Amblycerus sclerolobii Ribeiro-Costa, 2000

Fig. 6 A – I, Table 1

Amblycerus sclerolobii Ribeiro-Costa, 2000: 328–330 (detailed original description, type locality: Amazonas, Minas Gerais); Ribeiro-Costa et al. 2018: 515 (catalog); Santos and Ribeiro-Costa 2019: 103 (taxonomy); Romero-Nápoles et al. 2021: 209 (catalog).

Type material.

Holotype • Deposited in DZUP, male, with labels: Brasil: Minas Gerais, Viçosa; 19 - XI- 986; G. P. Santos leg., em semente de mamoneira-branca, Sclerolobium sp. Paratypes • (n = 11), eight with the same data as holotype, two paratypes deposited in DZUP, two in MZSP, two in MNRJ, two in USNM • one Brasil: Amazonas, Rio Javari, Estirão do Ecuador; X. 1979; M. Alvarenga leg., in CMNH (Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Oakland, Pennsylvaniaand) and • two only with the information 5. X. 1936, (EQ 045238), Sclerolobium denudatum, in USNM (Ribeiro-Costa 2000) .

Diagnosis.

Amblycerus sclerolobii differs from the others of the group by the armature of the internal sac of male genitalia. The AR has one pair of sclerites (Fig. 6 H) ( A. truncatus Ribeiro-Costa, sp. nov., A. falcorostrus Ribeiro-Costa & Morse, sp. nov., A. biacutus Ribeiro-Costa, sp. nov., A. morsei Ribeiro-Costa, sp. nov. has one sclerite- Figs 2, 3 F, 4 F, 5 G; A. manauara has two pairs- Fig. 9 F), but A. marinonii, A. kingsolveri and A. tachigaliae share with A. sclerolobii one pair (Figs 7 G, 8 F, 10 G). Although A. sclerolobii can be easily separated from these last three species by the serrate winding laminar sclerites at MR (Fig. 6 H) ( A. kingsolveri, A. marinonii, A. tachigaliae have straight laminar sclerites: Figs 7 G, 8 F, 10 G).

Note.

Ribeiro-Costa (2000) described this species as having the general integument color contrasting with the antennae, thoracic ventrites, and legs. Here we present illustrations of the extremes of this contrast (Fig. 6 C, D).

Distribution.

Brazil (Amazonas-Estirão do Equador, Minas Gerais-Viçosa).

Host plants.

Fabaceae: Tachigali denudata (Vogel) Oliveira-Filho, Tachigali sp. (quoted as Sclerolobium denudatum, Sclerolobium sp.).