Australian Biological Resources Study

Australian Faunal Directory

Porrostoma rhipidium

Porrostoma rhipidium

Lycid larva, Canberra, Feb. 2011

Lycid larva, Canberra, Feb. 2011

Museums

Regional Maps

Family LYCIDAE

Lycids


Compiler and date details

Andrew A. Calder, CSIRO Entomology, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia

Introduction

The Lycidae are a moderately large family, containing about 150 genera and 3500 species worldwide (Lawrence 1982), and largely confined to the tropical regions. The Australian fauna comprises 203 described species arranged in 13 genera (CALDER 1998). The largest genus in the Australian fauna is Porrostoma Castelnau, formerly known as Metriorhynchus Guérin-Méneville or Metriorrhynchus Gemminger & Harold, containing 105 valid species. The genus is widespread in the Indo-Malayan Region, extending as far west as India and north as far as the Philippines. Other large Australian genera are Trichalus Waterhouse (34 species) and Xylobanus Waterhouse (24 species), both of which occur in the Oriental Region as well.

During the compilation of this Catalogue a major nomenclatural problem became evident. The genus Metriorhynchus Guérin-Méneville, 1838, which is used for some 175 described species, is a junior homonym of Metriorhynchus Meyer, 1830, used for a fossil crocodile. Under the rules of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (1985) this name must be replaced with either one of its synonyms if there is one, or a new replacement name (see Article 60). Porrostoma Castelnau, 1838 has long been listed as a synonym of Metriorhynchus Guérin-Méneville and consequently becomes the valid name of this genus. However, the status of the genera Porrostoma Castelnau, 1838 and Metriorrhynchus Gemminger & Harald, 1869, and the species currently assigned to Porrostoma in this Catalogue, is being revised (L. Bocák, pers. comm.); in order to maintain stability the current subfamily and tribal names are retained here pending this revision.

Endemicity in this family is low at the generic level. Achras Waterhouse appears to be the only endemic genus. The genera Calochromus Guérin-Méneville, Cladophorus Guérin-Méneville, Porrostoma (formerly Metriorhynchus or Metriorrhynchus), Enylus Waterhouse, Flabellotrichalus Pic, Melaneros Fairmaire, Procautires Kleine, Synchonnus Waterhouse, Trichalus and Xylobanus are shared with New Guinea. The Australian Porrostoma rufipennis (Fabricius) has been introduced into New Zealand where it was described by Broun (1893) under the synonym Metriorhynchus erraticus (Kuschel 1990).

The biology of the Lycidae is not well known, although larvae occur beneath bark or in leaf litter or soil, where they are thought to feed on soft, decaying plant material or possibly slime mould plasmodia or yeasts (Lawrence & Britton 1994). Larvae of Porrostoma are heavily armoured and occasionally wander in the open, although they usually occur in wet litter or under bark of moist logs (Moore 1989). Adults are short lived and are usually found on flowers where they are thought to feed upon nectar and pollen, if at all. They are usually day flying and are frequently encountered in forested areas during the spring and summer months. Lycid adults are distasteful to predators such as birds (Crowson 1981) and are aposematically coloured in combinations of orange-red and black or reddish yellow and black. They are involved in numerous mimicry complexes. Lycid mimics occur in several beetle families, such as Buprestidae, Elateridae, Cantharidae, Lampyridae, Cleridae, Meloidae, Oedemeridae, Pyrochroidae, Cerambycidae, Chrysomelidae and Belidae (Moore & Brown 1989) as well as Diptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera. Moore & Brown (1981) have recorded that the common Australian lycid Porrostoma rhipidium (Macleay) has a characteristic quinoline-like odour, possesses a bitter taste and exhibits reflex bleeding when handled roughly. This species is heavily protected chemically by the presence of characteristic warning odour components (2-methoxy-3-alkylpyrazines), bitter principles (1-methyl-2-quinoline and 3-phenylpropanamide) and acetylenic antifeedants.

