Tessaromma Newman, 1840

Jin, Mengjie, Ślipiński, Adam, Keyzer, Roger De & Pang, Hong, 2017, Review of Australian genera Tessaromma Newman and Phlyctaenodes Newman with description of a new genus and species (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae: Phlyctaenodini), Zootaxa 4277 (1), pp. 67-85 : 74-76

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4277.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:75C87DF2-0749-4B30-BB4E-9CD23BB26F7B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6015106

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C923A732-C275-3426-FF6B-48D4FCFCFE52

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tessaromma Newman
status

 

Tessaromma Newman View in CoL

( Figures 3 View FIGURE 3 , 4 View FIGURE 4 M–Y)

Tessaromma Newman, 1840: 20 View in CoL . Type species by monotypy, Tessaromma undatum Newman, 1840 View in CoL .

Meropachys Hope, 1841: 54 View in CoL . Type species by subsequent designation, McKeown 1947: 54, Meropachys tristis Hope, 1841 .

Description. Length 6–21 mm. Body slender, brown to dark brown with distinct marble-like or wavy setose pattern on elytra. Vestiture double of sparse stiff bristles and dense adpressed setae. Head with weak frontoclypeal suture; eyes coarsely facetted, completely divided into, two broadly separated parts. Antenna 11-segmented; scape pear-shaped, strongly expanded apically, concave ventrally; pedicel transverse, distinctively shorter than scape; antennomere 4 slightly shorter than antennomeres 3 or 5. Pronotum with sharp lateral projections, and at least weakly developed tubercles on pronotal disc (sometimes hardly visible). Prosternal process narrow, weakly expanded posteriorly; Mesoventral process broad and meeting metaventrite. Elytra rounded or obliquely truncate apically; elytral surface with at least three rows of granules each bearing apical puncture and bristle. Procoxa with transverse plate covering part of trochanter; femora strongly clavate, without ventral setose brushes; protibia with 2 apical spines.

Remarks. There are only four genera of Australian Cerambycidae with eyes completely divided into two parts: Skeletodes Newman , Phalota Pascoe, Wattlemoria Slipinski & Escalona and Tessaromma . Skeletodes differs from Tessaromma by having long and slender legs and an apical spine on antennomere 3. Tessaromma can be separated from the other two genera by having femora strongly pedunculate-clavate, and dorsum with dense golden adpressed pubescence forming wavy pattern.

Tessaromma setosa McKeown, 1942 ( Figs 2A–2C View FIGURE 2 ) described from Queensland, Yarraman ( QMB) does not belong to Phlyctaenodini having the sunken type of antennal articulation, the procoxal cavities without lateral extensions, the protrochantin not visible externally and the mesocoxal cavities closed to mesepimeron. In the generic key to Australian Cerambycinae ( Slipinski & Escalona 2016) it will key to Ectinope Pascoe sharing elongate body, clavate femora, prothorax without lateral projections and the procoxal cavities externally open. We are transferring that species to that genus as Ectinope setosus (McKeown) comb. nov. It differs from the single, type species E. spinicollis Pascoe by its superior size (16 mm as compared to 8–9 mm), broader upper eye lobe and the elytral surfaces bearing rows of setigerous shiny punctures.

QMB

Queensland Museum, Brisbane

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cerambycidae

Tribe

Phlyctaenodini

Loc

Tessaromma Newman

Jin, Mengjie, Ślipiński, Adam, Keyzer, Roger De & Pang, Hong 2017
2017
Loc

Meropachys

Hope 1841: 54
1841
Loc

Meropachys tristis

Hope 1841
1841
Loc

Tessaromma

Newman 1840: 20
1840
Loc

Tessaromma undatum Newman, 1840

Newman. G 1840
1840
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