lower Cretaceous (Upper Aptian) Crato Formation of Brazil, plus Vetatractocerus burmiticus Yamamoto,(2019), Raractocetus extinctus Yamamoto (2019) and R. fossilis Yamamoto (2019) from the mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber (earliest Cenomanian), R. balticus Yamamoto (2019) from mid-Eocene Baltic amber and Atractocerus sp. from Miocene Dominican amber ( Yamamoto, 2019).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Lymexylidae

Loc

Atractocerinae Laporte, 1840

Lawrence, John F. 2020
2020
Loc

Melittomma

Murray 1867
1867
Loc

Atractocerinae

Laporte 1840
1840
Loc

Lymexylidae

Fleming 1821
1821
Loc

Tenebrionoidea

Latreille 1802
1802
Loc

Atractocerus

Palisot de Beauvois 1801
1801
Loc

Lymexylon

Fabricius 1775
1775
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