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University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Insecta Mundi Center for Systematic Entomology, Gainesville, Florida 2015 Description of a new species of Plesioclytus Giesbert (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae) from Georgia, and transfer of the genus to Plesioclytini Wappes and Skelley, new tribe James E. Wappes American Coleoptera Museum, San Antonio, TX, wappes@earthlink.net Paul E. Skelley Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Paul.Skelley@FreshFromFlorida.com Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/insectamundi Part of the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Commons, and the Entomology Commons Wappes, James E. and Skelley, Paul E., "Description of a new species of Plesioclytus Giesbert (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae) from Georgia, and transfer of the genus to Plesioclytini Wappes and Skelley, new tribe" (2015). Insecta Mundi. 941. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/insectamundi/941 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Center for Systematic Entomology, Gainesville, Florida at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Insecta Mundi by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln.

INSECTA MUNDI A Journal of World Insect Systematics 0436 Description of a new species of Plesioclytus Giesbert (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae) from Georgia, and transfer of the genus to Plesioclytini Wappes and Skelley, new tribe James E. Wappes American Coleoptera Museum 8734 Paisano Pass San Antonio, TX 78255-3523 Paul E. Skelley Florida State Collection of Arthropods Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services DPI P. O. Box 147100 Gainesville, FL 32614-7100 Date of Issue: August 28, 2015 CENTER FOR SYSTEMATIC ENTOMOLOGY, INC., Gainesville, FL

James E. Wappes and Paul E. Skelley Description of a new species of Plesioclytus Giesbert (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae) from Georgia, and transfer of the genus to Plesioclytini Wappes and Skelley, new tribe Insecta Mundi 0436: 1-7 ZooBank Registered: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:df9eb6a4-a51f-405b-9f03-453a8b238083 Published in 2015 by Center for Systematic Entomology, Inc. P. O. Box 141874 Gainesville, FL 32614-1874 USA http://www.centerforsystematicentomology.org/ Insecta Mundi is a journal primarily devoted to insect systematics, but articles can be published on any nonmarine arthropod. Topics considered for publication include systematics, taxonomy, nomenclature, checklists, faunal works, and natural history. Insecta Mundi will not consider works in the applied sciences (i.e. medical entomology, pest control research, etc.), and no longer publishes book reviews or editorials. Insecta Mundi publishes original research or discoveries in an inexpensive and timely manner, distributing them free via open access on the internet on the date of publication. Insecta Mundi is referenced or abstracted by several sources including the Zoological Record, CAB Abstracts, etc. Insecta Mundi is published irregularly throughout the year, with completed manuscripts assigned an individual number. Manuscripts must be peer reviewed prior to submission, after which they are reviewed by the editorial board to ensure quality. One author of each submitted manuscript must be a current member of the Center for Systematic Entomology. Manuscript preparation guidelines are availablr at the CSE website. Chief Editor: Paul E. Skelley, e-mail: insectamundi@gmail.com Assistant Editor: David Plotkin Head Layout Editor: Eugenio H. Nearns Editorial Board: J. H. Frank, M. J. Paulsen, Michael C. Thomas Review Editors: Listed on the Insecta Mundi webpage Manuscript Preparation Guidelines and Submission Requirements available on the Insecta Mundi web-page at: http://centerforsystematicentomology.org/insectamundi/ Printed copies (ISSN 0749-6737) annually deposited in libraries: CSIRO, Canberra, ACT, Australia Museu de Zoologia, São Paulo, Brazil Agriculture and Agrifood Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada