Rhabdorrhynchus, 2008

Meregalli, Massimo, 2008, Taxonomic relationships between Pachycerus and Rhabdorrhynchus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Lixinae), with descriptions of two new species of Rhabdorrhynchus from the Arabian Peninsula, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 152 (1), pp. 25-37 : 27-31

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2007.00335.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5114140

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C087D0-965B-FFB7-6430-6D36FCB0FEAF

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Rhabdorrhynchus
status

sp. nov.

RHABDORRHYNCHUS SAUDITUS View in CoL SP. NOV.

Type locality: Saudi Arabia, As Shāqqah al Yamānīyah, 19°42′N, 40°48′E GoogleMaps .

Holotype ♀, Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia, Shagi Yamani , 40 m [iles] south of Lith [= As Shâqqah al Yamânîyah, about 50 miles south of Lith, 19°42′N, 40°48′E], 28 March 1948, B. P. Uvarov ( BMNH). GoogleMaps

Paratypes: same data as holotype, 3♂, 2♀ GoogleMaps (1♂, 1♀, MER; 2♂, 1♀, BMNH) .

Diagnosis: A Rhabdorrhynchus of small size, characterized by the following features: pronotum convex, globose, granulose, at maximum width nearly as broad as elytra; rostrum flattened on dorsum, with distinct, roughly punctured dorsolateral keels, elytra elliptical, with dense vestiture of whitish scales; aedeagus slender, apex triangular; sternum VIII of female with arms joined at base; spermatheca with slender and curved cornu, thickened nodulus and distinct ramus.

Measurements: Body length including rostrum, 8.40– 9.79 mm. Rostrum: length 1.60–1.86 mm, width 0.90– 0.94 mm. Pronotum: length 2.51–3.08 mm, width 3.05–3.37 mm (ratio 0.85–0.93). Elytra: length 5.72– 6.09 mm, width 3.50–3.86 mm (ratio 1.55–1.63). Ratio of elytral to pronotal length, 1.98–2.28; ratio of elytral to pronotal width, 1.14–1.16.

Description: Body elliptical, barely convex in lateral view, integument moderately glossy, reddish on elytra, dark reddish on head, pronotum and legs; vestiture composed of dense, white, elliptical, glossy, simple scales and narrow, hair-like, yellowish scales, with bifid scales only present on underside of head ( Figs 1, 5 View Figures 1–15 ).

Rostrum subquadrate in cross section, in lateral view nearly straight from base to antennal insertion, slightly curved and thickened at apex. Surface roughly sculptured, with two dorsolateral, broad, glossy keels, higher and converging at their base on vertex, not touching eyes, irregularly delimited and slightly divergent anteriad, punctured on their inner side, joined to upper margin of scrobe above antennal insertion, and extended up to apex; in lateral view keels high, convex above eyes, slightly sinuate downwards at middle of rostrum length, raised again above antennal insertion, narrowed and sharpened towards apex, in some specimens only distinct and glossy in the basal part, between the eyes, shallower anteriad and forming densely punctured raised dorsolateral margins, not extending to apex. Dorsum of rostrum flat, densely and deeply sculptured, with wrinkles and punctures, median part forming an irregular subtriangular plate, broadened anteriad, separate from the dorsolateral keels by two narrow, moderately impressed furrows, flattened at antennal insertion, and directed laterally around epistoma at apex. Apex curved downwards, epistoma semicircular, well delimited, flat, broadly punctured, and nearly matt, concave at apex. Lateral sides, delimited by the expanded upper margin of scrobes and the dorsolateral keels, partly visible from above, triangular, broadened basad. Vestiture: sparse hair-like scales inserted in the wrinkles and punctures on the dorsolateral keels and sides; larger, denser, glossy, white scales on the median part, covering integument. Scrobes curved, deep; upper margin thickened, expanded outwards, fully visible from above, in lateral view distinctly convex and densely punctured above antennal insertion, smooth, more glossy behind, curved towards base of eyes; lower margin short, subparallel to upper margin, curved downwards ( Figs 3, 8 View Figures 1–15 ). Antennae inserted at three-quarters of rostrum length; scape slightly curved forwards, regularly thickened from basal third; funicle as thick as scape at apex, segment 1 subconical, 1.3 times longer than broad; segment 2 subquadrate, half as long as segment 1; segments 3–7 transverse, 3rd very short, 7th slightly broader; club large, elliptical; scape and funicle with dense white scales and some slightly longer white setae; club elliptical, basal part of segment 1 glossy and with some smaller white scales, simulating an eighth segment of funicle; remaining part of club silvery hairy ( Figs 4 View Figures 1–15 , 38, 41 View Figures 31–49 ).

Head short, transverse; vertex flat, roughly punctured; interocular pit distinct; eyes large, moderately convex, reaching upper side of head, their upper half visible from above, interocular distance on head three-quarters as wide as rostrum at its maximum width between upper margins of scrobes; in lateral view eyes elongate, moderately narrowed in their lower part, lower margin rounded. Vestiture: white scales around eyes, mainly on upper part; hair-like scales on sides; short, bifid scales connate near base on underside.

