Euetheola humilis ( Burmeister, 1847 )

López-García, Margarita M., Gasca-Álvarez, Héctor J. & Amat-García, Germán, 2015, The scarab beetle tribe Pentodontini (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae) of Colombia: taxonomy, natural history, and distribution, Zootaxa 4048 (4), pp. 451-492 : 463-465

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4048.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:71E2B8DA-825E-429F-BAA0-F582702B4A80

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5699354

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/990DA529-FF92-FF89-FF46-443617D6FEA6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Euetheola humilis ( Burmeister, 1847 )
status

 

Euetheola humilis ( Burmeister, 1847)

( Figs. 33 – 39 View FIGURES 33 – 39 )

Heteronychus humilis Burmeister, 1847: 93 . Ligyrus rugiceps LeConte, 1856: 21 .

Dyscinetus parvus Casey, 1915: 172 .

Dyscinetus hondurana Casey, 1915: 188 .

Description. Habitus as in Fig. 33 View FIGURES 33 – 39 . Length 13.0 – 13.5 mm (♂), 13.0 – 14.0 mm (♀). Width 6.0 – 6.5 mm (♂), 6.0 – 7.0 mm (♀). Color black to reddish brown ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ). Head: Frons transversely rugopunctate and grooved. Frontoclypeal suture present; carinate, elevated, and interrupted at middle ( Fig. 38 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ). Clypeus subtrapezoidal with apex truncate; surface transversely grooved and rugose; apex with 2 small, reflexed teeth. Interocular distance equals 4.0 – 4.8 times the transverse ocular diameter. Mandibles strongly sinuate, with a sharp tooth and basal rounded lobe. Antennal club subequal in length to antennomeres 2 – 7. Pronotum: Surface with sparse, small punctures, most of them not larger than those on vertex. Scutellum: Surface with a few minute, sparse punctures. Elytra: Surface with 3 double rows of punctures, each small, deep and round ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ). Lateral margin not thickened in females. Sutural stria complete, with contiguous punctures. Pygidium: Surface densely punctate, punctures larger and denser on the basal half. Legs: Protibia tridentate, basal tooth slightly removed from others. Protarsus simple ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ). Metatibia with apex slightly crenulate and with 9 spinules of nearly equal length. Venter: Prosternal process long, apex truncate and subquadrate. Parameres: Basal half broad, apical half narrowed, with 2 curve and acute lateral projections, apex rounded ( Figs. 35 – 36 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ). Spiculum gastrale: Base as long as lateral branches, apex broad, slightly truncate ( Fig. 37 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ).

Diagnosis. Euetheola humilis and E. bidentata are similar species, but the former has sinuate mandibles, a cariniform frontoclypeal suture, and smaller, sparser pronotal punctation than in E. bidentata . The male protarsi are not enlarged, and females do not have elytral margin thickened as they are in E. bidentata .

Locality records. ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 33 – 39 ) 34 specimens, 12♂, 22♀. Specimens were seen from ANDES, CTI, ICN, MEFLG, MPUJ, UPN. Arauca (3): Arauca, Alred. río Arauca (3). Atlántico (3): Barranquilla (1). Juan de Acosta, Reserva Campesina La Montaña (1). Repelón, Reserva Bijibana (1). Bolívar (6): Mompox (5). Turbaco (1). Casanare (7): Hato Corozal, Caserío indígena Mochuelo, Selva de Galería (1). Trinidad, Fundación RN La Palmita (6). Magdalena (4): Sitio Nuevo, Los Cocos, Isla de Salamanca (4). Meta (6): Los Medios, Hda. La Cabaña (1). San Martín, RN El Caduceo (4). Villavicencio, Buena Vista (1). Sucre (1): San Marcos, Hda. Cocodrilia (1). Tolima (1): Ibagué (1). Valle del Cauca (1): Bugalagrande (1). Ambiguous data (2): Colombia (1). Costa Atlántica (1).

Temporal distribution. February (3), March (4), April (6), May (1), June (4), July (1), August (1), October (1), November (4), December (5). No data (6).

Distribution. Southern United States of America to Argentina ( Endrödi 1969; Ratcliffe & Cave 2006; Ratcliffe et al. 2013). In Colombia, besides the eight departments recorded here, the species was found in Antioquia and Córdoba by Restrepo-Giraldo et al. (2003).

Natural history. Several specimens were collected with light traps, between 4 – 600 m. Some individuals were found in dry forest and gallery forest. Adults are attracted to lights. They feed on stems of grasses, and larvae are found in the soil feeding on roots ( Ratcliffe & Morón 1997). This species can become a pest of rice, sugarcane, and tobacco ( Scavo & Joly 1998). Bernardi et al. (2006) reported adults attacking plants of Eucalyptus saligna Smith (Myrtaceae) in Brazil.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dynastidae

Genus

Euetheola

Loc

Euetheola humilis ( Burmeister, 1847 )

López-García, Margarita M., Gasca-Álvarez, Héctor J. & Amat-García, Germán 2015
2015
Loc

Dyscinetus parvus

Casey 1915: 172
1915
Loc

Dyscinetus hondurana

Casey 1915: 188
1915
Loc

Heteronychus humilis

LeConte 1856: 21
Burmeister 1847: 93
1847
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