The Natural History Museum, London, Great Britain Muzeum i Instytut Zoologii PAN, Warsaw, Poland National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, CA, USA Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Gainesville, FL, USA Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL, USA National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA Zoological Institute of Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint-Petersburg, Russia Electronic copies (On-Line ISSN 1942-1354, CDROM ISSN 1942-1362) in PDF format: Printed CD or DVD mailed to all members at end of year. Archived digitally by Portico. Florida Virtual Campus: http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/insectamundi University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Digital Commons: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/insectamundi/ Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main: http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-135240 Copyright held by the author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons, Attribution Non-Commercial License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by-nc/3.0/ Layout Editor for this article: Michael C. Thomas

0436: 1-7 2015 Description of a new species of Plesioclytus Giesbert (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae) from Georgia, and transfer of the genus to Plesioclytini Wappes and Skelley, new tribe James E. Wappes American Coleoptera Museum 8734 Paisano Pass San Antonio, TX 78255-3523 wappes@earthlink.net Paul E. Skelley Florida State Collection of Arthropods Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services DPI P. O. Box 147100 Gainesville, FL 32614-7100 Paul.Skelley@FreshFromFlorida.com Abstract. Plesioclytus morrisi Wappes and Skelley new species (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) from the Ohoopee dune system in central Georgia is described with comments on the biology of the new species. The taxonomic placement of Plesioclytus Giesbert in the tribe Clytini is questioned as key characters are found to differ from the current characters used to define the tribe in the New World, resulting in its transfer to the newly erected Plesioclytini Wappes and Skelley new tribe, defined herein. Habitat photos for the new species and habitus photos for it and P. relictus Giesbert are provided. Key Words. Clytini, Plesioclytini, new tribe, adult hosts: Chrysoma and Licania. Introduction Collecting by Roy Morris in the relict sand dune system along the Ohoopee River (Fig. 8-9) in Emanuel and Tattnall counties of Georgia led to the discovery of a second species of Plesioclytus Geisbert, 1993 (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae). The first, Plesioclytus relictus Giesbert, 1993, was described from Florida with the holotype and allotype collected at the Archbold Biological Station in Highlands County. This location is in the southern end of the Lake Wales Ridge, a line of relict sand dunes in south-central Florida (Giesbert 1993). The new species, P. morrisi, like its predecessor, is diurnally active and has been found sitting on stems or flowers of low growing plants, including Chrysoma pauciflosculosa (Michx.) (Asteraceae), and Licania michauxii Prance (Chrysobalanaceae). Both species appear to be restricted in their distribution to widely separated (more than 600 km) relict sand dune systems. Species of this genus have a unique combination of characters and the placement of Plesioclytus in the Clytini by Giesbert (1993) significantly changes the current definition of that tribe in the New World. Instead, a new tribe, based on differences in the key characters utilized by Linsley (1962) for the North American Clytini fauna, and Martins (2011) for the South American Clytini fauna is proposed. Although Clytini is a large and diverse worldwide tribe composed of more than 900 species and at least 87 genera no attempt is made to review the character makeup of genera or species outside the New World. That is clearly beyond the scope and purpose of this paper. It is recognized that there may well be genera in other geographical areas that have similar unique characters to the Plesioclytus and perhaps could be placed in the Plesioclytini or, if necessary, into other new tribes. However, that does not change the rational for proposing a new tribe for Plesioclytus based on its own uniqueness and differences with New World Clytini. 1

