Ernoporus Thomson, 1859: 147
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1093/isd/ixaa002 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3847182 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0049C912-FF94-AE36-FC92-F9253913F4E6 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ernoporus Thomson, 1859: 147 |
status |
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Ernoporus Thomson, 1859: 147 View in CoL
( Figs. 27–29 View Figure 27 View Figure 28 View Figure 29 )
Synonymy
= Cryphalops Reitter, 1889: 94 View in CoL .
= Stephanorhopalus Hopkins, 1915: 35 View in CoL .
= Euptilius Schedl, 1940c: 589 View in CoL .
= Ernocladius Wood, 1980: 93 View in CoL syn. nov.
= Allothenemus Bright and Torres, 2006: 400 View in CoL syn. nov.
Type of genus
Diagnosis
This genus can be diagnosed by the combination of the entire eye, by the pronotum with concentric rows of asperities, by the distinct summit, and by the proventriculus which has anteriorly pointing spines posterior to the masticatory brush.
Female
Robust body shape, less than 2.1 times as long as wide. Eye oval shaped. Antennae with three or four funicle segments. Antennal club in most species with sutures straight to profoundly procurved. Pronotum with two or more marginal asperities. Asperities on the pronotum always arranged in concentric rows, leading to a distinct summit. Sides of pronotum rounded, sometimes with a weakly visible carina extending slightly from the posterior edge. Elytra with scale-like interstrial bristles. Apex of elytra vertical. Proventriculus with a simple, short apical plate. Crop spines hair-like. An area of anteriorly pointing spine-shaped or spatula-shaped setae is present beyond the masticatory brush.
Male
Similar to females, except for a more produced anterior margin of the pronotum, typically with feather-like setae on the protarsi and two or more spines on the posteroventral margin of the seventh tergite. Penis apodemes much shorter than penis body, fused at apex. Tegmen open dorsally, much narrower than penis apodemes. Tegminal apodemes absent. Spiculum gastrale thicker than penis apodemes, with a fork. Basal sclerites sometimes visible. Sometimes large hook-like end plates are present.
Distribution
Asia, Europe, Africa, Caribbean (likely introduced), Australia (introduced).
Remarks
Nineteen species known. Ernoporus are most easily recognized by the stout appearance with concentric asperities on the pronotum, though a few members of Eidophelus also share this feature, as well as Acorthylus and Neocryphus . The tuft of setae posterior to the proventriculus has not been observed in any other Ernoporini, but is present in other genera such as Acorthylus and at least some Stegomerus species.
Several species were previously placed in the genus Euptilius , presented separately in Fig. 25 View Figure 25 . These are characterized by antennal club with profoundly procurved sutures and extensive split setae on the hypomeron. No fresh specimens were available for study and no genetic information exists. However, based on the external morphology as well as a dissection of the proventriculus, there was no justification for resurrecting this genus based on the information available ( Wood 1980). All the characters which are distinctive are present in other Ernoporus species (procurved antennal sutures, split setae on the pronotum), although to a much lesser extent. Members of this species group have a very similar appearance to Neocryphus , but differ in the antennal club and the eye shape.
The genera Ernocladius and Allothenemus closely match the characters for this genus. Ernocladius was described as distinct from Ernoporus based on the interstrial ground vestiture being absent on the elytral disc and sparse or absent on the declivity, by the antennal funicle with only two segments, and by the procurved sutures of the antennal club ( Wood 1980). This combination of characters is not consistent within the groups, and is not stable across other genera. Allothenemus was described based on the unique morphology compared to former Cryphalini from the Americas, but also matches the diagnostic characters of Ernocladius and closely matches some Asian species. It is likely that the species represent non-native species based on the distribution and the close similarity to Margadillius minor Schedl, 1942 . Erioschidias imitatrix Schedl, 1977 is transferred from Cosmoderes , supported by internal and external morphology and molecular phylogenetics. Several species formerly in the genus Margadillius have been moved here. The previous misclassification is unsurprising, since a specimen in Schedl’s collection (NHMW) labeled as a homeotype (which is usually specimen that was directly compared to and that matches the primary type) of Margadillius margadilaonis , was in fact a misidentified member of Ernoporus .
Type material examined
Holotype of Euptilius armatus Browne, 1981 ( BMNH) ; holotype and paratype of Ernoporus concentralis Eggers, 1936 ( BMNH) ; allotypes (x2) of Cryphalus corpulentus Sampson, 1919 ( BMNH) ; holotype of Erioschidias imitatrix Schedl, 1977 ( NHMW) ; holotype of Ernoporus japonicus Nobuchi, 1966 ( ITLJ) ; syntypes (x2) of Margadillius minor Schedl, 1942 ( NHMW and BMNH) ; holotype of Margadillius parvulus Eggers, 1943 ( NHMW) ; paratype of Euptilius thailandicus Schedl, 1967 ( NHMW) ; holotype of Euptilius tuberculatus Browne, 1981 ( BMNH) .
Included species
Ernoporus acanthopanaxi ( Niisima, 1913: 4) (Cryphalus) View in CoL .
Ernoporus armatus ( Browne, 1981: 129) (Euptilius) View in CoL .
Ernoporus concentralis Eggers, 1936c: 629 View in CoL .
Ernoporus corpulentus ( Sampson, 1919: 113) (Cryphalus) comb. nov. [ Ernocladius View in CoL ].
= Margadillius corpulentus sundri Schedl, 1969: 48 View in CoL (syn: Wood, 1989).
