Badelina pygidialis ( Thomson, 1878 )

Ratcliffe, Brett C., 2014, A Review Of The Neotropical Genera Badelina Thomson, 1880, Balsameda Thomson, 1880, Guatemalica Neervoort Van De Poll, 1886, And Heterocotinis Martínez, 1948 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Cetoniinae: Gymnetini), The Coleopterists Bulletin 68 (2), pp. 241-262 : 245-247

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1649/0010-065x-68.2.241

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DC9113-632C-516B-50DA-FAE8F483FF5B

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Badelina pygidialis ( Thomson, 1878 )
status

 

Badelina pygidialis ( Thomson, 1878) ( Figs. 5–8 View Figs )

Gymnetis pygidialis Thomson 1878: 12 (original combination). Holotype male at MNHN, examined. Type locality: “ Brazil ”.

Description. Length 22.2–29.1 mm; width across humeri 13.8–17.6 mm. Color reddish brown to yellowish brown with black punctures on dorsal surface; head, pronotum, and elytra velutinous. Venter an enamel yellowish brown with black punctures. Head: Surface with punctures small, sparse. Clypeus with apex subtruncate to truncate, apex weakly reflexed. Eyes small, interocular width 6.0–6.5 transverse eye diameters. Antenna with 10 antennomeres, club distinctly longer than antennomeres 2–7 in both sexes. Pronotum: Surface with punctures small to large, ocellate, sparse. Sides with slender marginal bead, bead usually not reaching anterior or posterior angles. Elytra: Surface with punctures small to mostly large, sparse, ocellate, becoming crescent shaped behind weak apical umbones. Apices at suture subacutely produced. Pygidium: Surface in both sexes with transverse, vermiform strigae, becoming sparsely punctate in apical fourth to one-third, setigerous; setae short, dense, tawny. In oblique view, with feeble, longitudinal ridge at center; in lateral view, profile in both sexes nearly flat in basal two-thirds, convex in apical third. Venter: Setae long, brown and black mixed. Mesometasternal process, in lateral view, protuberant, subparallel to ventral axis of body ( Fig. 6 View Figs ), rounded in ventral view. Abdominal ventrites 1–5 in both sexes nearly smooth in central third, lateral thirds with sparse, moderately large, crescent-shaped punctures. Legs: Protibia slender, weakly tridentate in both sexes. Parameres ( Figs. 7–8 View Figs ): Form subrectangular in caudal view; apices broadly lanceolate, curving inwards, and with subapical, stout, spine-like tooth on lateral edge.

Distribution. Badelina pygidialis is known primarily from the Atlantic coastal forest region of southeastern Brazil. The single Goiás record is further inland to the west.

Locality Records. 67 specimens from ADMC, BCRC, BMNH, CASC, CMNH, DEIC, FMNH, MCZC, MGFT, MHNG, MNHN, MZSP, RMNH, UFRJ, USNM, and ZMHU. BRAZIL (67). ESPIRITO SANTO (28) : Rio Bonito , No data. GOIÁS (1) : Jatahy. RIO DE JANEIRO (8) : Mendez, No data. NO DATA (30).

Temporal Distribution. March (4). Nearly all of the specimens available for study are from old collections and have little or no collecting data.

Diagnosis. Badelina pygidialis is distinguished by its velutinous, brown pronotum and elytra, each with small, black spots ( Fig. 5 View Figs ), whereas B. aterrima is completely black on the pronotum and elytra ( Fig. 1 View Figs ). I questioned whether B. aterrima was merely a melanistic form of B. pygidialis , but I never found any intergrades of body color or pattern as is usually seen in other gymnetine species that have melanistic morphs. I completely immersed several specimens of B. aterrima in ethanol for a lengthy period to see if there might be any underlying color or spot pattern typical of B. pygidialis that would become apparent upon being wetted, but there was nothing other than black.

Although the parameres of B. aterrima and B. pygidialis are similar ( Figs. 3–4 View Figs and 7–8 View Figs ), they do differ. In lateral view, the length of the basal piece is different between the two species. In B. pygidialis , the basal piece is proportionately longer, as measured against the length of the parameres, than in B. aterrima ( Figs. 8 View Figs and 4 View Figs ). And in caudal view, the subapical spine on each paramere is more slender in B. pygidialis than the much broader spine seen in B. aterrima ( Figs. 7 View Figs and 3 View Figs ). Because of the differences in the genitalia and the totally disparate color forms that have no intergrades, I maintain B. pygidialis and B. aterrima as two separate species.

Badelina pygidialis is remarkably similar to Gymnetis punctipennis Burmeister ( Fig. 9 View Fig ) in form of the parameres and overall gestalt (velutinous brown pronotum and elytra with black spots), but B. pygidialis is a larger and more robust beetle, has the black spots on the elytra subequally spaced, and its mesometasternal process is, in lateral view, slender and projecting forwards and only slightly downwards. In G. punctipennis , the body form is smaller and more slender, the spots on the elytra are larger and usually coalesce into large spots behind the humerus and especially in front of each apical umbone, and the mesometasternal process is, in lateral view, large, subrectangular, and projecting downwards at about a 40° angle.

Natural History. Nothing is known of the life history of these beetles.

BCRC

Bioresource Collection and Research Center

CMNH

The Cleveland Museum of Natural History

FMNH

Field Museum of Natural History

MGFT

Museum G. Frey

MHNG

Museum d'Histoire Naturelle

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

MZSP

Sao Paulo, Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

UFRJ

Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

ZMHU

Zoologisches Museum der Humboldt Universitaet

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cetoniidae

Genus

Badelina

Loc

Badelina pygidialis ( Thomson, 1878 )

Ratcliffe, Brett C. 2014
2014
Loc

Gymnetis pygidialis

Thomson 1878: 12
1878
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