2 INSECTA MUNDI 0436, August 2015 WAPPES AND SKELLEY Materials Specimens studied are deposited in the following collections: ACMT CMNH EMEC FSCA MNRJ MZSP RFMC RHTC UGAC USNM American Coleoptera Museum (James E. Wappes), San Antonio, TX, USA Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, PA, USA Essig Museum of Entomology (University of California), Berkeley, CA, USA Florida State Collection of Arthropods, Gainesville, FL, USA Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, RJ, BRAZIL Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, SP, BRAZIL Roy F. Morris, II, Lakeland, FL, USA Robert H. Turnbow, Jr., Enterprise, AL, USA University of Georgia Arthropod Collection, Athens, GA, USA National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA Taxonomic placement In the process of determining the proper taxonomic placement for Plesioclytus both P. relictus and P. morrisi new species were worked through Key to the Tribes of North American Cerambycinae (Linsley 1962) where they ended in the Clytini. Consequently, they were also worked through, Key to North American Genera of Clytini (Linsley 1964) and as mentioned by Giesbert (1993) in his paper describing P. relictus, ended at Clytus, which they clearly are not, as also detailed by Giesbert in his comments on the need for a new genus. Further investigation as to their correct placement has revealed significant structural differences with characters used by Linsley (1964), to define and characterize the tribe Clytini for the North American fauna, and by Martins (2011), to do the same for the South American fauna. Significant differences between Clytini and Plesioclytus, using only character states to define the Clytini, used by these authors, are compared in Table 1. An examination of 83 Clytini species representing 28 genera from the New World supports the above character comparison. The authors believe it would be inappropriate to modify the current definition of this very large tribe (35 genera and 321 species in the New World) for a single unique genus and thereby propose Plesioclytus be placed in a new tribe defined by its unique physical structure. Plesioclytini Wappes and Skelley, new tribe Type genus. Plesioclytus Giesbert 1993, by present designation and monotypy. Defining characters. Procoxae, cavities closed, or nearly so, behind. Antennae much shorter than body, not attaining middle of elytra, without sulcus, carina or spines, distal antennomeres thickened, more so in the females, 11 segmented. Prothorax wider than long, evenly rounded, dorsal surface without tubercles or longitudinal granules. Elytra with carinate margins, moderately short, narrowed distally, dehiscent along suture (most specimens have the underlying wings and/or tergites exposed), apices rounded, lacking spines or spicules. Legs moderately short, metafemora subclavate, apices ending well short of elytral apices, unarmed at apex. Generic assignment. Plesioclytus Giesbert, 1993 and its two species P. relictus Giesbert and P. morrisi Wappes and Skelley are assigned to Plesioclytini. Plesioclytus Giesbert Plesioclytus Giesbert 1993: 129. Bezark 2015: 76; Peck and Thomas 1998: 119. Type species: Plesioclytus relictus Giesbert, 1993: 129, by original designation.