Pronotum large, as long as broad, dorsum slightly convex in lateral view, globose, base medially slightly expanded towards scutellum , not acutely prominent; sides moderately and regularly rounded from base to near apex, slightly more convergent apicad; apex curved on middle, prominent above head, nearly straight on sides, ocular lobes barely distinct, with a fringe of long and thick light-yellowish setae. Dorsum with a narrow, relatively deep median groove, narrowed on its middle and with a cleft granule or with a thin median carinula, which can be larger and more raised in the centre; surface with dense granules, irregularly placed, conically raised near base and sides, slightly flattened on top of disc; interspaces between the granules matt, microsculptured, forming short irregular rows; sides with conical granules prominent when seen from above. Vestiture: very short, barely distinct hair-like scales sparse on dorsum, longer and more dense on the posterior part of the upper half of sides; larger white scales on the anterior part of the median groove and the anterior part of sides, extended to base in the lower part of sides ( Fig. 2 View Figures 1–15 ).

Scutellum narrow, triangular, bare.

Elytra elongate-elliptical, at base as wide as base of pronotum, sides subparallel, slightly narrowed behind humeri, in lateral view depressed, gently declivous, barely sloping. Apex of each elytron with a short acute projection. Surface unevenly and deeply wrinkled, with sparse small glossy granules clearly visible above the white scales of the vestiture, denser on basal half, in some specimens extending for the whole length along suture and the odd intervals, sparse and smaller on the even intervals; intervals flat, base of intervals 3 and 5 slightly raised; odd intervals as wide as even ones, clearly delimited only in apical half of elytra; striae on basal half with shallow, irregularly impressed punctures, much wider than intervals at base, narrowing in posterior half to form grooves distinctly narrower than intervals towards apex. Vestiture: larger white scales forming a thick coating that covers surface, continuous and rather uniform on sutural interval, but arranged in several large patches on rest of elytra, except for small sparse uncoated spots and two larger irregular bare patches on intervals 2–5 behind middle of length; hair-like yellow scales scattered over whole surface, not covering integument, usually denser on even intervals and on the part of the surface devoid of larger scales, including part of the large bare patch on interval 4; short, white setae similar to the larger scales obliquely inserted on the granules; base lacking scales or setae ( Fig. 7 View Figures 1–15 ).

Prosternum smooth, space between anterior margin of fore coxae and apex as long as diameter of fore coxae; metasternum longer than diameter of middle coxae. Ventrite I as long as ventrite II, weakly convex in middle in female, flattened and with a narrow median impression in male; ventrites III and IV less than half as long as II, slightly convex, ventrite V short, transverse. Vestiture: larger white scales forming a thick, uniform coating, delimiting round bare patches; on ventrites I and II, four lateral and two median, closely approached patches; on ventrite II, the two outer patches smaller; on ventrites III and IV, the two outer patches absent and the median ones merged; on ventrite V, a bare irregular median line on basal half ( Fig. 6 View Figures 1–15 ).

Legs slender, femora scarcely thickened in middle; fore tibiae elongate, inner side weakly sinuate, inner preapical teeth moderately developed in female, barely distinct in male, apex moderately broadened, with about ten short yellowish apical denticles, uncus strong; middle and hind tibiae slender, cylindrical; tarsal segments as long as broad, segment 3 with scarcely widened lobes ( Fig. 32 View Figures 31–49 ); underside of each segment with fringe of orange setae limited to lateral margins; onychium nearly as long as segments 1–3, claws robust. Vestiture: thick coating of white scales on the whole surface, including tarsi; longer white semi-erect setae on inner side of tibiae, particularly middle and hind, and on tarsi.

Aedeagus slender, median lobe weakly curved, apical lamella triangular, shortly acutely pointed ( Figs 11, 13–15 View Figures 1–15 )

Spiculum gastrale narrow, slender, weakly curved.

Proventriculus with short blades, chaetae not extended towards pharynx ( Fig. 46 View Figures 31–49 ).

Hemisternites broadened basad, gradually tapering towards apex; styli subquadrate, short, apical ( Fig. 9 View Figures 1–15 ); symbiont pouches short, compact, globose; spermatheca with long and narrow, acutely pointed curved cornu, subquadrate ramus, and thickened nodulus ( Fig. 10 View Figures 1–15 ). Sternum VIII with thin arms joined at base and broadly widened, sclerotized plate nearly absent, limited to a small area around apex of arms ( Fig. 12 View Figures 1–15 ).

Variation: The holotype is the largest specimen; size varies from 8.40 to 9.79 mm, but most of the paratypes are only very slightly smaller than the holotype. Variation among the six specimens examined is mainly evident in the rostrum, which can have the dorsolateral keels, strongly developed, higher and glossy, as in the holotype, or only distinct and glossy in the basal part, between the eyes and shallower, less distinct anteriad, and forming densely punctured raised dorsolateral margins, not extending to apex; the granules on the pronotum are always very dense and conical, but sometimes more irregularly distributed; the narrow median groove of the pronotum can be nearly completely interrupted by a granule in the centre or can show a very thin median carinula, which can be larger and more raised in the centre. The elytral shape and vestiture are very uniform, but in some specimens the small glossy granules are nearly exclusively limited to the basal part; the ratio of elytral to pronotal width is very constant, whereas the ratio of elytral to pronotal length is more variable. The female genitalia are very constant, with the arms of the sternite VIII typically subangulate laterally.

Etymology: Named after the country of origin, Saudi Arabia.

Distribution: The type locality is south of Lith, in the central part of the Saudi Arabian coast of the Red Sea.

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Curculionidae

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF