Published May 17, 2019 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Byrrhidiini Davis, Deschodt & Scholtz 2019, new tribe

Description

Tribe Byrrhidiini Davis, Deschodt & Scholtz, new tribe

Type genus. Byrrhidium Harold, 1869, here designated (Figs. 1, 4).

Head. Punctate; anterior clypeal margin often with forklike small to large teeth protruding anteriorly; single very small median tooth on lower margin of clypeus; never with a horn on the frons or vertex; antenna nine segmented; mouthparts varying between genera but labrum always strongly sclerotized apically, inside margins of glossae with sclerotized denticles.

Pronotum. Pronotum convex, with sub-parallel sides; punctation indistinct.

Elytra. Convex; fused without humeral umbones; elytra with seven to eight feebly visible striae followed by an acute sub-lateral pseudoepipleural carina and inflexed pseudepipleuron; interstriae intervals flat; metathoracic wings absent; scutellum not visible from above.

Sterna. Smooth to punctate; sutures well defined.

Protibia. With a terminal spur; two or three denticles on anterior outside margin; posterior outside margin serrated or smooth; tarsi short.

Meso- and metatibia. Unmodified, long and thin; each meso-and metatarsus of uniform width, often setate.

Pygidium. Somewhat convex; punctate.

Aedeagus. Phallobase unmodified; parameres symmetrical and extremely variable.

Body size. Small to medium with size varying between 4.9 mm × 3.8 mm for the smallest and 11.8 mm × 7.5 mm for the largest known species.

Diagnosis and known distribution. The Byrrhidiini new tribe, can be distinguished from all other dung beetle tribes by the combination of the following characters: flightless with body medium sized, sparsely setate and strongly convex; antennae nine segmented; labrum sclerotized apically, inside margins of glossae with sclerotized denticles; punctures on pronotum visible but indistinct; an acute sub-lateral pseudoepipleural carina and inflexed pseudepipleuron; striae and punctures on the elytra indistinctly visible; no humeral umbone visible; scutellum not visible from above; unmodified meso- and metatibiae of the same width; distributed in the arid to hyper-arid region along the southwest seaboard of Namibia and South Africa between about 21 and 31 degrees south with most known species occurring in Namibia (Fig. 4).

Notes

Published as part of Davis, Adrian L. V., Deschodt, Christian M. & Scholtz, Clarke H., 2019, Defining new dung beetle tribes to resolve discrepancies between phylogeny and tribal classification in the subfamily Scarabaeinae (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae), pp. 131-144 in Zootaxa 4608 (1) on pages 134-136, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4608.1.7, http://zenodo.org/record/3993625

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Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

Biodiversity

Family
Scarabaeidae
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Coleoptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Davis, Deschodt & Scholtz
Taxonomic status
trib. nov.
Taxon rank
tribe
Taxonomic concept label
Byrrhidiini Davis, Deschodt & Scholtz, 2019