A NEW SPECIES OF PLESIOCLYTUS IN A NEW TRIBE INSECTA MUNDI 0436, August 2015 3 Table 1. Character state comparison Redescription (modified from Giesbert 1993). Size small, length 4-9 mm. Body narrow, slightly compressed from near the humeri distally to apex. Head with front subvertical, not carinate. Antennae short, segments from sixth thickened, subserrate; female with distal segments more robust. Pronotum rounded, slightly wider than long, disk convex. Prosternal process narrow, procoxal cavities closed, or nearly so, behind; mesosternum with intercoxal process sloping, apically subtruncate; metasternum convex; metepisternum large, broadly subtriangular, wide at front, strongly tapering toward rear. Elytra elongate, apically flattened, dehiscent; apices separately rounded. Abdomen with pygidium clearly exposed, extending beyond elytral apices. Legs moderately short. In Giesbert s 1993 description of Plesioclytus he stated: antennae.with short, conical 12th segment cupped into apex of 11th segment. Later, in Remarks he commented on its relationship to Clytus Laicharting, 1784, adding:.may be separated from that genus by the strongly sexually dimorphic antennae with an abbreviated 12th segment. However, a close examination of the last antennal segment in males and females of both P. relictus and P. morrisi, using the quality optics available today, indicates that this 12th segment is merely a modification of the 11th segment. What may appear as a dividing line on the 11th segment is a shallow incomplete trench or depression circling the tip (Fig. 5a-b) and not at all separate from it. Thus, there is no 12th antennal segment in Plesioclytus. The sexes of Plesioclytus species can be separated readily by the appearance of the vestiture on the dorsal surface of the pronotum and by the pronotal width. Males of both species have densely, coarsely pubescent pronotum with medial width slightly wider than across the humeri. The pronotum of females is primarily devoid of coarse dorsal pubescence, with only a narrow pubescent band along the basal and apical margins, and the medial width of the pronotum slightly narrower than the humeri. Plesioclytus morrisi Wappes and Skelley, n. sp. (Fig. 1, 2, 6) Diagnosis. Females of the two species are easily separated from each other by their color with P. morrisi uniformly pale orange-brown (Fig. 2a-b), while P. relictus females are similarly orange-brown, but also have contrasting dark brown to black areas on the head, pronotum and apical two-thirds of the elytra (Fig. 4a-b). Plesioclytus relictus females are also slightly larger and broader, including the distal antennomeres, than P. morrisi. Males are best separated by differences in the pubescent pattern of the pronotum. These patterns are composed of coarse pubescence, oriented in different directions, and bordered or separated by slightly shining impressions. In P. morrisi (Fig. 1a-b) the central third of the pronotum (from base to apex) has the pubescence oriented from side to side. This area is irregularly and narrowly delineated by slightly shining impressions, with the lateral pubescence outside this area oriented front to back. In P. relictus (Fig. 3a-b) the delineated area of primarily side to side oriented pubescence is confined to the basal half of the pronotum, with areas laterally and apically, covered in front to back oriented pubescence. Males of the two species can also be recognized by the shape of their last

4 INSECTA MUNDI 0436, August 2015 WAPPES AND SKELLEY Figures 1-7. Plesioclytus spp. 1) Plesioclytus morrisi, paratype male, a) dorsal habitus, b) pronotal vestiture. 2) Plesioclytus morrisi, allotype female, a) dorsal habitus, b) pronotal vestiture. 3) Plesioclytus relictus, holotype male, a) dorsal habitus, b) pronotal vestiture. 4) Plesioclytus relictus, allotype female, a) dorsal habitus, b) pronotal vestiture. 5) Plesioclytus relictus, allotype female, a) distal antennomeres, b) tip of eleventh antennomere. 6) Plesioclytus morrisi paratype male, a) fifth tergite (pygidium), b) fifth sternite. 7) Plesioclytus relictus holotype male, a) fifth tergite (pygidium), b) fifth sternite.

A NEW SPECIES OF PLESIOCLYTUS IN A NEW TRIBE INSECTA MUNDI 0436, August 2015 5 abdominal tergite (pygidium) with Plesioclytus morrisi having a visibly wider and less rounded structure (Fig.6a-b) than P. relictus (Fig. 7a-b). They may also be separated simply by their geographic distribution. Description. Male (Fig. 1a-b): Form small, elongate, feebly tapering. Integument unicolorous orangebrown. Head short; front and vertex longitudinally impressed in middle; coarsely, densely rugose-punctate, moderately sparsely golden pubescent, pubescence denser around eyes. Antennae (Fig. 1a) short, apices attaining mid-elytra, scape short, about