Odontocorynus falsus (LeConte)

Prena, Jens, 2008, Review ofOdontocorynusSchönherr (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Baridinae) with Descriptions of Four New Species, The Coleopterists Bulletin 62 (2), pp. 243-277 : 243-277

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1649/1074.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C697026C-42EB-4DF9-B96D-465E2870CB95

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EDE927-D836-8B46-C0E1-FE125BCBFE0D

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Odontocorynus falsus (LeConte)
status

 

Odontocorynus falsus (LeConte) View in CoL

( Fig. 33 View Figs )

Centrinus falsus LeConte 1876: 315 . Lectotype male, designated here, with red disk, labeled: ‘‘C./ falsus/ LeC.’’, ‘‘Horn Coll/ 8938’’, ‘‘ LECTOTYPUS / Centrinus / falsus LeConte / Prena design. 2007’’ (MCZ). Paralectotype 1, female, with disk and label: ‘‘C./ falsus/ Horn’’, ‘‘LeConte/ Collection’’ (MCZ).

Geraeus falsus . Leng (1920).

Centrinaspis falsa . Casey (1920).

Centrinus (Odontocorynus) falsus . Wagener Green (1920).

Odontocorynus falsus . O’Brien & Wibmer (1982).

Nicentrus falsus . Kuschel (1983); species erroneously attributed to Casey.

Recognition. In the United States, this is the only Odontocorynus with a slender body shape; it is part of a complex that is more diverse in Mexico (see also Wagener Green 1920). Male O. falsus are recognized easily by the pronotal protuberance on the anterolateral margin, which is absent in all congeners in the US. Female O. falsus were confused frequently with Nicentrus and Linogeraeus in collections. They can be recognized by the laterally costate prosternal channel, which in the US otherwise occurs only in Nicentrus grossulus , a species with a shorter rostrum and bulky pronotum. The Mexican O. procerus is very similar in both sexes, and can be distinguished by character states of the antenna.

Distribution. Eastern and central United States ( Fig. 33 View Figs ).

Type locality. United States, site not specified .

Material examined. UNITED STATES: Alabama ( JPPC 1 , USNM 5 View Materials ) , Arkansas ( TAMU 2 ) , Connecticut ( AMNH 2 View Materials , CWOB 3 ) , District of Columbia ( USNM 4 View Materials ) , Georgia ( CWOB 1 ) , Indiana ( CWOB 9 , JPPC 2 , USNM 1 View Materials ) , Iowa ( CWOB 1 , JPPC 2 , USNM 1 View Materials ) , Kansas ( USNM 5 View Materials ) , Maryland ( CNCI 5 View Materials , JPPC 2 , USNM 13 View Materials ) , Massachusetts ( AMNH 1 View Materials , USNM 1 View Materials ) , Missouri ( CNCI 1 View Materials , JPPC 2 , TAMU 3 ) , New Hampshire ( AMNH 1 View Materials ) , New York ( AMNH 5 View Materials , USNM 1 View Materials ) , North Carolina ( AMNH 2 View Materials , CMNC 2 , CWOB 4 , TAMU 2 ) , Oklahoma ( CWOB 8 , JPPC 4 , TAMU 23 ) , Pennsylvania ( AMNH 1 View Materials , USNM 2 View Materials ; Wagener Green 1920) , South Carolina ( JCCC 7 ) , Tennessee ( CWOB 1 ) , Texas ( JPPC 2 , TAMU 5 ) , Virginia ( USNM 2 View Materials ) , West Virginia ( CMNC 3 , CWOB 3 , JPPC 2 ) , Wisconsin ( CWOB 1 ) ; without locality data ( MCZ 3 View Materials ) . Total 151 specimens.

Temporal occurrence. June [1 date], August to October.

Plant association. Solidago sp. (3X).

Nomenclatural notes. The description states that the type series included four specimens, males and females, from the middle and southern United States. The two specimens mentioned above under type material are mounted exactly the same way and may have been collected together. I was unable to recognize the remaining two specimens of the original series. Possible candidates are one

256 specimen labeled ‘‘N.Y’’, Coll/ MLLinell’’, ‘‘Centrin./ falsus/LeC.’’ ( USNM), five specimens with the first labeled ‘‘Topeka Ks/ Popenoe.’’, ‘‘225’’, ‘‘LeConte/ det.’’, ‘‘ Centrinus / falsus/ LeC./ 8938’’ ( USNM), one specimen labeled ‘‘Horn Coll/ H’’, ‘‘79.’’ ( MCZ), and two specimens in the Casey Collection labeled ‘‘Ala’’ and ‘‘Ia’’ ( USNM). These are the only correct identifications I have seen, except for those by Wagener Green (1920) and O’Brien & Wibmer (1982) who placed the species in Odontocorynus . Because not all syntypes could be recognized and LeConte and Horn attribute the authorship to each other, I here designate the male specimen of the Horn Collection as lectotype, with the purpose of promoting stability of the name.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

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