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... La familia Aderidae Winkler, 1927 es un pequeño grupo de coleópteros de distribución mundial (Lawrence & Ślipiński, 2010) escasamente citados en la Península Ibérica aunque se encuentran ampliamente distribuidos por gran parte del territorio. El número de registros publicados es muy escaso, está mal repartido en el espacio y en el tiempo y la lista de especies conocidas es reducida. ...
... En el presente trabajo damos a conocer citas de siete especies que suponen la primera cita de Euglenes oculatus (Paykull, 1798) en Portugal y diversas nuevas citas para varias provincias españolas. Hemos intentado rescatar de la bibliografía todas las citas de la familia Aderidae en la Península Ibérica con objeto de reunir toda la información corológica disponible y actualizar la taxonomía (complicada en las categorías intrafamiliares (Gompel & Barrau, 2002;Lawrence & Ślipiński, 2010) con los últimos cambios propuestos por Alonso-Zarazaga (2010). El catálogo ibérico elaborado, que consideramos preliminar, reúne en este momento cinco géneros y diez especies. ...
Resumen: Se han estudiado ejemplares de siete especies de Aderidae de España y Portugal. Se aportan nuevas citas provincia-les para las siete especies y una de ellas, Euglenes oculatus (Paykull, 1798), se cita por primera vez para la fauna de Portugal. Se han recopilado las citas ibéricas de la familia, con las que se ha elaborado un catálogo preliminar de los adéridos ibéricos. La in-formación reunida se ha resumido en mapas de distribución por provincias de España y Portugal para las diez especies de adéri-dos ibéricos. Abstract: Records of seven species of Aderidae from Spain and Portugal are given. New records from several Spanish provinces are provided for all the species studied and one species, Euglenes oculatus (Paykull, 1798), is recorded for the first time from Por-tugal. Provincial distribution maps and a preliminary catalogue of the ten Iberian species of Aderidae are presented.
... Adults are mostly collected from foliage but can be collected in Malaise, flight intercept (FIT), or light traps and also by canopy fogging. Larvae are saproxylic or found in leaf litter and, rarely, in social insect nests (e.g., Lawrence et al. 1990;Yanega & Leschen 1994;Klimaszewski & watt 1997;Chandler 2002;Arias et al. 2008;. Most of the previously described species of New Zealand aderids were based upon one or only a few specimens. ...
The Aderidae (Coleoptera: Tenebrionoidea) of New Zeland are revised to include four genera and fourteen species. Three genera are described as new: one distributed throughout the Australasian region (Zenascus gen. n.) one endemic to the north and south islands of New Zealand (Transrenus gen. n.), and one that is endemic to the south island of New Zealand (Pseudozena gen. n.). Six species are also newly described (Pseudozena denticulata sp. n., Transrenus thulater sp. n., Zenascus roberti sp. n., Z. incensum sp. n., Z. elenae sp. n., Z. aurum sp. n.). All previously described New Zealand species of aderids contained in the preoccupied genus Xylophilus are transferred to the newly erected genus Zenascus, resulting in six new combinations (Z. antennalis (Broun), comb. n.; Z. coloratus (Broun), comb. n.; Z. luniger (Champion), comb. n.; Z. nitidus (Broun), comb. n.; Z. obscurus (Broun), comb. n.; Z. xenarthrus (Broun, 1910: 54), comb. n.). Holotype and lectotype designations are made or verified for all previously described species. The New Zealand species Xylophilus pictipes Broun is synonymized with Zenascus obscurus, syn. n. and Scraptogetus nigricans is synonymized with Scraptogetus anthracinus, syn. n. The Australian genus Pseudananca Blackburn 1893 is synonymized with the New Zealand genus Scraptogetus Broun, syn. n. Keys to the genera and species are included. Phenotypic characters previously employed in the higher classification of the Aderidae, including secondary sexually dimorphic characters, are discussed and a phylogenetic analysis for the ten New Zealand species of Zenascus is performed to reconstruct trait evolution in males, which display extreme dimorphic antennomere modifications.
Part 2 of this work includes a review of morphological and systematic work on Histeridae (G07, revision), Bostrichoidea (G15), Coccinelloidea (G16), Lymexyloidea + Tenebrionoidea (G17), Cleroidea (G18), Cucujoidea (G19), Chrysomeloidea (G20) and Curculionoidea (G21), discussions of hind wing structure in each group based on 702 wing images, references to additional published figures and comments on wing morphology and,
if possible, how these wing features may or may not be correlated with recent phylogenetic hypotheses. The introduction is followed by brief discussions of some important works not mentioned in Part 1, particularly those dealing with relationships of extinct taxa.
Grzymalia wukong gen. et sp. nov. is described as the first named representative of Aderidae from the Mesozoic amber deposits, based on a single adult beetle inclusion in mid-Cretaceous Kachin amber, northern Myanmar (ca. 99 Ma). The new genus resembles several extant representatives of the tribe Euglenesini, with such characters as uniseriate elytral pubescence, fully visible from above the head; a subquadrate pronotum; and the general ratio and form of antennomeres. The new genus differs from other members of the tribe in having a complete suture between abdominal ventrites I and II, as well as sparse and long setae along the entire length of its metafemoral inner edge. The fossil is provisionally attributed to Euglenesini; however, the single known female specimen doesn’t allow a formal and indisputable tribal placement without the study of a conspecific specimen of the opposite sex.
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