A new genus and species of Bruchinae, with a key to the genera from Australia (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) Reid, C. A. M. Beatson, M. Zootaxa 2013 3599 6 535 548 Reid & Beatson Reid & Beatson [151,548,1735,1761] Insecta Chrysomelidae Buburra Animalia Coleoptera 6 541 Arthropoda species jeanae sp. nov.   Material examined. Holotype: 3/ VICTORIA, Mt Buffalo NP, top of Dixon’s Falls, c 1455m, 36:46:29S 146:47:42E,  Phebalium squamulosumssp  alpinumflws, 15.xi.2010, C. Reid ( AMS); Paratypes(9): 4 (23, 2Ƥ) same data as holotype( AMS, MHNP); 13, 1Ƥ, same data as holotypeexcept beating  Phebalium squamulosumssp  alpinumflowers, 29.xi.2011, ( AMS, ANIC); 13, 2Ƥ, ditto except sweeping  Acacia alpinawith small seedpods (MVM, AMS). Description. As for genus, plus the following details of colour and sculpture:   FIGURES 17–18.  Buburra jeanaeReid & Beatson: 17, male antenna; 18, female antenna. Drawn to scale.   FIGURES 19–25.  Buburra jeanaeReid & Beatson, genitalia drawn from cleared specimens: 19, lateral penis and tegmen; 20, ventral penis; 21, apex tegmen; 22, female tergite VIII; 23, female sternite VIII; 24, ovipositor lateral and apicoventral; 25, Colour ( Figs 2–6) variable irrespective of sex. Darkest formdark-reddish-brown except the following black to blackish-brown: antennomeres 1–2, 6–11, palpi, dorsum of head, disc and anterior of pronotum, prosternum, mesoventrite, metaventrite, anterior and mid coxae and femora (except bases), apical halves ventrites; and the following clear reddish-brown: venter head capsule, mandibles, hypomeral lobes, hind tibiae, ventrite basal halves; the elytra are variegated blackish- and reddish-brown. Palest formclear reddish-brown except the following black to blackish-brown: frons and base of clypeus, palpi, antennomeres 6–11 and apical half 5; prosternal process; and the following dark reddish-brown: anterior pronotum, elytral humeri and patch around scutellum, band across middle metaventrite, apical halves anterior and mid tibiae, sides pygidium, narrow apices ventrites. Elytra variegated clear and dark reddish-brown. Surface sculpture ( Figs 2–6): frons and vertex dull, densely finely punctured and microreticulate, with close adpressed pale setae; with larger punctures and erect setae around inner margin of eye; clypeus microreticulate and finely punctured, with pale adpressed setae; labrum setose but shining; all antennomeres dull, microreticulate and densely setose, but 5–11 more so than 1–4; venter of head dull (punctured, setose and microreticulate) from between temples to mentum, smooth and shining (without sculpture) posterior to this; pronotum dull, densely finely punctured, microreticulate and setose with pale adpressed setae and scattered dark erect setae; prosternum and hypomeron with dense adpressed pale setae; scutellum with dense adpressed pale setae; elytra sculptured as pronotum except shining, without distinct microreticulation, and adpressed setae in small variegated patches of pale cream thicker stae or black thinner setae; pygidium sculptured as elytra, with dense adpressed pale setae, denser along midline; ventrites sculptured as dorsum except slightly smoother and shinier between punctures, dense adpressed pale setae; scattered erect dark setae present on legs; anterior and mid femora densely setose with adpressed pale setae; hind femora with variegated pale and dark adpressed setae, as elytra; anterior and mid tibiae with mixed pale and dark setae, more erect towards apices; hind tibia and tarsi with adpressed pale setae.   Distribution and biology.The species has been collected only in November, at a single site in the Victorian Alps, Mount Buffalo National Park. This is an isolated granite mountain range rising to 1723m. Within the park,  Buburra jeanaewas only collected along the last 200mof walking track above Dixons Falls, in the dominant plateau vegetation classified as “subalpine woodland and open forest” (Anonymous 2001), although the site is complex as it includes streamside communities and rocky areas near the top of a steep slope ( Fig. 1).  Buburra jeanaewas not found at other collecting sites in the park in November 2010and November 2011: the first 1.2kmof the Dixons Falls track, roadside 1kmNE of The Horn, The Castle, Dingo Dell, The Monolith, Crystal Brook Falls, several stops on the entrance road. Adults of  B. jeanaewere first collected by beating flowering  Phebalium squamulosumssp  alpinum(Rutaceae), where they were probably feeding on pollen, but this plant does not have seedpods suitable for the larva. Bruchines were absent from another species of Rutaceaeflowering nearby,  Boronia algida. There were two species of woody Fabaceaeat the locality:  Boissiaea foliosa, which was flowering, and the dwarf shrub  Acacia alpina,which had young seedpods. There were no bruchines on  Boissiaea(only cryptocephalines), but three adults of  Buburrawere collected by beating and sweeping the  Acacia alpinaon the second visit and we suspect that  A. alpinais the larval host of this beetle.   Acacia alpinais widespread in the Australian Alps, from the western border of the Australian Capital Territory to central Victoria ( Costermans 2009; Atlas of Living Australia2012). Visits were made in November 2011to nearby mountain peaks in the Victorian Alps, around Hotham Heights (where  A. alpinaoccurs) and Falls Creek (  A. alpinaabsent), but the weather was poor (continuous rain or southerly wind) and no bruchines were collected. Two of the 10 specimensof  B. jeanaehave partially deformed antennae (each with 2 segments fused on one antenna), and there is also asymmetry in the anastomosed elytral striae, suggesting a genetic problem in this limited and isolated population.   Etymology.Named for CAMR’s mother, in memory of a beautiful day on Mount Buffalo celebrating her birthday.