Orizabus mcclevei, Warner, 2011

Warner, William B., 2011, Review of the genus Orizabus Fairmaire in the United States of America (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae), Insecta Mundi 2011 (174), pp. 1-42 : 3-4

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5160884

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BA87C3-BC43-FF83-F9E9-FC4593EE6CDD

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Orizabus mcclevei
status

 

Key to Orizabus species of the United States of America

1. Clypeal carina usually entire, at most weakly emarginate in anterior view; protibia tridentate (when not worn) in both sexes with apex truncate to transversely rounded ( Fig. 5-7 View Figures 5-7 , 35 View Figures 32-35 ); male genitalia with paramera relatively thin, laterally dentate ( Fig. 20, 21 View Figures 20-25 , 33, 34 View Figures 32-35 ); body usually smaller (12 to 19 mm long), strongly convex, pyriform ........................................................... 2

— Clypeal carina usually obviously bidentate in anterior view (unless worn; Fig. 1, 2 View Figures 1-4 , 12, 13 View Figures 12-15 , 37 View Figures 37-38 ); female protibia tridentate, with apex oblique ( Fig. 10 View Figures 10-11 , 37, 38 View Figures 37-38 ); male with protibia blade-like, edentate ( Fig. 8, 9 View Figures 8-9 , 12 View Figures 12-15 , 36 View Figure 36 ); male genitalia and shape different; body normally longer than 19 mm ............................................................................................................................................ 3

2(1). Clypeal carina apparently apical, in dorsal view often weakly angulate with angle opening anteriorly ( Fig. 6 View Figures 5-7 , 32 View Figures 32-35 ); pronotum with posterior marginal bead more or less effaced and anterior marginal bead not angulately broadened at middle; antennal club as long as or shorter than distance between frontoclypeal tubercle and clypeal carina ( Fig. 6 View Figures 5-7 , 32 View Figures 32-35 ); paramera with lateral tooth just anterior to middle, tooth often appressed ( Fig. 33, 34 View Figures 32-35 ) ................... O. pyriformis (LeConte)

— Clypeal carina obviously subapical, in dorsal view straight ( Fig. 5 View Figures 5-7 ); pronotum with posterior marginal bead complete or only shortly interrupted at middle, anterior marginal bead with posterior edge angularly broadened at middle; antennal club obviously longer than distance between clypeal carina and frontal tubercle ( Fig. 5 View Figures 5-7 ); paramera with lateral tooth at about apical third ( Fig. 20, 21 View Figures 20-25 ) ............................................................................ O. mcclevei new species

3(1). Posterior edge of anterior pronotal bead usually not posteriorly prolonged at midline, in females bead often slightly narrowed at midline ( Fig. 10 View Figures 10-11 ); pronotal disc simply convex, without broad depression in anterior half ( Fig. 8 View Figures 8-9 ); male paramera with apex incised ( Fig. 30 View Figures 26-31 ); length usually less than 22 mm ............................................................................ O. pinalicus new species

— Posterior edge of anterior pronotal bead in male posteriorly prolonged at midline into triangular tubercle ( Fig. 1, 3 View Figures 1-4 , 36 View Figure 36 ), in female usually at least obtusely angulate (bead medially broader; Fig. 37, 38 View Figures 37-38 ); pronotal disc often with broad depression behind tubercle (lacking in most females); male paramera without apical incisure ( Fig. 26-29 View Figures 26-31 ); length usually more than 22 mm but smallest individuals of similar size .......................................................................................... 4

4(3). Clypeus parabolic, with lateral margins straight to weakly convex; clypeal carina obviously subapical, with teeth apices separated by about a dorsal eye width or more ( Fig. 1 View Figures 1-4 , 37 View Figures 37-38 ) .......... ............................................................................................................. O. clunalis (LeConte)

— Clypeus strongly narrowed, subtriangular, with lateral margins straight or weakly concave; clypeal carina apparently apical, with teeth narrowly separated (much less than a dorsal eye width) such that clypeal carina appears cleft ( Fig. 3 View Figures 1-4 , 38 View Figures 37-38 ) ......................... O. ligyroides Horn

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dynastidae

Genus

Orizabus

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF