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Family MEGALOPODIDAE

Introduction

The family Megalopodidae is relatively small, with three subfamilies and approximately 27 genera and 400 species worldwide (Monrós 1960; Seeno & Wilcox 1982; Kuschel & May 1996). Two subfamilies occur in Australia: Zeugophorinae with three out of 70 world species (Reid 1989) and Palophaginae with three of four world species (Kuschel & May 1990). In Australia, Megalopodidae are confined to rainforest, in the east.
The family Megalopodidae has had a complex taxonomic history. Traditionally, it was considered to be a single subfamily in the Chrysomelidae, named Megalopodinae (often misspelled Megalopinae). With recognition of Zeugophorinae (Boving & Craighead 1931) for a group of small species with leaf-mining larvae the group was split. Several authors noted the similarity of the above subfamilies with Cerambycoidea. Recognition as a separate family was proposed by Kuschel & May (1990), who erected a third subfamily, Palophaginae. Systematic analysis has confirmed the distant relationship between Chrysomelidae and Megalopodidae (Reid 1995). The largest subfamily, Megalopodinae, is absent from Australia.

Zeugophorinae adults are small, cryptic and rarely collected. The only known host in Australia is a vine, Celastrus (Reid 1998). Larvae are leaf-miners, with typical leaf-mining morphology: white, flattened and legless (Lee 1998). Pupation is in soil (Cox 1996).

Palophaginae adults are delicate dull brown cerambycid-like beetles, and also rare. The larvae feed on pollen within the male cones of Araucariaceae and pupate in soil (Kuschel & May 1990). Half of the known adult specimens have been reared from cones, the other half collected at light.

 

General References

Böving, A.G. & Craighead, F.C. 1931. An illustrated synopsis of the principal larval forms of the Coleoptera. Entomologica Americana 11: 1-351 [Date published 14-11-1931]

Cox, M.L. 1996. The pupae of Chrysomeloidea. pp. 119-265 in Jolivet, P.H.A. & Cox, M.L. (eds). Chrysomelidae Biology. The classification, phylogeny and genetics. Amsterdam : SPB Academic publishing Vol. 1.

Kuschel, G. & May, B.M. 1990. Palophaginae, a new subfamily of leaf beetles, feeding as adult and larva on araucarian pollen in Australia (Coleoptera: Megalopodidae). Invertebrate Taxonomy 3(6): 697–719

Kuschel, G. & May, B.M. 1996. Discovery of Palophaginae (Coleoptera: Megalopodidae) on Araucaria araucana in Chile and Argentina. New Zealand Entomologist 19: 1-13

Lee, J.E. 1998. Leaf beetle larvae of Zeugophorinae from North America and Europe (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). The Coleopterists Bulletin 52(2): 118-125

Monrós, F. 1959. Los generos de Chrysomelidae (Coleoptera). Opera Lilloana III, Universidad Nacional de Tucuman, Argentina. 1-336 pp.

Reid, C.A.M. 1989. The Australian species of the tribe Zeugophorini (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Megalopodinae). General and Applied Entomology 21: 39-47

Reid, C.A.M. 1995. A cladistic analysis of subfamilial relationships in the Chrysomelidae sensu lato (Chrysomeloidea). pp. 559-631 in Pakaluk, J. & Ślipiński, S.A. (eds). Biology, Phylogeny and Classification of Coleoptera: Papers celebrating the 80th birthday of Roy A. Crowson. Warszawa : Muzeum i Instytut Zoologii PAN.

Reid, C.A.M. 1998. Two new species of Zeugophora Kunze in Indonesia (Coleoptera: Megalopodidae: Zeugophorinae). Serangga 3(1): 7-14

 

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)