The first Australian species to be described were Pyrochroa serraticornis (Fabricius 1775), Lycus rufipennis and Lycus atratus (Fabricius 1801). Dalman (1817), Bosiduval (1835), Erichson (1842), LeGuillou (1844) and Redtenbacher (1867) described another seven species which were collected during the first European voyages to this country. Waterhouse (1877a, 1877b, 1878, 1879) monographed the world fauna including many Australian representatives then present in the British Museum (Natural History) collections, and designated the type specimens of numerous genera providing a sound basis for future work during a time when generic type specimens were not automatically designated. Macleay (1872, 1886, 1887), Blackburn (1888, 1892, 1900) and Lea (1895, 1899, 1908, 1909, 1921a, 1921b, 1921c, 1922, 1929) described 131 species, well over 60% of the Australian species. Lea's (1909) monograph of the Australian Malacodermidae (which included the families Cantharidae, Lampyridae, and Lycidae as well as the unrelated Melyridae) is the first and only work to treat the Australian lycid fauna as a whole. In this monograph, he described 92 new species particularly in the genus Metriorrhynchus and erected the genus Dumbrellia for two Calochromus species that have a partially covered head and a prothorax without distinct cells (areolets). Lea also created two primary homonyms (Metriorrhynchus hackeri Lea, 1929, nec Kleine, 1928 and Metriorrhynchus marginicollis Lea, 1929, nec W.J. Macleay, 1872) which were corrected by CALDER (1998). Fairmaire (1877a, 1877b, 1883) described six species and one new genus, Bourgeois (1879, 1884, 1889) described two species and one genus, while Pic (1921, 1923, 1925, 1942) described 16 species and erected two genera and one subgenus of which only Flabellotrichalus survives. Kleine (1927, 1929, 1930) revised Trichalus and Xylobanus and described new species of Metriorrhynchus (Kleine 1928a). He described another seven species in two later papers (Kleine 1933b, 1934) bringing to 29 the number of species he described.

No comprehensive modern treatment of the Australian lycid fauna is available although Bocák & Bocáková (1990) provided keys to the suprageneric groups they recognised in the world fauna. The most recent catalogue of the world fauna was provided by Kleine (1933a). Papp (1952) catalogued the world fauna of Calochromus, recognised and provided a key to three species groups and described the larva of C. polgari Papp from the Indian subcontinent. Matthews (1985) provided an illustrated key to the lycid genera of South Australia. The Australian lycids are badly in need of a modern revision.

The first attempt at a classification of the Lycidae was by Lacordaire (1857). He recognised three subtribes Lycides vrais, Calochromides and Homalidides of the tribe Lycides which was considered to be a tribe of the family Malacodermes. In the succeeding 65 years the proliferation of taxa with minimal description and no reference to any suprageneric categories resulted in a very confused state when Kleine began his researches on the Lycidae. Kleine (1926) produced the first classification this century of the Lycidae largely based on the New Guinean fauna. He recognised three subfamilies: Metriorrhynchinae, Dilolycinae and Calochrominae. This was followed by yet another classification based on the Indian fauna in which 10 subfamilies were recognised (Kleine 1928b). In the catalogue of Lycidae of the world Kleine (1933a) recognised only two subfamilies, Homalisinae (now correctly Omalisinae) and Lycinae, which contained 15 tribes. The Omalisinae with its single European genus is now considered as a separate family (see Crowson 1972; Lawrence 1982).

The most recent classification of the family by Bocák & Bocáková (1990) is based largely upon adult mouthparts and male and female genitalia. This classification of the family recognises six subfamilies (Calochrominae, Metriorrhynchinae, Ateliinae, Leptolycinae, Lycinae and Erotinae) and is followed in this Catalogue. Of these subfamilies only the Calochrominae, Erotinae and Metriorrhynchinae occur in Australia. Further changes that affected the Australian fauna were published by Bocák & Bocákova (1992). The Calochrominae are represented in Australia by two genera Calochromus and Dumbrellia. The Erotinae are represented by the genus Melaneros Fairmaire. Kleine (1934) described the only species of Melaneros known from Australia. The Metriorrhynchinae contain the majority of the Australian taxa with ten genera and 182 species recorded.

Type specimens held in the Institute of Zoology of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warszawa, Poland were verified from Mroczkowski (1959) and the type material of Fabricius was verified from Zimsen (1964) and Radford (1981). Odontocerus martini Pic (1925: 18) was erroneously listed from Buru, NSW in the genus Metriorrhynchus by Kleine (1933a). The original description states clearly that it was described from Bœrœ, which is the island of Buru in the Indonesian archipelago in the Straits of Malacca; it is thus not an Australian species.

