Cybocephalus geoffreysmithi, T. R. Smith in T. R. Smith & Cave, 2007

Smith, Trevor Randall, 2022, Review of the Cybocephalidae (Coleoptera) of North America and the West Indies with descriptions of two new species of Cybocephalus Erichson, Insecta Mundi 2022 (950), pp. 1-35 : 16

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7300614

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2425983D-0398-45D4-A728-3BF5991D07BE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7300730

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87DA-FFC6-AE47-FF02-327EFDDD4AB8

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Cybocephalus geoffreysmithi
status

 

Cybocephalus geoffreysmithi View in CoL T. R. Smith

( Fig. 71–80 View Figures 71–80 )

Cybocephalus geoffreysmithi View in CoL T. R. Smith in Smith and Cave 2007a: 168–169.

Cybocephalus caribaeus View in CoL T. R. Smith in Smith and Cave 2007a: 167–168; new synonymy.

Distribution. West Indies ( Curaçao, Jamaica), Central America ( Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama), South America ( Colombia, Trinidad, Venezuela).

Hosts. Dactylopiidae : Dactylopius sp. ; Diaspididae : Diaspis boisduvalii Signoret.

Remarks. In the West Indies and Trinidad, specimens were collected in urban and natural areas, often associated with Stachytarpheta sp. (Verbenaceae) . In Central and South America, specimens were collected on cultivated fruit crops such as papaya ( Carica papaya L.), cassava ( Manihot esculenta Crantz ) and banana ( Musa sp. ), undoubtedly feeding on the associated scale insects. Interestingly, this species has been collected in various traps, including flight intercept yellow pan traps in coastal desert scrub habitats of Cura çao, black light/mercury vapor traps in Guatemala and castor oil traps in Venezuela. A series of over 50 specimens were collected in Honduras feeding on Dactylopius sp. (Datcylopiidae) , infesting Opuntia sp. (Cactaceae) .

Taxonomy. Cybocephalus caribaeus T. R. Smith is treated herein as a synonym of C. geoffreysmithi . A large series of this species from Honduras was found after the original descriptions of both species were published ( Smith and Cave 2007a). Additional specimens from Guatemala and Panama were also examined and compared to the holotypes of both species. After a detailed examination of all material, it is clear that these two species are, in fact, one. There is some natural variation in the male genitalia that led to the original separation of the two species; however, the basic structure of the male genitalia is identical, and no differences can be found in the shape of the legs and antennae. The most distinctive characteristic of this species is the notched lateral margins of the median lobe ( Fig. 75, 76 View Figures 71–80 ). This characteristic is not found in any other species of Cybocephalus in the Western Hemisphere. The apical margin of the basal plate (originally used to separate the two species) varies from rounded, slightly flattened, or slightly emarginate. However, considering that all other morphological aspects of the two are identical, this is regarded as intraspecific variation. Based on these characters, C. caribaeus should be treated as a synonym of C. geoffreysmithi .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cybocephalidae

Genus

Cybocephalus

Loc

Cybocephalus geoffreysmithi

Smith, Trevor Randall 2022
2022
Loc

Cybocephalus geoffreysmithi

Smith TR & Cave RD 2007: 168
2007
Loc

Cybocephalus caribaeus

Smith TR & Cave RD 2007: 167
2007
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