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Title
A phylogenetic revision of Minyomerus Horn, 1876 and Piscatopus Sleeper, 1960 (Curculionidae: Entiminae: Tanymecini: Tanymecina)
Description
A phylogenetic revision of the broad-nosed weevil genera Minyomerus Horn, 1876, and Piscatopus Sleeper, 1960 (Entiminae: Tanymecini) is presented. These genera are distributed throughout western North America, from Canada to Mexico and Baja California, primarily in arid and desert habitats, and feed on shrubs such as creosote (Larrea tridentata (DC.) Coville: Zygophyllaceae) and several Asteraceae. Piscatopus was considered monotypic, comprised solely of P. griseus Sleeper, 1960, whereas Minyomerus formerly was comprised of seven species: M. innocuus Horn, 1876 (designated as the type species for Minyomerus in Pierce, 1913), M. caseyi (Sharp, 1891), M. conicollis Green, 1920, M. constrictus (Casey, 1888), M. languidus Horn, 1876, M. laticeps (Casey, 1888), M. microps (Say, 1831). This revision includes comprehensive redescriptions of the previously described species in these genera and descriptions of ten new species: M. imberbus sp. nov., M. caponei sp. nov., M. reburrus sp. nov., M. cracens sp. nov., M. trisetosus sp. nov., M. puticulatus sp. nov., M. bulbifrons sp. nov., M. politus sp. nov., M. gravivultus sp. nov., and M. rutellirostris sp. nov. A cladistic analysis using 46 morphological characters of 22 terminal taxa (5 outgroup, 17 ingroup) was carried out in WinClada and yielded a single most-parsimonious cladogram (length = 82, consistency index = 65, retention index = 82). The monophyly of Minyomerus is supported by the preferred cladogram. The results of the cladistic analysis place Piscatopus griseus within the genus Minyomerus as sister to M. rutellirostris. Therefore, Piscatopus is demoted to a junior synonym of Minyomerus and its sole member P. griseus, is moved to Minyomerus as M. griseus (Sleeper), new combination. Additionally, the species M. innocuus Horn, 1876 is demoted to a junior synonym of M. microps (Say, 1831), based on the principle of priority, and M. microps is elevated to the rank of type for the genus. The species M. languidus, M. microps, and M. trisetosus are putatively considered parthenogenetic, and lack male specimens over a broad range of sampling events. The diversity in exterior and genitalic morphology, range of host plants, overlapping species distributions, and geographic extent suggests an origin during the Miocene (~15 mya).
Date Created
2014
Contributors
- Jansen, Michael Andrew (Author)
- Franz, Nico M (Thesis advisor)
- Wojciechowski, Martin (Committee member)
- Rosenberg, Michael (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
v, 225 p. : col. maps
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25115
Statement of Responsibility
by Michael Andrew Jansen
Description Source
Retrieved on Aug. 14, 2014
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: M.S., Arizona State University, 2014
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references
Field of study: Biology
System Created
- 2014-06-09 02:18:38
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:34:06
- 3 years 2 months ago
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