 

Diagnosis

The adults of the Lycidae range in size from 5 to 22 mm. The body is either elongate and parallel-sided or the elytra are expanded posteriorly. The head is slightly to strongly deflexed, partly concealed by pronotum and is occasionally rostrate. The antennae are serrate to pectinate or flabellate, usually long and flattened with their insertions approximate and raised. The labrum is well developed and the tentorium is nearly always membranous. The hind angles of the pronotum are usually acute, the lateral margins usually explanate and the disc is concave with ridges enclosing cells (areolets). The anterior margin of the mesosternum is more or less straight and the mesocoxae are distinctly separate. The elytra are soft, leathery and usually have costae and rows of deep window punctures giving the elytra a net-veined appearance. The elytral epipleura are indistinct or absent. The hindwings lack a closed anal cell. The legs are more or less flattened, the trochanters are elongate and the tarsi have membranous lobes on tarsomeres 3 and 4. The females are nearly always winged and possess either a long or short ovipositor (Lawrence & Britton 1994).

The larvae are elongate and somewhat flattened, usually heavily sclerotised and sometimes tuberculate. The head is small with non-opposable, blade-like mandibles which are longitudinally divided into two parts and the bases are close together. The third antennal segment is reduced. Spiracles are biforous and situated in the upper pleural sclerites. Tergite 9 usually lacks solid urogomphi. Abdominal segment 10 is circular and ventrally located (Lawrence 1982)

 

General References

Blackburn, T. 1892. Notes on Australian Coleoptera, with descriptions of new species. Part X. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 2 6(3): 479-550 [Date published May 23, 1892]

Blackburn, T. 1900. Further notes on Australian Coleoptera, with descriptions of new genera and species. Part XXVI. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 24: 35-68 [Date published Aug. 1900]

Blackburn, T. [1887] 1888. Further notes on Australian Coleoptera with descriptions of new species. Transactions and Proceedings and Report of the Royal Society of South Australia 10: 177-287

Bocák, L. & Bocáková, M. 1990. Revision of the supergeneric classification of the family Lycidae (Coleoptera). Polskie Pismo Entomologiczne 59: 623-676

Bocák, L. & Bocáková, M. 1992. Notes on some genera of the family Lycidae (Insecta: Coleoptera). Entomologica Basiliensia 15: 255-260

Boisduval, J.B.A.D. 1835. Voyage de Découvertes de l'Astrolabe exécuté par ordre du Roi, pendant les années 1826–1827–1828–1829, sous le commandement de M.J. Dumont d'Urville. Faune entomologique de l'Océan Pacifique, avec l'illustration des insectes nouveaux recueillis pendant le voyage. 2me Partie. Coléoptères et autres Ordres. Paris : J. Tastu Vol. 2 vii 267 pp.

Bourgeois, J. 1879. Lycides recueillis au Brésil par C. van Volxem. Annales de la Société Entomologique de Belgique (Comptes-rendus) 22: xv-xix

Bourgeois, J. 1884. Diagnoses de Lycides nouveaux ou peu connus. 4e partie. Annales de la Société Entomologique de France 6 4: 61-68

Bourgeois, J. 1889. Diagnoses de Lycides nouveaux ou peu connus. 6e partie. Annales de la Société Entomologique de France 6 9: 225-236

Broun, T. 1893. Manual of the New Zealand Coleoptera. Wellington : New Zealand Institute Part 5 - 7 xvii 975-1504 pp.

Calder, A.A. 1998. Coleoptera: Elateroidea. In Wells, A. (ed.) Zoological Catalogue of Australia. Volume 29.6. Melbourne : CSIRO Publishing, Australia. xiii 248 pp.

Crowson, R.A. 1972. A review of the classification of Cantharoidea (Coleoptera), with the definition of two new families, Cneoglossidae and Omethidae. Revista de la Universidad de Madrid 21(82): 35-77

Crowson, R.A. 1981. The Biology of the Coleoptera. London : Academic Press xii 802 pp.

Dalman, J.W. in Schönherr, C.J. 1817. Appendix ad C.J. Schönherr Synonymiam Insectorum sistens descriptiones novarum specierum. Scaris : Lewerentz Vol. 1(3) 266 pp.

Erichson, W.F. 1842. Beitrag zur Insecten-fauna von Vandiemensland, mit besonderer Berucksichtigung der geographischen Verbreitung der Insecten. Archiv für Naturgeschichte 8(1): 83-287, pls 4, 5

Fabricius, J.C. 1775. Systema Entomologiae, sistens Insectorum Classes, Ordines, Genera, Species, adiectis Synonymis, Locis, Descriptionibus, Observationibus. Flensburgi et Lipsiae [= Flensburg & Leipzig] : Kortii xxxii 832 pp. [Date published 17 April]

Fabricius, J.C. 1801. Systema Eleutheratorum secundum ordines, genera, species: adiectis synonymis, locis, observationibus, descriptionibus. Kiliae : Bibliopolii Academici Novi Vol. II 687 pp.