twice as long as wide; third segment about 1.5 times as long as scape, fourth segment subequal in length to scape, remaining segments gradually decreasing in length, tenth segment subquadrate, eleventh segment nearly ringed with apical depression but not divided into another segment. Pronotum moderately inflated, broadly rounded, slightly wider than base of elytra; with three moderately large longitudinal discal impressions, one in middle, with irregular, longer and wider impressions on each side; entire surface densely, moderately coarsely, cribrate-punctate, clothed except on discal impressions with dense, subdepressed, coarse, golden pubescence, impressions with sparse, fine suberect setae. Prosternum short, moderately densely punctate, pubescence pale, suberect. Metasternum shining, moderately sparsely punctate, with pale golden pubescence somewhat less dense but longer than on prosternum. Scutellum subtruncate, densely clothed with longitudinally reclining, pale golden pubescence. Elytra slightly more than 2.5 times as long as width across humeri, apical 3/5 flattened, epipleural and sutural margins distinctly carinate, apices without spines; entire surface moderately densely, irregularly cribrate-punctate, pubescence sparse, pale subrecumbent. Abdomen moderately punctate and clothed with subdepressed golden pubescence; apex of terminal sternite emarginated-truncate. Legs subclavate, femoral clubs moderately stout, bases of meso- and metafemora curved; mesotarsi not elongate, mesotarsomere I about 1.5 times longer than wide. Length 5-8 mm. Female (Fig. 2a-b): Similar to male except as noted. Pronotum evenly convex, shining, slightly narrower than elytral humeri, lacking discal impressions; pubescence sparse, fine, erect, with a fascia of coarser, pale recumbent pubescence across base and an indistinct fascia on each side near apex. Abdomen robust with apex of terminal sternite subtruncate. Length 5-9 mm. Type Material. Male holotype and female allotype of Plesioclytus morrisi are labeled: / GA: Emanuel Co., Ohoopee Dunes NA, Hall s Bridge Rd., 10/VI/00, R. Morris / Sweeping Chrysoma plauciflosculosa. They are deposited in FSCA. Paratypes: 118 males and 27 females. GEORGIA: Emanuel Co.: same data as holotype (2mACMT, 14m, 1f RFMC, 2m- USNM). Ohoopee Dunes NA, Halls Bridge Rd., 25/V/01, R. Morris (6m, 1f RFMC); Ohoopee Dunes NA, Halls Bridge Rd., 11/V/02, Morris/Donaldson, UV/MV (2m, 1f RFMC); Ohoopee Dunes Natural Area, 11 June 2000, R. Turnbow, on Chrysoma pauciflosculosa (Michx.) Greene (1f RHTC); Ohoopee Dunes Natural Area, 10 June 2000, R. Turnbow, on Chrysoma pauciflosculosa (Michx.) Greene (2m - FSCA, 4m RHTC, 1m,1f - UGAC ); US1 & I-16, Gar Rd., 28/V/01, R.Morris (2m RFMC); I-16 & US 1, 11/V/02, R. Morris (5m, 1f RFMC); Jct. I-16 & Hwy. 1, 9 June 2000, R. Turnbow (1f RHTC).Tattnall Co.: 3 mi E of 147 along Ohoopee riv., 7-V-1998, BLT, Morris/Donaldson (1m RFMC); 3 mi E of 147 along Ohoopee riv., 12-VI-98, Roy and Graham Morris/Donaldson (1m, 1f RFMC); 2 mi E of 147, Ohoopee River, 20-VI-1998, Morris/Wappes, sweeping Licania michauxii (2m, 1f RFMC); 2 mi E of 147, Ohoopee riv., 25-IX-1999, R. Morris (1m, 1f RFMC); 2 mi E of 147, Ohoopee riv., 5-VI1999, R. Morris (7m RFMC); 2 mi E of 147, Ohoopee riv., 11-VI-1999, R. Morris, on flowers of Licania michauxii (5m, 1f RFMC); 2 mi E of 147, along Ohoopee Riv., 12-V-2001, Morris / Donaldson (1m, 1f EMEC, 1m, 1f - MNRJ, 1m, 1f MZSP, 8m, 3f RFMC, 1f - USNM); 2 mi E of 147, along Ohoopee Riv., 20V-2001, Morris / Donaldson (1f -ACMT, 1f FSCA, 11m, 3f RFMC); 2 mi E of 147, along Ohoopee Riv., 26-V-2001, Morris / Donaldson (4m RFMC, 3m -ACMT); 2 mi E of 147, along Ohoopee Riv., 15-VI-2001, Morris (2m RFMC); 2 mi E of 147, along Ohoopee Riv., 30/V/2004, Morris/Nearns/Skelley (1m RFMC); Hwy 147 near Ohoopee River, 19-20-VI-1998, Wappes, Morris (2m, 2f ACMT); 2 mi S of Reidsville, 10-V2003, R. Morris (7m, 1f RFMC); 3 mi S of Reidsville, 22-VI-2002, R. Morris (3m RFMC); 3 mi S of Reidsville, 11-V-2002, R. Morris (2m -ACMT, 1m, 1f - CMNH, 2m- FSCA, 10m RFMC); 4 mi S of Reidsville, 29 June 1998, R. Turnbow, on Geobalanus oblongifolius (Michx.) Small (2m RHTC).

