Megalinus Mulsant & Rey, 1877
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.176738 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1C57150F-8D4C-4B22-AF4B-8F1FBF614930 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6244482 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0D308E1E-FFA2-FF99-FF39-F997FD20FAF7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Megalinus Mulsant & Rey, 1877 |
status |
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The genus Megalinus Mulsant & Rey, 1877 View in CoL
Xantholinus (Megalinus) Mulsant & Rey, 1877: 261 View in CoL .
Leptophallus Coiffait, 1956a: 59 [preocc.]; syn. n.
Leptophius Coiffait, 1983: 345 [replacement name for Leptophallus Coiffait, 1956 ]; syn. n.
Comment. Leptophallus was originally described as a subgenus of Xantholinus to include Xantholinus relucens sensu Kraatz (1857) (type species by original designation and later to be identified as X. flavocinctus Hochhuth, 1849 ) and X. elianae Jarrige, 1941 , and distinguished from other subgenera by the small and slen- der aedeagus without distinct spines ( Coiffait 1956a). Subsequently, two additional species were attributed to the subgenus, X. anatolicus Coiffait, 1965 from Turkey and X. minutus Coiffait, 1962 from Algeria ( Coiffait 1972). The preoccupied name Leptophallus was replaced with Leptophiu s by Coiffait (1983).
Megalinus View in CoL , too, was originally described as a subgenus of Xantholinus View in CoL to include the type species (by monotypy) Xantholinus glabratus ( Gravenhorst, 1802) and separated from other subgenera by the shape of the mesosternal process ( Mulsant & Rey 1877). Nearly a century later, Coiffait (1972) elevated Megalinus View in CoL to the rank of genus—at that time including three species, M. glabratus , M. oasis ( Steel, 1948) View in CoL , and M. scutellaris ( Fauvel, 1900) View in CoL —stating that it was distinguished from Xantholinus View in CoL by the modified genital segments (lateral tergal sclerites IX extending clearly beyond posterior margin of the short and weakly sclerotised tergite X).
Emphasising the evident modifications of the genital segment and the particular morphology of the aedeagus of Xantholinus flavocinctus, Bordoni (1985) View in CoL recognised Leptophius as a distinct genus. Arguing that in X. minutus View in CoL and X. anatolicus the genital segments were of the typical Xantholinus View in CoL condition, he attributed these two species to the new subgenus Neoleptophallus . In addition, he described the genus Lemiganus View in CoL to include the fourth species previously in Leptophius , X. elianae View in CoL , stating that, despite obvious similarities, it was not possible to attribute it to Megalinus View in CoL owing to the less deep median incision of the labrum, the different morphology of the aedeagus (small and slender, distally with long "lobi laterali", sclerotised internal structures absent), and the somewhat different shape and chaetotaxy of the sclerites of the genital segments (tergites IX and X, sternite IX).
A comparison of Leptophius flavocinctus , Megalinus glabratus , and Megalinus scutellaris revealed, however, that they are doubtlessly congeneric. True, there are differences in the morphology of the genital sements—the lateral tergal sclerites IX are somewhat shorter and slightly differently shaped in L. flavocinctus than in M. glabratus and M. scutellaris—, but they are clearly autapomorphic and the principle morphology is highly similar. Also, what Bordoni (1985) refers to as "lobi laterali" in Leptophius (and Lemiganus ) is clearly not homologous to the "lobi laterali" in Xantholinus . The conspicuous distal sclerotised structure of the aedeagus in Megalinus , Leptophius , and Lemiganus represents an evident synapomorphy; for comparison see figure 5 (aedeagus of Lepidophallus denticulatus , now a synonym of Megalinus scutellaris ) in Bordoni (2004), figure 10 ( Leptophius flavocinctus ) in Bordoni (1985), and figure 16 ( Lemiganus elianae ) in Bordoni (1985). The reduced size and internal structures of the aedeagus of L. flavocinctus must be regarded as an autapomorphy (known also from other genera of Xantholinini ) and is no convincing argument to consider Leptophius a distinct genus. In consequence, Leptophius is here placed in the synonymy of the senior name Megalinus . It seems most likely that Lemiganus , too, will eventually have to be synonymised with Megalinus , but so far I have not been able to examine a male of L. elianae .
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Staphylininae |
Tribe |
Xantholinini |
Megalinus Mulsant & Rey, 1877
Assing, Volker 2007 |
Leptophius
Coiffait 1983: 345 |
Leptophallus
Coiffait 1956: 59 |
Xantholinus (Megalinus)
Mulsant 1877: 261 |