Hylax

Hylax is a genus of leaf beetles in the subfamily Eumolpinae.[2] It is distributed in Central America and South America.[3]

Hylax
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Chrysomelidae
Subfamily: Eumolpinae
Tribe: Eumolpini
Genus: Hylax
Lefèvre, 1884
Type species
Amasis calcaratus
Chapuis, 1874
Synonyms

Amasis Chapuis, 1874
(preoccupied)
[1]

Species

  • Hylax aeneus (Lefèvre, 1878)
  • Hylax apollodorus Bechyné, 1955[4]
  • Hylax analectus Bechyné, 1951
  • Hylax bahiensis Bechyné, 1950
  • Hylax bolivianus (Jacoby, 1882)
  • Hylax calcaratus (Chapuis, 1874)[1]
    • Hylax calcaratus chalcaratus (Chapuis, 1874)
    • Hylax calcaratus vianai (Bechyné, 1949)
  • Hylax chiriquiensis (Jacoby, 1900)
  • Hylax chrysodinoides Bechyné, 1951
  • Hylax continuus (Bechyné, 1949)
  • Hylax coroicensis Bechyné, 1950
    • Hylax coroicensis coroicensis Bechyné, 1950
    • Hylax coroicensis subcorpulentus Bechyné, 1958[5]
  • Hylax costaricensis Bechyné, 1951
  • Hylax cupreus (Olivier, 1791)
  • Hylax cyanipes (Lefèvre, 1884)
  • Hylax dilatipes (Bowditch, 1921)
  • Hylax dimidiata (Jacoby, 1900)[4]
  • Hylax elongatus (Lefèvre, 1884)
  • Hylax ferox (Baly, 1865)
  • Hylax flavipes (Lefèvre, 1885)
  • Hylax guerini Bechyné, 1953[2]
  • Hylax hilaris (Lefèvre, 1884)
  • Hylax humeralis (Baly, 1860)
  • Hylax hoegei (Jacoby, 1890)
  • Hylax klugi (Lefèvre, 1884)
  • Hylax lateralis (Germar, 1824)[4]
  • Hylax marcapatensis Bechyné, 1955[4]
  • Hylax mexicanus (Jacoby, 1881)
  • Hylax mutabilis (Lefèvre, 1878)
  • Hylax nigroviolaceus (Jacoby, 1900)
  • Hylax pereirai Bechyné, 1958[5]
  • Hylax peruanus (Lefèvre, 1895)
  • Hylax plagiatus (Lefèvre, 1878)
  • Hylax pseudoviolaceus Bechyné, 1953[2]
  • Hylax puncticollis (Jacoby, 1890)
  • Hylax quadriplagiatus (Jacoby, 1881)
  • Hylax romani (Weise, 1921)
  • Hylax rufimanus (Lefèvre, 1878)
  • Hylax rufotestaceus (Lefèvre, 1878)
  • Hylax rugulosus (Lefèvre, 1882)
  • Hylax rutilans (Lefèvre, 1885)
  • Hylax spinipes (Latreille, 1832)
  • Hylax strigatus (Lefèvre, 1884)
  • Hylax strigicollis (Jacoby, 1890)
  • Hylax tarsalis (Lefèvre, 1885)
  • Hylax tenebrosus (Jacoby, 1890)
  • Hylax viridis (Bowditch, 1921)
  • Hylax wygodzinskyi Bechyné, 1950
  • Hylax zikani (Bechyné, 1949)

The following species were moved to Hermesia:[6]

  • Hylax auratus (Olivier, 1808)
  • Hylax auratus violaceus (Jacoby, 1882): synonym of Hermesia inermis Bowditch, 1921
  • Hylax cyaneus (Bowditch, 1921)

Other synonyms:

  • Hylax lateralis (Lefèvre, 1878): synonym of Chalcoplacis plicipennis (Germar, 1824)[4]
gollark: Time to initiate Contingency P-485.
gollark: Oh dear, I have become somewhat predictable.
gollark: Bad things? So don't do that, silly.
gollark: The mobile app supports no commands.
gollark: A search query which returns lots of results is going to take longer than one which returns none, mostly, thus you have access to some data you shouldn't.

References

  1. Chapuis, F. (1874). "Tome dixième. Famille des phytophages". In Lacordaire, J.T.; Chapuis, F. (eds.). Histoire naturelle des Insectes. Genera des coléoptères. Paris: Librairie Encyclopédique de Roret. pp. i–iv, 1–455.
  2. Bechyné, J. (1953). "Katalog der neotropischen Eumolpiden (Col. Phytoph. Chrysomeloidea)". Entomologische Arbeiten aus dem Museum G. Frey (in German). 4: 26–303.
  3. Flowers, R. Wills (1995). "Some Corrections to the Generic Records of Central American Eumolpinae (Chrysomelidae: Coleoptera)". The Florida Entomologist. 78 (3): 553–557. doi:10.2307/3495545. JSTOR 3495545.
  4. Bechyné, J. (1955). "Reise des Herrn G. Frey in Südamerika: Eumolpidae (Col. Phytophaga)". Entomologische Arbeiten aus dem Museum G. Frey Tutzing Bei München. 6: 569–657.
  5. Bechyné, J. (1958). "Notizen zu den neotropischen Chrysomeloidea (Col. Phytophaga)". Entomologische Arbeiten aus dem Museum G. Frey Tutzing Bei München. 9: 478–706.
  6. Flowers, R. Wills (1995). "Hermesia Lefèvre, a resurrected genus of neotropical Eumolpinae (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae)". Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington. 97 (1): 35–45.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.