Mantichorula Reitter, 1889

Chigray, Svetlana N., Nabozhenko, Maxim V., Chigray, Ivan A. & Abakumov, Evgeny V., 2022, A revision of the Palaearctic Pimeliini (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae): a comparative analysis and systematic position of Eastern European and Asian taxa with dorso-lateral eyes, European Journal of Taxonomy 809, pp. 1-71 : 31-32

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2022.809.1719

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A754493E-5466-4479-B515-AABEDDE09D93

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6449880

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC8666-5574-FFA6-507C-BF5EFC32FE06

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Mantichorula Reitter, 1889
status

 

Genus Mantichorula Reitter, 1889

Figs 4C–D View Fig , 11E–F View Fig , 12A–B View Fig , 19 View Fig , 23E View Fig , 24C View Fig , 26D View Fig , 27F–G View Fig

Mantichorula Reitter, 1889: 695 .

Mantichorula – Reitter 1893: 246. — Semenov 1893: 263. — Semenov-Tjan-Shansky 1907: 179. — Schuster 1935: 27. — Medvedev 1990: 125. — Ren & Yu 1999: 67, 74, 76–78, figs 23, 30– 31. — Ren & Dong 2001: 297.

Type species

Mantichorula semenowi Reitter, 1889 , by monotypy.

Species included

M. semenowi Reitter, 1889 ; М. grandis Semenov, 1893 ; M. mongolica Schuster, 1940 .

Diagnosis

Body black, wide, dorsoventrally flattened, disc-shaped, without dense pubescence dorsally, only some parts of pronotum and head with setae, elytra dorsally and laterally with very short, fine, sparse spines ( Fig. 4C–D View Fig ) and sometimes with small area of setation along apical part of suture. Body length 10– 20 mm. Eyes large, circular, moderately convex dorsally.

Pronotum strongly transverse (more than 2 × as wide as long). Anterolateral angles weakly projecting. Base of pronotum strongly widely emarginated, and posterolateral angles deeply protruding and impressed into elytral base ( Figs 4C View Fig , 11E View Fig ). Disc of pronotum with one medial and two lateral longitudinal stripes of recumbent, moderately dense, short setae and coarse, semispherical tubercles on lateral sides ( Fig. 11E–F View Fig ); base widely, sharply depressed and flattened. Prosternum before procoxae near 2× shorter

than longitudinal diameter of one procoxa. Prosternal process very large and broad, raised between procoxae, strongly protruding beyond procoxae, extending to mesoventrite ( Fig. 4D View Fig ).

Scutellar shield not concealed by base of pronotum, triangular. Elytra short, oval, with ( Fig. 11E View Fig ) or without depressions around scutellar shield, apical part abducted. Elytra with double humeral rib. Ventral side of body covered with short, dense setae. Metaventrite much shorter, than mesoventrite. Intercoxal process 1.2–1.24 × as wide as one metacoxa ( Fig. 4D View Fig ).

Protrochanters and inner side of profemora covered with very long, dense setae. Femora robust, weakly curved outward. All tibiae weakly curved outward. Protibiae strongly gradually widened to apex, triangular, flattened, without projecting process at apex of outer margin, with dense, short, strong spines, but with longer and finer spines and dense, long setae along lateral margins (more recumbent on inner side) ( Figs 26D View Fig , 27F–G View Fig ); strong spines denser at apex of outer margin. Meso- and metatibiae with similar structures, but not dorsoventrally flattened and widened, often additionally covered with cream coloured scales. Protibial terminal spurs large and widened, not lanceolate ( Fig. 27F–G View Fig ), subequal in length, extending to base of protarsomere 5. Meso- and metatibial terminal spurs different in length, inner tibial terminal spurs longer than outer ones, extending to protarsomere 3 and half length of metatarsomere 1 subsequently. Protarsi with long, recumbent spines dorsally and ventrally and short setae laterally; meso- and metatarsi flattened from sides, with very dense, long setae on dorsal side.

Male genitalia ( Fig. 19A, H View Fig ) Inner sternite VIII ( Fig. 19H View Fig ) sclerotized on margins and membranous in middle, densely pubescent;

posterior margin deeply emarginated medially; gland absent (at least, not observed). Spiculum gastrale ( Fig. 19G View Fig ) with roundly connected rods and rounded derivatives of inner sternite IX with short pubescence terminally.

Tegmen of aedeagus ( Fig. 19A–C View Fig ) elongate, slender, with subequal basal and apical pieces. Basal piece weakly wider than apical piece, both fusiform.Apical piece glabrous, weakly curved, ventral aphophyses not expressed, dorsal apophyses short, merged in triangular plate. Basal piece with sub-acutely angulate apex. Median lobe acutely angulate apically, with narrow baculi and wide, membranous area at middle, slightly bifurcated at base ( Fig. 19D–F View Fig ).

Female genitalia

Spiculum ventrale with elongate common stem and narrow rods ( Fig. 19I View Fig ). Sternite VIII narrow, strongly transverse, with moderately short apophyses.

Ovipositor ( Fig. 19J–L View Fig ) is very similar to that in Przewalskia , but differs in the absence of sclerotization on vulva, apical lobes turned to dorsal side and widely weakly rounded proctiger.

Female genital ducts ( Fig. 23E View Fig )

Vagina elongated, tube-shaped, not widened, with short primary bursa copulatrix at apex. Spermatheca absent. Accessory gland of spermatheca very short, tube-shaped, not modified, without constrictions.

Distribution

Mongolia, China (Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Gansu, Shanxi provinces).

Notes

Schuster (1940) believed that all three species of Mantichorula should be regarded as valid, and that M. grandis distinctly differs from M. semenowi and M. mongolica because of their short antennae, which do not extend far beyond the base of the pronotum. Medvedev (1990) interpreted the genus Mantichorula as monotypic. We studied the type series of M. grandis and discovered that this species and some specimens standing as M. semenowi in the ZIN collection do indeed have shorter antennomeres. Studies of the type specimens of M. semenowi and M. mongolica , as well as a detailed examination of male and female genitalia, are necessary to revise this genus.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Tenebrionidae

Loc

Mantichorula Reitter, 1889

Chigray, Svetlana N., Nabozhenko, Maxim V., Chigray, Ivan A. & Abakumov, Evgeny V. 2022
2022
Loc

Mantichorula

Ren G. - D. & Dong S. 2001: 297
Ren G. - D. & Yu Y. 1999: 67
Medvedev G. S. 1990: 125
Schuster A. 1935: 27
Semenov-Tjan-Shansky A. P. 1907: 179
Reitter E. 1893: 246
Semenov A. P. 1893: 263
1893
Loc

Mantichorula Reitter, 1889: 695

Reitter E. 1889: 695
1889
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