Dysanellus Bernhauer, 1911

Chatzimanolis, Stylianos, 2018, A Review of the Genera Dysanellus Bernhauer and Torobus Herman (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylininae: Staphylinini), The Coleopterists Bulletin 72 (2), pp. 279-291 : 280-282

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1649/0010-065X-72.2.279

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:38A07005-9DF6-4468-BBC3-BD16FE6851B4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7037275

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/296D87B5-FFED-2406-FF38-F981FBD6FB4E

treatment provided by

Diego

scientific name

Dysanellus Bernhauer, 1911
status

 

Dysanellus Bernhauer, 1911 View in CoL

( Figs. 1–2 View Figs , 5–6 View Figs , 9 View Figs , 11–13 View Figs View Figs , 16–18 View Figs , 25 View Fig )

Type Species. Dysanellus bruchi View in CoL , fixed by monotypy ( Bernhauer 1911).

Diagnosis. The following character statess in combination can distinguish Dysanellus from all other genera in Xanthopygina : head transverse; antennomeres 1–7, 11 longer than wide; antennomeres 8–10 not transverse; mandibles long; labial palpomere 3 securiform; pronotum with several rows of punctures; and postcoxal process present. Species in Ocyolinus Sharp might be confused with Dysanellus , but the two genera can be easily distinguished by the shape of labial palpomere 3 (securiform in Dysanellus , dilated but not securiform in Ocyolinus ) and presence of a postcoxal process in Dysanellus (absent in Ocyolinus ).

Description. Habitus as in Figs. 1–2 View Figs , body medium to large size, 13.6–17.6 mm in total length. Color of head and pronotum dark metallic brown with purple overtones or metallic green-blue; elytra metallic golden brown or metallic green-blue; mouthparts, mesoscutellum, ventral surface of body, and legs brown; proximal antennomeres brown, distal antennomeres dark orange; abdomen brown with segment VII orange-brown or brown and segment VIII orange-brown.

Head transverse, with medium-sized to large, setose punctures and microsculpture around margin of head; with various punctures and sculpture on epicranium. Clypeus slightly emarginate; anteclypeus not expanded. Eyes small to medium size, occupying 1/2 to 1/3 of lateral margins of head. Ventral surface of head with transverse microsculpture and scattered medium-sized to large punctures; postoccipital suture and ventral basal ridge present; infraorbital ridge short but well delineated; postmandibular ridge present, prominent, extending from near mandible to lateral side of head; gular sutures separated anteriorly, converging medially; nuchal depression prominent, forming well-defined neck; neck with microsculpture and micropunctures.

Antennomeres 1–3 with multiple rows of macrosetae; antennomeres 4 (distally) and 5–11 with macrosetae but also with microtrichiae; antennomeres 1–7 and 11 longer than wide; antennomeres 8–10 longer than wide or subquadrate; antennomere 1 twice as long as antennomere 2; antennomere 3 longer than 2; antennomeres 4–7 subequal in size; antennomeres 8–10 becoming gradually shorter in length, shorter than antennomeres 4–7.

Mouthparts with labrum medially emarginate to its base. Mandibles large, curved, blunt; with or without long medial tooth; mandibles with dorsolateral groove extending from condyle to just above tooth; prostheca setose. Maxilla with galea and lacinia densely setose; maxillary palpi 4-segmented; P 1 small, about 1/3 as long as P 2; P 2 curved, elongate, longer than P 3; P 2 –P 3 with large setae apically; P 4 elongate, longer than P 3. Submentum with 1 long and 1 shorter anterolateral seta in each end; labial palpi 3-segmented; P 1 subequal in length to P 2; both P 1 and P 2 with several long setae; P 3 with distal end securiform.

