Helophorus (Lihelophorus), Zaitzev, 1908

Angus, Robert B., Jia, Fenglong, Chen, Zhen-ning, Zhang, Ying, Vondráček, Dominik, Fikáček, Martin & Sw, London, 2016, Taxonomy, larval morphology and cytogenetics of Lihelophorus, the Tibetan endemic subgenus of Helophorus (Coleoptera: Hydrophiloidea), Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae 56 (1), pp. 109-148 : 114

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5311784

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:15CF0A9E-44F3-492B-88F7-A7922EF9F73A

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/377A879F-8D7C-2853-FE67-59537214F9FF

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Helophorus (Lihelophorus)
status

 

Subgenus Lihelophorus Zaitzev, 1908 View in CoL

Type species. Helophorus (L.) lamicola Zaitzev, 1908 View in CoL (designated by HANSEN 1991: 285).

Diagnosis of adults. Body moderately large to large (4.4–6.1 mm); antenna with 9 antennomeres; maxillary palpus 4 asymmetrical ( Figs 4–5 View Fig View Fig ); labial palpus ca. as long as cardo ( Fig. 1a–b View Fig ); labial palpomere 3 slightly asymmetrical, with fringe of long setae ( Figs 1b, g View Fig ); gular sutures widely separate ( Fig. 1a View Fig ); clypeus and frons without well-defined granules ( Figs 4–5 View Fig View Fig ); pronotum with 5 longitudinal grooves (largely reduced and weakly distinct only posteriorly in H. lamicola ), without granules ( Figs 2a,c,e View Fig , 4–5 View Fig View Fig ); scutellary stria of elytron present ( Figs 2b,d,f View Fig ); elytron without elevated alternate intervals, tubercles or erect setae ( Fig. 3 View Fig ); elytral interval 10 flat, i.e. elytral flanks absent ( Figs 2j–k View Fig ); epipleuron with wide inner pubescent portion ( Fig. 2j View Fig ); whole metaventrite and abdominal ventrites with dense pubescence; meso- and metatarsomere 2 longer than metatarsomere 3 ( Figs 1h–j View Fig ); tibiae and tarsi of middle and posterior legs with row of long swimming-hairs ( Figs 1h–k View Fig ); posterior margin of last abdominal ventrite with minute irregular teeth ( Fig. 2i View Fig ).

By body size and general habitus, the presence of distinct scutellary stria and asymmetrical ultimate maxillary palpomere, the Lihelophorus species resemble representatives of subgenera Helophorus s. str. and Gephelophorus Sharp, 1915 . They differ from them by (1) presence of series of swimming-hairs on meso- and metatibiae and (2) flat last elytral interval. The well-developed series of swimming-hairs on meso- and metatibiae are only present in the species of the subgenus Rhopalohelophorus Kuwert, 1886 , which can be however easily distinguished from Lihelophorus by the absence of scutellary stria on the elytron.

Distribution. Endemic to the Tibetan Plateau (Fig. 7a)

Analysis of molecular data. The division of the molecular dataset into three partitions was selected as the best partition scheme, with different substitution model selected for each codon position: GTR+G for the first, F81+I for the second and HKY+G for the third codon position. The analysis revealed strongly supported clades for the subgenus Lihelophorus as well as for its three species recognized by means of morphology ( Fig. 9a View Fig ). Both larval morphotypes reared from egg cases laid by field-collected adults were reliably assigned to adults from the same locality: the larva with abdominal appendages (MF660) to H. lamicola and the larva without the appendages (MF666) to H. yangae sp. nov. Intraspecific variation of cox1 sequences ranged between 0.0–2.9 % (mean 1.9 %) in H. lamicola , 0.8–6.3 % (mean 4.4 %) in H. ser and 0.0–0.1 % (mean 0.1 %) in H. yangae sp. nov. Interspecific distances range from 10.4–13.4 %.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Helophoridae

Genus

Helophorus

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