Semanotus Mulsant, 1839

James Hammond, H. E. & Williams, Daryl J., 2013, Casey’s conundrum, a review of the genus Semanotus Mulsant (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae: Callidiini) in North America, Zootaxa 3670 (2), pp. 101-136 : 115

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3670.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1480445C-0FC7-462B-919F-D35C645A2B90

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5629630

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DA87E8-FFE4-FFCC-F5CD-8EC3BECCFAD3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Semanotus Mulsant, 1839
status

 

Semanotus Mulsant, 1839 View in CoL View at ENA

Semanotus Mulsant, 1839: 54 View in CoL Sympiezocera Lucas, 1853 : cvi Xenodorum Marseul, 1856: 48 Hylotrupes LeConte, 1873: 296 View in CoL Anocomis Casey, 1912: 271

Hemicallidium Casey, 1912: 273 Anacomis Leng, 1920: 275

Diagnosis. Members of this genus can be separated from other genera of the Callidiini by the following combination of characters: body moderately broad, convex to slightly flattened; antennae 11-segmented and varying from reaching about the middle of the elytra to surpassing elytral apex; antennomeres 3–10 apically widened with antennomeres 6–11 moderately flattened in cross section; pronotum usually wider than long, narrowed to pedunculate at base, laterally rounded to angulate, disk with dorsal callosities that are separated into 3 to 5 more or less distinct calli or fused in various configurations; prosternal process wide and expanded behind procoxae; femora slightly clavate; tarsal claws simple; apex of aedeagus divided into a flat plate-like dorsal lobe that is apically rounded and ventral lobe that is pointed to slightly aciculate; tegmen bilobed.

Hosts. Juniperus spp. (junipers), Sequoia spp. (redwoods), Libocedrus sp. (incense-cedar), Pseudotsuga sp. (Douglas-fir), Cupressus spp. (cypress), Thuja spp. (cedar), Picea spp. (spruces), Pinus spp. (pines), Abies spp. (firs).

Flower and Associated Vegetation Records. Chaemaecyparis sp. (cedar)

Distribution. Transcontinental in North America , from Alaska south to Texas; southern Mexico southeast through Guatemala and Honduras; in the Palaearctic from Algeria and Morocco, throughout Asia including the middle east, China, Japan, and Nepal, from most of continental Europe and the Scandinavian countries.

Remarks. This diverse genus is superficially similar to many genera within the Callidiini including Xylocrius , Hylotrupes , Callidium , Ropalopus , and Pyrrhidium in that they share a similar habitus and have a pronotum that is variously sculptured. They differ from these species in that the front coxae are divided by a narrow prosternal process, tarsal claws are simple, the femora only slightly clavate and apical antennomeres dorso-ventrally flattened.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cerambycidae

Loc

Semanotus Mulsant, 1839

James Hammond, H. E. & Williams, Daryl J. 2013
2013
Loc

Hemicallidium

Leng 1920: 275
Casey 1912: 273
1912
Loc

Semanotus

Casey 1912: 271
LeConte 1873: 296
Marseul 1856: 48
Mulsant 1839: 54
1839
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF