Acoptus LeConte, 1876: 264

Anzaldo, Salvatore S., 2017, Review of the genera of Conoderinae (Coleoptera, Curculionidae) from North America, Central America, and the Caribbean, ZooKeys 683, pp. 51-138 : 68

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.683.12080

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D7FD86CA-6374-480C-821B-A10C26CDDF32

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/96A8ED20-6378-B7B7-B81B-50AB80F6F576

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scientific name

Acoptus LeConte, 1876: 264
status

 

Acoptus LeConte, 1876: 264 Figs 5 View Figures 1–9 , 24 View Figures 19–36 , 42 View Figures 37–45 , 73 View Figures 71–74

= Homogaster Provancher, 1877: 530 [Syn.: Blackwelder and Blackwelder 1948: 48]. Type species: Homogaster quebecensis Provancher, 1877 [by monotypy].

Type species.

Acoptus suturalis LeConte, 1876 [by monotypy].

Gender.

Masculine.

Diagnosis.

Acoptus can be easily recognized from the rest of the conoderines treated here by the following characteristics: the inner margin of eyes towards the top has a large lanceolate space (Fig. 42 View Figures 37–45 ) and the eyes are nearly touching above and below the lanceolate space, the mandibles are somewhat falcate and are in contact only at the apex (visible in Fig. 5 View Figures 1–9 ), and the tibial apex distally has the dorsal margin dilated and premucro absent from all tibiae (Fig. 24 View Figures 19–36 ). The relatively forward facing eyes that do not extend much on lateral portions of head (genae large), the first funicular article that is longer than the second, the unmodified mesoventrite, the ventrally toothed and non-carinate metafemora, the unarmed femoral apices, the small and non-ascending mesopleura, the absent sclerolepidia, and the abdominal ventrites that are not rapidly ascending additionally help diagnose the genus and in combination separate it from all Lechriopini and other New World Conoderinae .

Notes.

The species Homogaster quebecensis was first placed in synonymy with Piazurus subfasciatus LeConte, 1876 (= Lechriops subfasciatus (LeConte)) by LeConte (1880: xii), where it remained in catalogs until Blackwelder and Blackwelder (1948: 48) listed it in synonymy with Acoptus suturalis . Provancher’s description agrees with that of Acoptus .

Phylogenetic relationships.

In keys to North American genera, Acoptus is always separated from the rest of the North American genera along with Psomus by the flat abdominal ventrites (e.g. Hespenheide 2002: 755). Casey (1892: 458, 1897: 666) suggested a relationship to Psomus on these grounds, but this similarity only suggests they are both aberrant in their placement in the Lechriopini - they are otherwise very different in appearance, as also noted by Casey (1892: 458). LeConte (1876: 264) originally distinguished his genus from Copturus (which, with the geographic scope and time of publication of the key included only species currently placed in Cylindrocopturus and Eulechriops ) and Zygops by the nearly flat abdominal ventrites and elongate first funicular article. Provancher (1877: 530), apparently independently, separated his genus Homogaster from Zygops and Copturus (as well as the South American Timorus ) for the same reasons. A phylogeny by Davis (2014) recovered Acoptus as closer to the Old World genus Mecopus ( Conoderinae : Mecopini ) than any of the included New World conoderines, a result consistent with the new placement of the genus (the study did not include Othippiini ).

Host associations.

Mentions in the literature of host plants include Fagus L. ( Fagaceae Dumort) ( Chittenden 1890: 171), Ulmus americana L. ( Ulmaceae Mirb.) ( Hoffman 1942: 12) and Juglans cinerea L. ( Juglandaceae DC. ex Perleb) ( Halik and Bergdahl 2002). Sleeper (1963: 215) additionally reports Quercus L. ( Fagaceae ), Cercis canadensis L. ( Fabaceae Lindl.), Carya Nutt. ( Juglandaceae ), and Platanus occidentalis L. ( Platanaceae T. Lestib.). Adults of A. suturalis have been implicated as vectors of the chestnut blight fungus, Cryphonectria parasitica (Murrill) Barr ( Pakaluk and Anagnostakis 1977) and the butternut canker fungus, Sirococcus clavigignenti-juglandacearum Nair, Kostichka & Kuntz ( Halik and Bergdahl 2002).

Described species.

One.

Range.

Eastern Canada, Eastern U.S.A., extreme northeastern Mexico ( Sleeper 1963: 215). Specimens have not been observed from Mexico or even Texas to confirm Sleeper’s range extension; recently the genus was reported for the first time from Arkansas ( Skvarla et al. 2015).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Curculionidae

Loc

Acoptus LeConte, 1876: 264

Anzaldo, Salvatore S. 2017
2017
Loc

Homogaster quebecensis

Provancher 1877
1877