Narberdia aridulus Burke, 1976

Soto-Hernández, Macotulio, 2017, New species of Narberdia Burke from México and Central America (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), Zootaxa 4263 (1), pp. 139-152 : 140-141

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4263.1.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EB05A3B0-7A1D-4283-8C0E-014A443EA6B9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6020603

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9E2E879A-B301-FFDD-73A8-F941FE95527F

treatment provided by

Plazi (2017-05-08 10:33:03, last updated 2024-11-27 08:35:33)

scientific name

Narberdia aridulus Burke, 1976
status

 

Narberdia aridulus Burke, 1976 View in CoL

Figure 8 View FIGURES 7 — 8

Narberdia aridulus Burke 1976: 543 View in CoL . O̓ Brien & Wibmer 1982: 111. Alonso-Zarazaga & Lyal 1999: 75. Anderson 2002: 737. Soto-Hernández et al. 2013: 42.

Recognition. Male. Body oblong, length 2.7—4.1 mm; width 1.4—2.1 mm. Rostrum slender, slightly curved, 1.5— 2.1 mm, longer than pronotum along dorsal midline. Antennal scape shorter than length funicular segments and club combined; funicular segment 1 strongly clavate, subiqual in length to 2. Club elongate—oval, as long as length preceding four funicular segments combined. Eyes small with upper edge strongly separated from head. Elytra with intervals 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 slightly wider than other intervals. Mesocoxae separated by distance about ½ width of coxa. Ventrite 5 shorter than 4. Femur with small, triangular tooth; metatibal mucro straight, acute. Male median lobe with subparallel—sided from base to apical 1/5, then narrowed to rounded apex.

Host plant. Bernardia myricifolia (Scheele) S. Watson and B. obovata I. M. Johnst.

Distribution. United States of America (Texas) and México (Nuevo León).

Remarks. Narberdia aridulus appears to be closely related to N. sarukhani , from which it differs by having elytral intervals 1, 3, 5, 7 wider than other intervals, first funicular segment subequal in length to second segment, antennal club oval, more compact, as long as preceding four funicular segments combined, femur with small, triangular tooth, not curvet toward tibiae, and male median lobe subparallel—sided from base to apical 1/5 then rounded to apex.

Alonso-Zarazaga, M. A. & Lyal, C. H. C. (1999) A world catalogue of families and genera of Curculionoidea (Excepting Scolytidae and Platypodidae). EntomoPraxis S. C. P., Barcelona, 316 pp.

Anderson, R. S. (2002) Family 131. Curculionidae Latreille 1802. In: Arnett, R. H. Jr., Thomas, M. C., Skelley P. E. & Frank, H. J. (Eds.), American Beetles. Uol. II. Polyphaga: Scarabaeoidea through Curculionoidea. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp. 722 - 806.

O, Brien, C. W. & Wibmer, G. J. (1982) Annotated checklist of the weevils (Curculionidae sensu lato) of North America, Central America, and the West Indies (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). Memoirs of the American Entomological Institute, 34, i-ix + 1 - 563.

Soto-Hernandez, M., Jones, R. W. & Reyes-Castillo, P. (2013) A key to the Mexican and Central American genera of Anthonomini (Curculionidae, Curculioninae). Zookeys, 260, 31 - 47.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 7 — 8. Narberdia species, habitus, lateral views, scale bars 0.5 mm. 7) N. ramuvei, female; and 8) N. aridulus, female.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Curculionidae

Genus

Narberdia