6 INSECTA MUNDI 0436, August 2015 WAPPES AND SKELLEY Figures 8-11. Ohoopee dune system. 8-9) Plesioclytus habitat in Ohoopee Natural Area. 10) Male Plesioclytus morrisi sitting on woody goldenrod. 11) Small woody goldenrod plant, the size typically utilized for perching by Plesioclytus morrisi new species. Etymology. It is our great pleasure to name this species for the collector of the holotype, Roy F. Morris, II. It should be noted that this is the second new species to be described that was discovered by Roy in the Ohoopee dune system of Georgia, the first being Crossidius grahami Morris and Wappes, 2013. Biology. Most Plesioclytus morrisi specimens have been taken by sweeping or hand collecting from gopher apple, Licania michauxii Prance, or woody goldenrod, Chrysoma pauciflosculosa Michaux during May and June with an aberrant record from October. According to Roy Morris, who has collected the vast majority of the known specimens, they are most often associated with small and singular plants, rather than large or clusters, of plants (Fig. 10-11). Although Mr. Morris has investigated other areas of somewhat similar sandy habitats in Georgia and north Florida, where gopher apple and woody goldenrod are found, he has not been successful in finding the new species outside the relict sand dunes (Fig. 8-9) of Emanuel and Tattnall counties Georgia (for a further account of this habitat see Morris and Wappes 2013). One can speculate that the plants P. morrisi has been found sitting on and swept from may not be the host(s), or that other unknown biological factors are involved in limiting its distribution. Acknowledgments We thank Roy Morris for providing most of the study material, the habitat photographs and for sharing the information and lessons learned from his pursuit of this intriguing little cerambycid. Thanks to Kyle Schnepp, FSCA, Gainesville, FL for assisting with the auto montage photographs used in the

A NEW SPECIES OF PLESIOCLYTUS IN A NEW TRIBE INSECTA MUNDI 0436, August 2015 7 plates and to Michael C. Thomas, Gainesville, FL for layouts of the illustrations. Special thanks to Antonio Santos-Silva, São Paulo, Brazil for providing a presubmission review and helping translate Portuguese text. We also thank him, Miguel Monné, MNRJ, Rio de Janeiro, Steve Lingafelter, USNM, Washington, D.C., and Don Thomas, USDA, Weslaco, TX, for reviewing the paper and providing helpful suggestions to improve it. Literature Cited Bezark, L. G. 2015. Checklist of the Oxypeltidae, Vesperidae, Disteniidae and Cerambycidae, (Coleoptera) of the Western Hemisphere. BioQuip Products, Rancho Domingez, CA. 2015: 1-492. Giesbert, E. F. 1993. A new genus and species of clytine cerambycid from Florida. Insecta Mundi 7(3): 129-131. Linsley, E. G. 1962. The Cerambycidae of North America, Part III. Taxonomy and classification of the Subfamily Cerambycinae, Tribes Opsimini through Megaderini. University of California Publications in Entomology, Volume 20: 1-188. Linsley, E. G. 1964. The Cerambycidae of North America, Part V. Taxonomy and classification of the Subfamily Cerambycinae, Tribes Callichromini through Ancylocerini. University of California Publications in Entomology, Volume 22: 1-197. Martins, U. R. 2011. Cerambycidae Sul-Americanos (Coleoptera), Taxonomia (Volume 12). Sociedade Brasileira de Entomologia, Curitiba, Paraná, Brazil. 264p. Morris, II, R. F., and J. E. Wappes. 2013. Description of a new Crossidius LeConte (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Trachyderini) from southern Georgia with comments on its biology and unusual distribution. Insecta Mundi 0304: 1-7. Peck, S. B., and M. C. Thomas. 1998. A distributional checklist of the beetles (Coleoptera) of Florida. Arthropods of Florida and Neighboring Land Areas 16: 1-180. Received July 15, 2015; Accepted August 7, 2015. Review Editor Michael C. Thomas

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