Cautires Waterhouse, 1879

Jiruskova, Alice, Motyka, Michal & Bocak, Ladislav, 2016, High diversity and endemism in the genus Cautires Waterhouse, 1879 (Coleoptera: Lycidae) from the Malay mountain forests, with the descriptions of fourteen new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 219 (219), pp. 1-29 : 5

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2016.219

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3853409

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B487FE-F035-FFCC-FDF3-A032FE27F9CE

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Cautires Waterhouse, 1879
status

 

Cautires Waterhouse, 1879

Figs 6–20 View Figs 2–20 , 41–78 View Figs 41–58 View Figs 59–78

Cautires Waterhouse, 1879: 36 . Type species: Lycus View in CoL (gen. 22) excellens Waterhouse, 1878 by subsequent designation: Bourgeois 1891: 345.

Bulenides Waterhouse, 1879: 34 . Type species: Lycus View in CoL (gen. 21) obsoletus Waterhouse, 1878 by subsequent designation: Bourgeois 1891: 345.

Bulenides – Dudkova & Bocak 2010: 34.

Diagnosis

Cautires belongs to the subtribe Cautirina in close relationships to Xylobanus ( Lycidae : Metriorrhynchini ), from which it can be distinguished by continuous larval terga and a simple, usually slender phallus with a pair of sickle-shaped thorns in the internal sac ( Sklenarova et al. 2014). Almost all Oriental Cautires have the male antennae flabellate ( Figs 7–20 View Figs 2–20 ), some species have very short lamellae and the antenna is acutely serrate ( Fig. 6 View Figs 2–20 ). The female antennae are always serrate. Each elytron bears four primary and five secondary longitudinal costae ( Figs 41–58 View Figs 41–58 ) and numerous transverse costae connecting them. Cautires species have the lanceolate phallus with membranous internal sac bearing two sickle-shaped thorns at its base ( Figs 59–78 View Figs 59–78 ).

Remark

The revised concept of Cautires merged the genera Bulenides Waterhouse, 1879 and Cautires Waterhouse, 1879 ( Dudkova & Bocak 2010). Later, the terminal position of Bulenides within the Cautires clade was confirmed by subsequent molecular phylogenetic study by Sklenarova et al. (2014). The latter study also redefined the limits of Xylobanus Waterhouse, 1879 , which was originally defined by the absence of secondary costae. Some Xylobanus have elytral costae similar to those of Cautires and adults of these species can be identified using the shape of male genitalia. The species group of C. obsoletus corresponds with the limits of Bulenides and these species differ in absence of lateral ridges in the pronotum.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

SuperFamily

Elateroidea

Family

Lycidae

SubFamily

Lycinae

Tribe

Metriorrhynchini

SubTribe

Cautirina

Loc

Cautires Waterhouse, 1879

Jiruskova, Alice, Motyka, Michal & Bocak, Ladislav 2016
2016
Loc

Bulenides

Dudkova P. & Bocak L. 2010: 34
2010
Loc

Cautires

Bourgeois J. M. 1891: 345
Waterhouse C. O. 1879: 36
1879
Loc

Bulenides

Bourgeois J. M. 1891: 345
Waterhouse C. O. 1879: 34
1879
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