Aulonochares Giron & Short, 2019

Giron, Jennifer C. & Short, Andrew Edward Z., 2021, The Acidocerinae (Coleoptera, Hydrophilidae): taxonomy, classification, and catalog of species, ZooKeys 1045, pp. 1-236 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1045.63810

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2C3076FD-13FB-4842-A7F6-B0EBE9B23795

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CBBF4016-F785-3CE6-90B5-8F1281F3EB70

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Aulonochares Giron & Short, 2019
status

 

Genus Aulonochares Giron & Short, 2019 Figs 1D View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 , 4 View Figure 4 , 11J View Figure 11 , 21 View Figure 21 , 22A-C View Figure 22

Aulonochares Girón & Short, 2019: 112.

Gender.

Masculine.

Type species.

Aulonochares tubulus Girón & Short, 2019: 120; by original designation.

Diagnosis.

Medium sized beetles, total body length 5.8-7.5 mm. Body shape elongated oval in dorsal view; weakly convex in lateral view (Fig. 21 View Figure 21 ). Color orange brown to dark brown; ventral surface covered with rather long golden setae, especially on abdominal ventrites, and more densely so (with shorter setae) on surface of femora. Head subquadrate in dorsal view, seemingly constricted at anterior margin of eyes (Fig. 11J View Figure 11 ). Eyes relatively small, separated by distance nearly 6.5 × the maximum width of an eye (Fig. 11J View Figure 11 ). Clypeus with lateral margins nearly parallel, slightly convex, with anterior margin only slightly narrower than posterior margin (Fig. 11J View Figure 11 ). Labrum fully exposed. Mentum and submentum roughly punctate (Fig. 21C View Figure 21 ). Antennae with nine antennomeres, with cupule slightly asymmetrical and round in outline. Maxillary palps long, nearly 1.5 × longer than maximum width of head, with inner and outer margins of maxillary palpomere 2 evenly curved (Fig. 21A View Figure 21 ). Pronotum with ground punctation shallow and uniformly sparse. Elytra without sutural striae, with outer margins slightly flared; serial punctures, ground punctures and systematic punctures similar in size, shallowly impressed. Surface of prosternum flat (slightly carinate only along midline of antero-mesal projection of anterior margin). Posterior elevation of mesoventrite simple, without carinae or ridges; anapleural sutures concave, anteriorly converging, anteriorly separated by distance nearly 0.3 × as wide as anterior margin of mesepisternum. Metaventrite densely and uniformly pubescent. Protibiae with spines of anterior row very small and appressed (Fig. 21C View Figure 21 ); apical spurs of protibiae very short (not exceeding the length of the first tarsomere) and stout. Hydrofuge pubescence covering most surface of metafemora (Fig. 21C View Figure 21 ). Ventral face of tarsomeres 1-4 densely covered by stiff setae. Apex of fifth abdominal ventrite strongly emarginate; emargination fringed by stout setae. Aedeagus tubular (Fig. 22A-C View Figure 22 ), somewhat cylindrical, with parameres forming a 5-7 × longer than wide tube; basal piece very short and strongly concave; gonopore reduced, located at apex of median lobe.

Differential diagnosis.

Aulonochares can be easily mistaken with Novochares in the New World, and the two genera can be collected together. The subquadrate shape of the head (Fig. 11J View Figure 11 ; as opposed to trapezoid as in Fig. 11G View Figure 11 ), the roughly punctate mentum, the long setae composing the ventral pubescence of the abdominal ventrites, ventrally densely setose tarsomeres, along with the tubular shape of the aedeagus (Fig. 22A-C View Figure 22 ) are very distinctive and uniquely combined in Aulonochares among Neotropical acidocerines.

Distribution.

Neotropical: Brazil (Amazonas, Roraima), French Guiana, Guyana, Suriname, Venezuela; Fig. 4 View Figure 4 .

Natural history.

Specimens of Aulonochares have been collected in densely forested sandy streams and detrital pools in forests along creeks. They seem to prefer habitats with abundant detritus or decaying organic matter. Females of A. tubulus and A. ligulatus have been observed carrying their egg cases underneath their abdomen ( Girón and Short 2019; pers. obs.).

Larvae.

Immature stages are not known for the genus.

Taxonomic history.

Recently described by Girón and Short (2019).

Remarks.

Only three species are known for the genus ( Girón and Short 2019).

Species examined.

Aulonochares lingulatus Girón & Short, A. novoairensis Girón & Short, A. tubulus Girón & Short. Holotypes and paratypes of all three species were available for this study. We have not seen any specimens of the genus from outside the Guiana Shield region of South America.

Selected references.

Girón and Short 2019: original description of the genus and all its currently known species; Short et al. 2021: phylogenetic placement.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Hydrophilidae

Loc

Aulonochares Giron & Short, 2019

Giron, Jennifer C. & Short, Andrew Edward Z. 2021
2021
Loc

Aulonochares

Giron & Short 2019
2019