Paratrichius circularis Ma, 1990
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4763.2.8 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6C3ACEFB-DA76-42EB-8714-BAB0F3B0D859 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3804187 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1A543C3A-C204-FFCC-87F3-6164FDF81B23 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Paratrichius circularis Ma, 1990 |
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Paratrichius circularis Ma, 1990
( Figs. 1–6 View FIGURES 1‒6 , 13–16 View FIGURES 13‒20 , 21-28 View FIGURES 21‒31 , 32-34, 37)
Paratrichius circularis Ma, 1990: 457 , 460 (type locality: Mt. Emeishan, Qingyinge, Sichuan, China), figs. 1–2, ♂, 5 parameres; Ma 1995: 177, text-figs. 150a–b pronotum and elytron; Krajčík 1999: 51; Smetana 2006: 309; Krajčík 2011: 79; Krajčík 2012: 197; Bezděk 2016: 406.
Type material. This species was originally described based on two male specimens ( Ma 1990). The type specimens deposited in IZAS being unavailable for the present work, here we transcribe the label data from the original publication: holotype (♂, IZAS), Mt. Emeishan, Qingyinge, Sichuan, 800–1,000 m, 1957.VII.25, Ke-Ren HUANG leg. ; paratype (♂, IZAS), Mt. Emeishan, Jiulaodong, Sichuan, 1,800 –1,900 m, 1957.VII.31, You-Cai LU leg.
Additional material examined (5♂♂, 4♀♀). CHINA: Sichuan: 1♀ ( MNHN), 1.VIII.[19]31, Omei, China, elv. 2,000; 1♀ ( SYSM), Szechuan, W. China, Omei; 1♂ ( MYNU), 2006.VII, Mt. Emeishan, Leshan, Sichuan; 1♂ ( MYNU), 2014.VIII.24, Qiliping, Mt. Emeishan, Hongya, Chao ZHOU leg.; 1♀ ( MYNU), 2018.VIII.9, Mt. Zhou- gongshan, Ya‘an, Sichuan, alt. 1,600 m, Ji-Shen WANG leg.; 2♂♂ ( MYNU), 2018.VIII.11 ~12, Mt. Zhougongshan, Ya‘an, Sichuan, alt. 1,600 m, Jian-Yue QIU & Hao XU leg.; Chongqing: 2♂♂, 1♀ ( SWU), 1991.VII.26, Mt. Simi- anshan Nature Reserve, Dawopu, Jiangjin, Chongqing, alt. 1,060 m, Jing-Qiu CHENG et al. leg.
Diagnosis. Elongate, with slender legs, color black ( Figs.1–6 View FIGURES 1‒6 ). Antennae fulvous (with slightly darker scapus); antennal club longer in male. Pronotum suboctagonal, slightly wider at the middle of lateral margins, anterior angles slightly pointed; a narrow chalky band along margins; three chalky maculae on disc (“/ | \” shaped), sometimes partly ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 21‒31 ) or totally absent ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 1‒6 ) in female; dorsal surface with dense punctures (punctures larger in female). Elytra regularly covered with sparse yellowish setae ( Fig 23 View FIGURES 21‒31 ); color of the inner area from humeral callus to apicosutural angle gradually from black to orange-brown. Yellowish chalky material on elytra: disc with two sinuate, transverse bands (usually, the anterior one divided into two parts, the posterior one divided into three parts); elytral juxtascutellar area with a narrow band along suture; elytral distal declivity with a crescent narrow transverse band. Pygidium strongly convex in male, while depressed medially in female; surface with concentric wrinkles, covered with pale yellowish chalky material at sides only ( Figs. 14, 16 View FIGURES 13‒20 ). Sides of metasternum covered with chalky material. Abdominal sternite III to VI covered with chalky material (absent in median portion of III to V in female). Protibia bidentate (proximal tooth inconspicuous in male), without terminal spur in male. Parameres broad; apex rounded, slightly arcuate outwards; a short, auriform protuberance laterally protruding from basal part of paramere ( Figs. 27–28 View FIGURES 21‒31 ).
Measurements. Body length 14.2–15.1 mm, width 6.1–7.0 mm.
Distribution. China: Chongqing (new record), Sichuan.
Remarks. The figure numbers of the parameres of Paratrichius circularis and P. rufescens Ma, 1990 are reversed in the original description ( Ma 1990), and this mistake was not corrected in Ma (1995). Ma (1990) claimed that P. circularis was closed to P. elegantulus (Moser, 1902) but differed in the body size, the color of elytra, and the shape of spots on elytra and pygidium. Actually, their coloration patterns are distinctly different: P. elegantulus resembles P. flavipes (Moser, 1901) which usually bears six maculae on elytron, while P. circularis has two chalky bands instead of maculae.
The adults of P. circularis were observed visiting the flowers of Hydrangea sp. (Rosales: Saxifragaceae ) in Mount Zhougongshan, Sichuan ( Figs. 32–34 View FIGURES 32‒36 ) at a high elevation (about 1,600 m). While the label data of several specimens indicated that beetles were caught at an elevation around 1,000 m. These data suggested a broad altitude distribution range for this species.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Cetoniinae |
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Paratrichius circularis Ma, 1990
Mückstein, Petr, Xu, Hao & Qiu, Jian-Yue 2020 |
Paratrichius circularis
Bezdek, A. 2016: 406 |
Krajcik, M. 2012: 197 |
Krajcik, M. 2011: 79 |
Smetana, A. 2006: 309 |
Krajcik, M. 1999: 51 |
Ma, W. Z. 1995: 177 |
Ma, W. Z. 1990: 457 |