Anisandrus apicalis (Blandford, 1894)

Smith, Sarah M., Beaver, Roger A. & Cognato, Anthony I., 2020, A monograph of the Xyleborini (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Scolytinae) of the Indochinese Peninsula (except Malaysia) and China, ZooKeys 983, pp. 1-442 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.983.52630

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7DED4CE2-934C-4539-945F-758930C927F9

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/931273BB-884C-C521-E8A6-84A266A8983F

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Anisandrus apicalis (Blandford, 1894)
status

 

Anisandrus apicalis (Blandford, 1894) Fig. 18C, D, J View Figure 18

Xyleborus apicalis Blandford, 1894b: 105.

Ambrosiodmus apicalis (Blandford): Wood 1989: 169.

Anisandrus apicalis (Blandford): Hulcr et al. 2007: 578.

Type material.

Holotype (NHMUK).

New records.

China: Jiangxi, Wu-Yi Mt., 17.vii.2017, Lai, S-C, Tian, S et al. (RABC, 1). Sichuan, Jiuzhago Nature Reserve, 33°08.865'N, 103°55.134'E, 2483 m, 5.vii.2005, A.I. Cognato, ex Pinus armandii (MSUC).

Diagnosis.

3.05-3.4 mm long (mean = 3.17 mm; n = 5); 2.33-2.43 × as long as wide. This species is distinguished by the mesonotal mycangial tuft the length of the scutellum; elytral disc with or without a weak transverse saddle-like depression; declivital posterolateral margin costate to interstriae 5; declivity appearing bisulcate, weakly impressed from striae 1 and 2, interstriae 3 feebly inflated and tuberculate from base to apical 1/2 then becoming flattened and unarmed to apex; and moderately sized sharp incurved spine at base of declivity on interstriae 2.

This species strongly resembles A. cristatus and A. congruens and is most easily distinguished by the moderate size, the less strongly impressed declivital sulci and smaller spines on interstriae 3 that are not backwardly hooked and much smaller than the spine at the summit of interstriae 2.

Similar species.

Anisandrus congruens , A. cristatus , A. geminatus , A. niger , A. sinivali , A. venustus .

Distribution.

China (Anhui, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Jiangxi*, Shanxi, Sichuan, Xizang, Yunnan), India (Meghalaya, Sikkim, West Bengal), Japan, South & North Korea, Kuril Islands, Nepal, Thailand.

Host plants.

A polyphagous species usually attacking angiosperms, but also recorded from Pinus ( Pinaceae ) ( Murayama 1936; Nobuchi 1966).

Remarks.

Published records from India, Nepal, Thailand, and some Chinese provinces may refer to Anisandrus cristatus or A. congruens , with which A. apicalis has been confused previously.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Curculionidae

Genus

Anisandrus

Loc

Anisandrus apicalis (Blandford, 1894)

Smith, Sarah M., Beaver, Roger A. & Cognato, Anthony I. 2020
2020
Loc

Ambrosiodmus apicalis

Wood & Bright 1992
1992
Loc

Xyleborus apicalis

Blandford 1894
1894