Phanaeus pseudofurcosus Balthasar, 1939
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.37520/aemnp.2021.025 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:85434EFF-F859-4BBF-8AB5-F50B9BA08771 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6303362 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1B2B878A-8A3A-FFAC-FF7C-FDF4EA37FEA7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Phanaeus pseudofurcosus Balthasar, 1939 |
status |
stat. nov. |
Phanaeus pseudofurcosus Balthasar, 1939 View in CoL stat. rev.
( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 , 39 View Figs 32–42 , 51 View Figs 43–54 , 62 View Figs 55–62 )
Phanaeus pseudofurcosus Balthasar, 1939: 244 View in CoL . Type locality: Mexico, without specific locality.
Type material examined. MEXICO: HOLOTYPE: ♂ (originally designated by BALTHASAR 1939, examined from photographs; Fig. 23 View Figs 22–23 ), without specific locality ( NMPC: Mus. Nat. Pragae Inv. 26350).
Non-type material examined. MEXICO: COLIMA: 8 ♂♂ 11 ♀♀, Comala ( IEXA). J AL I SCO. 3 ♀♀, Alista ( IEXA); 1 ♀, Alista, Presa La Tierra ( IEXA); 4 ♂♂ 2 ♀♀, Casimiro Castillo, El Tigre ( IEXA); 2 ♂♂ 1 ♀, Casimiro Castillo, La Calera ( IEXA); 2 ♂♂ 2 ♀♀, Casimiro Castillo, Rancho Piedra Bola ( IEXA); 1♂ 1♀, Cerro de García, San Luis Soyotlán ( VMPM), 1♀, El Corcovado ( IEXA);1♂ 3♀♀, La Manzanilla( GHVM); 2 ♂♂ 2 ♀♀, Sierra de Manantlán ( IEXA).
Diagnosis. Always metallic bright green ( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 , 51 View Figs 43–54 , 62 View Figs 55–62 ), occasionally with red sheen. Sides of pronotal disc granulate ( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 , 51 View Figs 43–54 ). Pronotal disc coarsely granulorugose ( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 , 51 View Figs 43–54 ). Posteromedial process of pronotum produced into narrowed denticle, short and distinctly emarginate apically ( Figs 39 View Figs 32–42 , 51 View Figs 43–54 ). Anteromedial portion of pronotal disc with two strongly developed denticles ( Fig. 51 View Figs 43–54 ). Anterolateral margins of pronotal disc with line of tubercles; tubercles separated, never forming complete ridge ( Fig. 51 View Figs 43–54 ). Posterolateral angles of pronotum much shorter than posteromedial process ( Figs 39 View Figs 32–42 , 51 View Figs 43–54 ). Elytral striae scabriculous, distinctly impressed, superficially punctate ( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 ). Elytral interstriae scabriculous, smooth, superficially punctate, convex ( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 ).
Variability. Minor male. Similar to major males, except for reduction of secondary sexual characters (i.e., cephalic horn, pronotal processes and posterolateral angles). Female. Similar to male, except for head showing trituberculate carina; pronotal sculpture granulate to superficially punctate, smooth or rugose posteriorly; pronotum with anteromedial black macula, and anteromedial carina followed by posterior concavity. The metallic bright green chromatic phase is more common in this species, but specimens with a red sheen are frequent ( Fig. 62 View Figs 55–62 ).
Comments. EDMONDS (1994) erroneously applied the name P. pseudofurcosus ( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 , 39 View Figs 32–42 , 51 View Figs 43–54 , 62 View Figs 55–62 ) to P. balthasari ( Figs 8–9 View Figs 8–9 , 34 View Figs 32–42 , 45 View Figs 43–54 , 56 View Figs 55–62 ), which he considered a subspecies of P. tridens ( Figs 1–5 View Figs 1–5 , 32 View Figs 32–42 , 43 View Figs 43–54 , 55 View Figs 55–62 , 63 View Fig ). Populations actually belonging to P. pseudofurcosus were classified in P. tridens tridens by EDMONDS (1994). Later, ARNAUD (2001, 2002) corrected EDMONDS’ S (1994) mistake in regard to the application of the name P. pseudofurcosus and transferred the Coliman and southern Jaliscan populations from P. tridens tridens to P. furiosus as the subspecies P. furiosus pseudofurcosus . A decade later, EDMONDS & ZÍDEK (2012) disagreed with Arnaud and returned those populations to P. tridens , now treated as a monotypic species (i.e., a taxonomically “homogeneous” species that does not comprise different subspecies according to ZACHOS 2016). Oddly, they said that P. pseudofurcosus was a junior subjective synonym of P. furiosus , not of P. tridens . This, as mentioned above, was likely a mistake and they meant to say that P. pseudofurcosus was a junior synonym of P. tridens .
Unlike previous authors, we conclude that P. pseudofurcosus – i.e., the southern Jaliscan and Coliman populations treated in P. tridens by EDMONDS (1994) and EDMONDS & ZÍDEK (2012) and in P. furiosus by ARNAUD (2001, 2002) – deserves full species status. Phanaeus pseudofurcosus is endemic to the Pacific coast of Mexico along the western Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt and the northern Sierra Madre del Sur in Colima and Jalisco ( Fig. 66 View Fig ), while P. tridens is found in the Gulf of Mexico coast in northern Veracruz ( Fig. 64 View Fig ). Among morphological differences, P. pseudofurcosus shows the posteromedial process of pronotum produced into a narrowed denticle, short and distinctly emarginate apically ( Figs 39 View Figs 32–42 , 51 View Figs 43–54 ; produced into a denticle, distinctly widened laterally, elongate and apically bifurcated in P. tridens , Figs 32 View Figs 32–42 , 43 View Figs 43–54 ).
Differences from P. furiosus include the posteromedial process of pronotum of major males medially narrowed in P. pseudofurcosus ( Figs 39 View Figs 32–42 , 51 View Figs 43–54 ; distinctly thick and not narrowed in P. furiosus , Figs 38 View Figs 32–42 , 50 View Figs 43–54 ) and the posterolateral angles of pronotum distinctly raised in P. pseudofurcosus ( Fig. 39 View Figs 32–42 ; posterolateral angles obsolete in P. furiosus , Fig. 38 View Figs 32–42 ). The green chromatic phases of P. pseudofurcosus ( Figs 22–23 View Figs 22–23 , 51 View Figs 43–54 , 62 View Figs 55–62 ) and P. furiosus ( Figs 19, 21 View Figs 19–21 , 50 View Figs 43–54 ) are similar, but P. pseudofurcosus never shows a completely red ( Fig. 20 View Figs 19–21 ) or dark blue chromatic phase ( Fig. 61 View Figs 55–62 ) as P. furiosus does. Additionally, P. pseudofurcosus shows a green-red chromatic phase not seen in P. furiosus .
Distribution. Mexico: western Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt, northern Sierra Madre del Sur, and the Pacific coast in Colima, Jalisco and Michoacán ( Fig. 66 View Fig ).
NMPC |
National Museum Prague |
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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Phanaeus pseudofurcosus Balthasar, 1939
Moctezuma, Victor, Halffter, Gonzalo & Lizardo, Viridiana 2021 |
Phanaeus pseudofurcosus
BALTHASAR V. 1939: 244 |