Fairmaire, L. 1877a. Diagnoses de Coléoptères australiens et mélanésiens. Petites Nouvelles Entomologiques 2(180): 166–167 [15 Sept. 1877]

Fairmaire, L. 1877b. Diagnoses de Coléoptères australiens et mélanésiens. Petites Nouvelles Entomologiques 2(182): 173-174

Fairmaire, L. 1883. Essai sur les Coléoptères de l'archipel de la Nouvelle-Bretagne. Annales de la Société Entomologique de Belgique (Comptes-rendus) 27(2): 1-58

ICZN 1985. International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, Third Edition, adopted by the XX General Assembly of the International Union of Biological Sciences. London : International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature xx 338 pp.

Kleine, R. 1926. Coleoptera. Lycidae. Nova Guinea 15: 91-195

Kleine, R. 1927. Bestimmungstabelle der Gattung Xylobanus C.O. Waterhouse. Tijdschrift voor Entomologie 70: 43-72

Kleine, R. 1928a. Neue Metriorrhynchus von Australien und Batjan (Col. Lycid.). Entomologische Mitteilungen. Berlin-Dahlem 17(2): 120-128

Kleine, R. 1928b. Neue Indische Lycidae nebst faunistischen Bemerkungen. Indian Forest Records Entomology Series 13: 221-268

Kleine, R. 1929. Bestimmungstabelle der Gattung Trichalus. Treubia 10: 471-493

Kleine, R. 1930. Bestimmungstabelle der Trichalusverwandtschaft. Treubia 11(3): 325-340

Kleine, R. 1933a. Lycidae. pp. 1-145 in Schenkling, S (ed.). Coleopterorum Catalogus auspiciis et auxilio W. Junk. Berlin : W. Junk Vol. 128 145 pp.

Kleine, R. 1933b. Neue Lyciden und Bemerkungen zum Cat. Col. Junk-Schenkling Lycidae. Stettiner Entomologische Zeitung 94(1): 1-20

Kleine, R. 1934. Prof. Dr. E. Handschin, Studienreise auf den Sundainseln und in Nordaustralien, 1930–32. 5. Brenthidae und Lycidae. Mitteilungen der Schweizerischen Entomologischen Gesellschaft / Bulletin of the Société Entomologique Suisse 16: 115-117

Kuschel, G. 1990. Beetles in a suburban environment: a New Zealand case study. The identity and status of Coleoptera in the natural and modified habitats of Lynfield, Auckland (1974-1989). DSIR Plant Protection Report No. 3: 1-118, figs 1-230

Lacordaire, T. 1857. Histoire Naturelle des Insectes. Genera des Coléoptères. Paris : Librairie Encyclopédique de Roret Vol. 4 579 pp.

Lawrence, J.F. 1982. Coleoptera. pp. 482-553 in Parker, S.P. (ed.). Synopsis and Classification of Living Organisms. New York : McGraw Hill Vol. 2 vii 1232 pp.

Lawrence, J.F. & Britton, E.B. 1994. Australian Beetles. Melbourne : Melbourne University Press x 192 pp.

Lea, A.M. 1895. Descriptions of new species of Australian Coleoptera. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 2 9: 589-634 [Date published Mar. 28, 1895]

Lea, A.M. 1899. Descriptions of new species of Australian Coleoptera. Part V. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 23(4): 521-645 [Date published 19 May, 1899: dated 1898]

Lea, A.M. 1908. The Coleoptera of King Island, Bass Strait. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria n.s. 20(2): 143-207 [Date published March 31, 1908]

Lea, A.M. 1909. Revision of the Australian and Tasmanian Malacodermidae. Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London 1909(1): 45-251 pls II-VI [Date published Jun. 4, 1909]

Lea, A.M. 1921a. On Coleoptera, mostly from Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 7(3): 182-240, pl. 13

Lea, A.M. 1921b. On Australian Coleoptera of the family Malacodermidae. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 45: 50-135

Lea, A.M. 1921c. Descriptions of new species of Australian Coleoptera. Part XVII. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 46(3): 351-369 [Date published November 2, 1921]

Lea, A.M. 1922. Results of Dr. E. Mjöberg's Swedish Scientific Expeditions to Australia 1910-1913. No. 26. Cryptophagidae, Cucujidae, Malacodermidae, Melandryidae, Mordellidae, Rhipidophoridae, and Oedemeridae. Arkiv för Zoologi 14(11): 1-21

