Komiyandra, Santos-Silva & Heffern & Matsuda, 2010

Santos-Silva, Antonio, Heffern, Daniel & Matsuda, Kiyoshi, 2010, Revision of Hawaiian, Australasian, Oriental, and Japanese Parandrinae (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae), Insecta Mundi 2010 (130), pp. 1-120 : 7-8

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5164485

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8400144

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/975887B7-FFDF-FFE7-66D0-F9B817DF3356

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Komiyandra
status

gen. nov.

Komiyandra View in CoL , new genus

Etymology. Dedicated to our colleague, Mr. Ziro Komiya (Komiya + Parandra ), of Japan, who has published numerous papers on Oriental Prioninae and provided many of the important specimens for this study. Feminine gender.

Type species. Parandra janus Bates, 1875 View in CoL .

Description. Dorsal area of head, between eyes, with gibbosities well marked, separated by furrow deep or barely deep, without central depression in “V”. Ocular carina elevated and distinct from middle to clypeus. Eyes ( Fig. 94 View Figure 90-104 ) narrow (maximum width equal to 0.4 times the total length); posterior ocular edge ( Fig. 452 View Figure 447-453 ) prominent or very prominent; anterior ocular edge with concavity well marked. Frontoclypeal suture just visible laterally (sometimes absent). Central region of clypeus vertical, oblique or strongly oblique. Clypeolabral suture visible in full extension or only laterally. Central projection of male labrum varying from wide and truncate at apex to narrow and sharpened apically; central projection of female usually as in male, but when truncate, always narrower. Mandibles of major males ( Fig. 177, 184 View Figure 177-199. 177-195 ) subfalciform (almost identical to female in minor males), shorter than head or slightly shorter, wide at base of latero-outer face ( Fig. 114 View Figure 105-117 ); dorsal carina elevated, well marked from base to apical third; inner margin with two teeth, together protracted, located in middle or after middle; apex with two large teeth, visible dorsally, and a third, small, not visible dorsally; outer face without large tooth around middle ( Fig. 107 View Figure 105-117 ). Mandibles of females ( Fig. 169 View Figure 148-176 , 185 View Figure 177-199. 177-195 ) Birandra -like, wide at base of latero-outer face; dorsal carina elevated only at basal third, ending approximately in middle; inner margin with two teeth together protracted, located in middle; apex and outer face as in males. Mentum with hair long and sparse. Galea ( Fig. 196 View Figure 177-199. 177-195 , 200 View Figure 200-209. 200-204 ) long (surpassing the apex of second segment of maxillary palp). Ventral sensorial area of antennae ( Fig. 235, 245 View Figure 235-251 ) not visible from side, divided ( Fig. 312, 313 View Figure 300-314. 300-303 ) or not by low carina, not visible from side (sometimes visible from the side on antennomere XI or X-XI); ventral sensorial area of antennomere XI not extending into dorsal area; dorsal sensorial area of antennomere XI small, well delimited, not divided by carina.

Pronotum strongly convex in apical half (close to head); anterior edge barely sinuous (mainly in males) to sinuous (mainly in females); anterior angles projected to front (usually more distinct in females); lateral angle very distinct and obtuse, or slightly distinct and obtuse (sometimes variable intraspecific); posterior angles distinct and obtuse (sometimes almost in right angle). Elytra punctate, usually distinctly and abundantly. Veins MP 3 and MP 4 fused at their apex ( Fig. 211 View Figure 210-217. 210-214 ). Apex of prosternal process barely enlarged. Femora glabrous or sub-glabrous. Dorsal face of tibiae rounded, or flat or shallowly furrowed. Procoxal cavities clearly open behind. Paronychium with one seta (two setae in K. ohbayashii sp. nov.).

Included species. Komiyandra janus ( Bates, 1875) , comb. nov.; K. shibatai ( Hayashi, 1963) , comb. nov.; K. formosana ( Miwa and Mitono, 1939) , comb. nov.; K. lanyuana ( Hayashi, 1981) , comb. nov.; K. javana Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. nayani Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. ohbayashii Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. luzonica Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. philippinensis Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. mindanao Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. mehli Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. vivesi Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. lombokia Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. sulawesiana Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. irianjayana Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. menieri Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. sangihe Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda, sp. nov.; K. mindoro Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. niisatoi Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. drumonti Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. cabigasi Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. koni Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. johkii Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; K. poggii Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.; and K. uenoi Santos-Silva, Heffern and Matsuda , sp. nov.

Geographical distribution ( Fig. 316 View Figure 315-316 ). Japan (Ryukyu Islands), Taiwan, Philippines, Malaysia (Borneo: Sabah), Indonesia (Borneo, Sulawesi, Ternate, Java, Lombok, Sumbawa, Moluccas, Irian Jaya, Sumatra, Sangihe, Seram).

Comments. Komiyandra differs from Birandra Santos-Silva, 2002 , and Acutandra Santos-Silva, 2002 , by mandibles of major males being sub-falciform ( Fig. 162 View Figure 148-176 ), and by veins MP 3 and MP 4 ( Fig. 211 View Figure 210-217. 210-214 ) fused together at apices. In Birandra , mandibles of major males ( Fig. 118 View Figure 118-147 ) are clearly falciform and veins MP 3 and MP 4 ( Fig. 212 View Figure 210-217. 210-214 ) are separate at apices. In Acutandra , mandibles of major males ( Fig. 120 View Figure 118-147 ) are very similar to that of females (not falciform or sub-falciform), and veins MP 3 and MP 4 ( Fig. 205 View Figure 200-209. 200-204 ) are as in Birandra . Different from Archandra Lameere, 1912 , and Parandra Latreille, 1802 , because these genera have distinctly falciform mandibles in major males and veins MP 3 and MP 4 ( Fig. 207, 208 View Figure 200-209. 200-204 ) not fused together at apices, and by procoxal cavities closed behind. From Neandra Lameere, 1912 , different by procoxal cavities open behind, and presence of paronychium clearly exposed. In Neandra , procoxal cavities are closed behind, and paronychium not exposed. Different from Stenandra Lameere, 1912 , by procoxal cavities open behind, and by the paronychium clearly exposed (closed and not exposed in Stenandra ). See comments on Melanesiandra , Hawaiiandra , Caledonandra , Malukandra , Papuandra , and Storeyandra .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cerambycidae

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