Mycetophagus

<i>Mycetophagus</i>

Mycetophagus

Genus of beetles


Mycetophagus is a genus of hairy fungus beetles in the family Mycetophagidae. There are at least 20 described species in Mycetophagus.[1][2][3][4]

Quick Facts Mycetophagus, Scientific classification ...

ITIS Taxonomic notes:

  • The name Mycetophagus appeared in two or three separate works in 1792, one by Hellwig (in Schneider Neuest Mag. Ent., 1:394), and two by Fabricius (Entomologiae Systematicae, Emendatae et Auctae, Tom. I, Pars II:497; and Determinatio generis Ips affiniumque, Actes de la Société d'Histoire Naturelle de Paris 1:30). Hellwig appears to be the most frequently cited author, so for the moment ITIS will cite Hellwig. Further work would be required to determine earliest available authorship for the genus.[1]
  • There is apparently some confusion about subgenera in Mycetophagus. Parsons (1975:94) notes that "Casey's subgenera are not entirely natural and are used here chiefly for convenience in keying to species." Until further research clarifies this issue, ITIS has opted to omit subgenera in this genus.[1]

As discussed by Löbl and Smetana (2011 p21),[5] Hellwig (1792 p408) cited the correct page and number for the genus Lyctus in the second part of Fabricius’ book, demonstrating that he had Fabricius’ book in front of him. As such, Fabricius 1792[6] clearly has priority over Hellwig 1792[7] and should be cited as the author of this genus.

Mycetophagus serrulatus

Species

The following species are recognised in the genus Mycetophagus:

  • Mycetophagus akitai M. SAITÔ 2013[8]
  • Mycetophagus alni Champion, 1917[9]
  • Mycetophagus amamianus Nakane, 1989[9]
  • Mycetophagus ancora (Reitter, 1884)[9]
  • Mycetophagus antennatus (Reitter, 1879) [10]
  • Mycetophagus ater (Reitter, 1879) g
  • Mycetophagus atomarius (Fabricius, 1787) g
  • Mycetophagus bifasciatus Champion, 1919[9]
  • Mycetophagus californicus Horn, 1878 i c b
  • Mycetophagus ciscaucasicus (Semenov, 1899)[9]
  • Mycetophagus confusus Horn, 1878 i c g b
  • Mycetophagus decempunctatus Fabricius, 1801 g
  • Mycetophagus distinctus Hatch, 1962 i c g b
  • Mycetophagus elongatus (Reitter, 1889)[9]
  • Mycetophagus exterminatus Wickham, 1913 g
  • Mycetophagus flexuosus Say, 1826 i c b
  • Mycetophagus fulvicollis Fabricius, 1792 g
  • Mycetophagus grandis (Reitter, 1889)[9]
  • Mycetophagus hiranoi M. SAITÔ 2013 [8]
  • Mycetophagus hillerianus Reitter, 1877[9]
  • Mycetophagus hyrcanicus Nikitsky, 1989[9]
  • Mycetophagus incognitus Nikitsky, 1988[9]
  • Mycetophagus infulatus (Reitter, 1884)[9]
  • Mycetophagus irroratus (Reitter, 1879)[9]
  • Mycetophagus lederi (Reitter, 1897)[9]
  • Mycetophagus livshitzi Nikitsky, 1988[9]
  • Mycetophagus melsheimeri LeConte, 1856 i c g b
  • Mycetophagus multipunctatus Fabricius, 1792 g
  • Mycetophagus obscurus LeConte, 1856 i c g
  • Mycetophagus obsoletesignatus Miyatake, 1968[9]
  • Mycetophagus obsoletus (Melsheimer, 1844) i c g b
  • Mycetophagus piceus (Fabricius, 1777) g
  • Mycetophagus pini Ziegler, 1845 i c g
  • Mycetophagus pluriguttatus LeConte, 1856 i c b
  • Mycetophagus pluripunctatus LeConte, 1856 i c b
  • Mycetophagus populi Fabricius, 1798 g
  • Mycetophagus praetermissus Parsons, 1975 i c g
  • Mycetophagus punctatus Say, 1826 i c b (hairy fungus beetle)
  • Mycetophagus pustulosus (Reitter, 1889)[9]
  • Mycetophagus quadriguttatus Müller in Germar, 1821 i c b (spotted hairy fungus beetle)
  • Mycetophagus quadriornatus (Reitter, 1901)[9]
  • Mycetophagus quadripustulatus (Linnaeus, 1761)[9]
  • Mycetophagus ramosus Reitter, 1904[9]
  • Mycetophagus reitteri Nikitsky, 2008[9]
  • Mycetophagus salicis Brisout de Barneville, 1862 g
  • Mycetophagus sauteri Grouvelle, 1913 g
  • Mycetophagus serrulatus (Casey, 1900) i c b
  • Mycetophagus sulcicollis Champion, 1917[9]
  • Mycetophagus tauricus Pliguinsky, 1923[9]
  • Mycetophagus tenuifasciatus Horn, 1878 i c b
  • Mycetophagus tschitscherini Reitter, 1897 g
  • Mycetophagus weigeli Háva, 2020[9]
  • Mycetophagus willistoni Wickham, 1913 g
  • Mycetophagus yunnanus Háva, 2019[9]
  • BOLD:ACA9195 (Mycetophagus sp.)
  • BOLD:ACQ6809 (Mycetophagus sp.)

Data sources: i = ITIS,[1] c = Catalogue of Life,[2] g = GBIF,[3] b = Bugguide.net[4]


References

  1. "Mycetophagus Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2024-05-28.Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. "Browse Mycetophagus". Catalogue of Life. Retrieved 2024-05-28.
  3. "Mycetophagus". GBIF. Retrieved 2024-05-28.
  4. "Mycetophagus Genus Information". BugGuide.net. Retrieved 2018-03-25.
  5. Löbl I, Smetana A (2011) Comments of the editors [pp. 21–22]. In: Löbl I, Smetana A (Eds) Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera. Volume 7. Curculionoidea I. Apollo Books, Strenstrup, 373 pp.
  6. Fabricius JC (1792) Entomologia systematica emendata et aucta. Secundum classes, ordines, genera, species adjectis synonimis, locis, observationibus, descriptionibus. Christ. Gottl. Proft, Hafniaeionibvs, descriptionibvs. Carol. Tome I Pars II.
  7. Hellwig JCL (1792) Dritte Nachricht von neuen Gattungen im entomologischen System. Neuester Magazin für Liebhaber der Entomologie 1(3): 385–408.
  8. "Security check". www.biolib.cz. Retrieved 2024-05-29.

Further reading

  • Parsons, Carl T. (1975). "Revision of Nearctic Mycetophagidae (Coleoptera)". The Coleopterists Bulletin. 29 (2): 93–108. JSTOR 3999785.
  • Lobl, I.; Smetana, A., eds. (2013). Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera, Volume 5: Tenebrionoidea. Apollo Books. ISBN 978-90-04-26090-0.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Mycetophagus, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.