Ernoporus dispar ( Schedl, 1972f: 49) (Cryphalops) View in CoL .
Ernoporus exquisitus ( Bright, 2019: 105) (Allothenemus) comb. nov. [ Allothenemus View in CoL ].
Ernoporus guiboutiae ( Schedl, 1957b: 53) (Miocryphalus) comb. nov. [ Ernocladius View in CoL ].
Ernoporus imitatrix ( Schedl, 1977c: 499) (Erioschidias) comb. nov. [ Cosmoderes View in CoL ].
Ernoporus inermis ( Schedl, 1939b: 343) (Stephanorhopalus) View in CoL .
Ernoporus japonicus Nobuchi, 1966b: 52 View in CoL .
Ernoporus melodori ( Hopkins, 1915: 36) (Stephanorhopalus) View in CoL .
Ernoporus minor ( Schedl, 1942a: 176) (Margadillius) comb. nov. [ Margadillius View in CoL ].
Ernoporus minutus ( Bright and Torres, 2006: 400) (Allothenemus) comb. nov. [ Allothenemus View in CoL ].
Ernoporus parvulus ( Eggers, 1943b: 75) (Margadillius) comb. nov. [ Margadillius View in CoL ].
Ernoporus quadridens ( Schedl, 1971a: 284) (Cryphalops) View in CoL .
Ernoporus shimanensis Murayama, 1953: 36 View in CoL .
Ernoporus thailandicus ( Schedl, 1967a: 127) (Euptilius) View in CoL .
Ernoporus tiliae ( Panzer, 1793: 14) (Apate) View in CoL .
= Cryphalus ratzeburgi Ferrari, 1867: 11 View in CoL .
= Cryphalus lederi Reitter, 1889: 93 View in CoL .
= Ernoporus eggersi Kurentsov, 1941: 155 View in CoL (syn: Sokanovskiy, 1954).
= Ernoporus starki Eggers, 1942: 31 View in CoL (syn: Schedl, 1952e).
Ernoporus tuberculatus ( Browne, 1981: 128) (Euptilius) View in CoL .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Ernoporus Thomson, 1859: 147
Johnson, Andrew J., Hulcr, Jiri, Knížek, Miloš, Atkinson, Thomas H., Mandelshtam, Michail Yu., Smith, Sarah M., Cognato, Anthony I., Park, Sangwook, Li, You & Jordal, Bjarte H. 2020 |
Ernoporus exquisitus ( Bright, 2019: 105 ) (Allothenemus)
Bright, D. E. 2019: 105 |
Allothenemus
Bright, D. E. & J. A. Torres 2006: 400 |
Ernoporus minutus (
Bright, D. E. & J. A. Torres 2006: 400 |
Ernoporus armatus ( Browne, 1981: 129 ) (Euptilius)
Browne, F. G. 1981: 129 |
Ernoporus tuberculatus ( Browne, 1981: 128 ) (Euptilius)
Browne, F. G. 1981: 128 |
Ernocladius
Wood, S. L. 1980: 93 |
Ernoporus imitatrix ( Schedl, 1977c: 499 ) (Erioschidias)
Schedl, K. E. 1977: 499 |
Ernoporus dispar ( Schedl, 1972f: 49 ) (Cryphalops)
Schedl, K. E. 1972: 49 |
Ernoporus quadridens ( Schedl, 1971a: 284 ) (Cryphalops)
Schedl, K. E. 1971: 284 |
Margadillius corpulentus sundri
Schedl, K. E. 1969: 48 |
Ernoporus thailandicus ( Schedl, 1967a: 127 ) (Euptilius)
Schedl, K. E. 1967: 127 |
Ernoporus japonicus
Nobuchi, A. 1966: 52 |
Ernoporus guiboutiae ( Schedl, 1957b: 53 ) (Miocryphalus)
Schedl, K. E. 1957: 53 |
Ernoporus shimanensis
Murayama, J. 1953: 36 |
Ernoporus parvulus ( Eggers, 1943b: 75 ) (Margadillius)
Eggers, H. 1943: 75 |
Ernoporus minor ( Schedl, 1942a: 176 ) (Margadillius)
Schedl, K. E. 1942: 176 |
Ernoporus starki
Eggers, H. 1942: 31 |
Ernoporus eggersi
Kurentsov, A. I. 1941: 155 |
Euptilius
Schedl, K. E. 1940: 589 |
Ernoporus inermis ( Schedl, 1939b: 343 ) (Stephanorhopalus)
Schedl, K. E. 1939: 343 |
Ernoporus concentralis
Eggers, H. 1936: 629 |
Ernoporus corpulentus ( Sampson, 1919: 113 ) (Cryphalus)
Sampson, F. W. 1919: 113 |
Stephanorhopalus
Hopkins, A. D. 1915: 35 |
Ernoporus melodori ( Hopkins, 1915: 36 ) (Stephanorhopalus)
Hopkins, A. D. 1915: 36 |
Ernoporus acanthopanaxi ( Niisima, 1913: 4 ) (Cryphalus)
Niisima, Y. 1913: 4 |
Cryphalops
Reitter, E. 1889: 94 |
Cryphalus lederi
Reitter, E. 1889: 93 |
Cryphalus ratzeburgi
Ferrari, J. A. 1867: 11 |
Ernoporus tiliae ( Panzer, 1793: 14 ) (Apate)
Panzer, G. W. F. 1793: 14 |