Pronotum quadrate; lateral margins of pronotum concave in dorsal aspect; pronotum broadest in apical 1/3 and narrower at basal angles. Hypomeron expanded, with transverse microsculpture and few micropunctures; superior and inferior marginal lines of hypomeron separate throughout their lengths; superior line fully visible from above, extending around anterolateral margin of pronotum and contacting inferior line at neck fossa; no portion of dorsum of pronotum visible from below. Pronotum with multiple rows of punctures. Postcoxal process present,elongate.Mesoscutellum prominent, long, with dense polygonal microsculpture and micropunctures; with multiple rows of small punctures. Basisternum with dense polygonal microsculpture and carina; anterior marginal depression present; furcasternum with medial carina pointed vertically; furcasternum without polygonal microsculpture.

Elytral width subequal to pronotal width; with multiple rows of punctures and large setae and sparse microsculpture; elytra shiny due to lack of extensive microsculpture. Hind wings fully developed. Mesoventrite with anterior margin forming “lip”; with dense polygonal microsculpture and few punctures along edges; without median carina. Metaventrite with dense, uniform, medium-sized punctures; metaventral process small, rounded, with v-shaped emargination.

Tarsal segmentation 5-5-5; meso- and metatibiae with multiple rows of spurs. Protarsus enlarged in both sexes, with spatulate setae ventrally; meso- and metatarsi not enlarged. Empodium with 2 small setae.

Abdomen with paired protergal glands; abdomen expanding from segment III to segment V (widest) and then becoming narrower towards segment VIII. Abdominal terga III–V with basal carina; D. bruchi with faint subbasal (arch-like) carina on III–V; D. transverserugosus Bernhauer without subbasal (arch-like) carina on III–V. Segments with dense, uniform, small punctures and microsculpture. Males with secondary sexual structures of sterna VIII–IX (only known for D. transverserugosus ); presence of porose structure on abdominal sternum VII unclear (see Remarks on the description of D. transverserugosus for more details). Lateral tergal sclerites of abdominal segment IX long and straight, covered with long macrosetae.

Male genitalia with aedeagus typical of Xanthopygina ( Figs. 16–18 View Figs ); with median lobe longer and wider than paramere; median lobe with single dorsal tooth; paramere wide and long, not divided into lobes. Paramere with peg setae and short apical setae. Spermatheca not sclerotized.

Synoptic Catalogue. The catalogue presented below follows the format of the catalogue presented in Herman (2001b), and its purpose here is to clarify the status of all taxa assigned to Dysanellus in the past. For the complete catalogue entry details, see Herman (2001b).

Dysanellus Bernhauer 1911: 419 View in CoL (species included: D. bruchi ).

Leptodiastemus Bernhauer 1934: 214 , originally proposed as a subgenus of Dysanellus (species included: D. excellens ), currently in synonymy with Xenopygus Bernhauer ( Chatzimanolis and Caron 2016).

brevipennis Cameron 1933: 347 (Dysanellus) View in CoL , in Algon Sharp as Algon dysanelloides Schillhammer, 1999 (a replacement name for Algon brevipennis ( Cameron, 1933) that was preoccupied).

bruchi Bernhauer 1911: 419 (Dysanellus) View in CoL .

elegans Bernhauer 1915: 145 ( Dysanellus View in CoL , cited as Disanellus), in Algon ( Hammond 1984) .

excellens Bernhauer 1934 View in CoL :(215 Dysanellus , subgenus Leptodiastemus ), in Xenopygus ( Chatzimanolis and Caron 2016 ).

transverserugosus Bernhauer 1921: 175 View in CoL .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

SubFamily

Staphylininae

Tribe

Staphylinini

Loc

Dysanellus Bernhauer, 1911

Chatzimanolis, Stylianos 2018
2018
Loc

brevipennis

Cameron, M. 1933: 347
1933
Loc

transverserugosus

Bernhauer, M. 1921: 175
1921
Loc

Dysanellus

Bernhauer, M. 1915: 145
1915
Loc

Dysanellus Bernhauer 1911: 419

Bernhauer, M. 1934: 214
Bernhauer, M. 1911: 419
1911
Loc

bruchi

Bernhauer, M. 1911: 419
1911
Loc

excellens

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