Lea, A.M. 1929. On Coleoptera, mostly from Queensland. (Part II). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 9(3): 335-363 [Date published Jun. 29, 1929]

LeGuillou, E.J.F. 1844. Description de vingt insectes Coléoptères recueillis pendant le voyage autour du monde de l'Astrolabe et la Zélée. Revue Zoologique par la Société Cuvierienne 7: 220-225

Macleay, W.J. 1872. Notes on a collection of insects from Gayndah. Second paper. Transactions of the Entomological Society of New South Wales 2(4): 239-318

Macleay, W.J. 1886. The insects of the Fly River, New Guinea, "Coleoptera". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 2 1: 136-157, 183-204

Macleay, W.J. 1887. The insects of the Cairns district, northern Queensland. Part II. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 2 2(2): 213-238 [Date published August 31, 1887: Second Series commenced 1886-87]

Matthews, E.G. 1985. A Guide to the Genera of Beetles of South Australia. Part 4. Polyphaga: Byrrhoidea, Buprestoidea, Dryopoidea, Elateroidea, Cantharoidea, Derodontoidea and Bostrichoidea. Adelaide : South Australian Museum 68 pp.

Moore, B.P. 1989. A Guide to the Beetles of South-eastern Australia. Greenwich, N.S.W. : Australian Entomological Press Fasc. 9 pp. 133-148.

Moore, B.P. & Brown, W.V. 1981. Identification of warning odour components, bitter principles and antifeedants in an aposematic beetle: Metriorrhynchus rhipidius (Coleoptera: Lycidae). Insect Biochemistry 11: 493-499

Moore, B.P. & Brown, W.V. 1989. Graded levels of chemical defence in mimics of lycid beetles of the genus Metriorrhynchus (Coleoptera). Journal of the Australian Entomological Society 28(4): 229-233

Mroczkowski, M. 1959. List of type specimens in the collection of the Institute of Zoology of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warszawa. II. Lycidae (Coleoptera). Annales Zoologici, Warszawa 18(2): 11-63

Papp, C.S. 1952. Eine neue Calochromus-Art und -Larve aus Indien (West-Bengal) und ein Catalog über die bisher bekannten Arten (Coleoptera: Lycidae). Arkiv för Zoologi 3(13): 159-171 pl. 1 [Date published Aug. 20, 1952]

Pic, M. 1921. Notes diverses, descriptions et diagnoses. L'Échange, Revue Linnéenne 37: hors-texte 9-10

Pic, M. 1923. Contribution à l'étude des Lycides. L'Échange, Revue Linnéenne 39(404–413): hors-texte 1-40

Pic, M. 1925. Malacodermes exotiques. L'Échange, Revue Linnéenne 41(418–426): hors-texte 1-36

Pic, M. 1942. Coléoptères du globe (suite). L'Échange, Revue Linnéenne 58(488): 5-8 [Date published 8 May 1942]

Radford, W.P.K. 1981. The Fabrician types of the Australian and New Zealand Coleoptera in the Banks Collection at the British Museum (Natural History). Records of the South Australian Museum (Adelaide) 18(8): 155-197

Redtenbacher, L. 1867. Reise der Österreichischen Fregatte Novara um die Erde in den Jahren 1857, 1858, 1859 unter den befehlen des Commodore B. von Wüllerstorf-Urbair. Zoologischer Theil. Coleoptera. Wien : Karl Gerold's Sohn Vol. 2(1) iv 249 pp. 5 pls.

Waterhouse, C.O. 1877a. A monograph of the Australian species of the coleopterous family Lycidae. Transactions of the Entomological Society of London 1877: 73-86

Waterhouse, C.O. 1877b. Monograph of the coleopterous genus Calochromus of the family Lycidae. Cistula Entomologica 2: 195-202

Waterhouse, C.O. 1878. On the different forms occurring in the coleopterous family Lycidae, with descriptions of new genera and species. Transactions of the Entomological Society of London 1878: 95-118

Waterhouse, C.O. 1879. Illustrations of Typical Specimens of Coleoptera in the Collection of the British Museum. Part I. Lycidae. London : British Museum (Natural History) [Trübner & Co.] x 83 pp. 18 pls.

Zimsen, E. 1964. The Type Material of I.C. Fabricius. Copenhagen : Munksgaard 656 pp.

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
12-Feb-2010 (import)