Polyphylla, Harris, 1841

Skelley, Paul E., 2009, A new species of Polyphylla Harris from peninsular Florida Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae) with a key to species of the pubescens species group, Insecta Mundi 2009 (85), pp. 1-14 : 1-2

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5352614

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5450553

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/955A8790-397D-7630-FF1D-9600F871FE0A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Polyphylla
status

 

Polyphylla - pubescens species group

Diagnosis. Species of the pubescens group share some characters that distinguish them from all other Polyphylla . The most notable characters are the vestiture of setae (not scales), pronounced sexual dimorphism ( Fig. 22-29 View Figure 22-29 ), and male genitalic form.

Male. Length 15.3-25.0 mm, width 6.9-12.0 mm. As with all Polyphylla , males have seven lamellate antennomeres in the club ( Fig. 6, 8 View Figure 6-9 ). Males of the pubescens species group are unique in Polyphylla by having dense, short dorsal pubescence made of setae (devoid of scales), relatively narrowed protibiae with 2 lateral teeth (rarely a weak basal tooth is visible), and genitalia with apex laterally flattened and semicircular in lateral view.

Female. Length 15.0-25.0 mm, width 6.9-14.0. In addition to being distinctly more robust overall, females of the pubescens species group differ from males in having the apical clypeal ridge reduced, five weakly lamellate antennomeres in the club ( Fig. 7, 9 View Figure 6-9 ), greatly reduced dorsal pubescence, protibiae with two lateral teeth much more pronounced, metafemora much more robust, metatibiae greatly dilated at apex (Fig. 14-21), and more spatulate meso- and metatibial spurs. Although flight wings are present, female body and appendage morphologies indicate they do not fly, which is corroborated by all behavioral observations.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Melolonthidae

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