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 Neoplocaederus: viridipennis & cyanipennis

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
Pierre Posted - 28/02/2010 : 20:01:32


Also from Cameroon.
17 to 22 mm.

8   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Pierre Posted - 06/03/2010 : 20:51:40
O.k. the natural colour does not come out on the photos, you are right. They are really green, not as blueish than the photo suggests.
Thank you for you help!
Francesco Posted - 06/03/2010 : 09:58:42

Perfect! This and the similar specimen should be Neoplocaederus cyanipennis (Thomson, 1860).
It differs from viridescens in the more fine pronotal wrinkles and the more intense green colour... a character that I could not manage to understand from the picture.
Pierre Posted - 05/03/2010 : 21:42:59
The scape is punctured all over. On its upper part, where it get its typical swelling, it shows distinct wrinkles. But only here; the rest of the scape is only punctured.
Francesco Posted - 05/03/2010 : 20:35:40
Perfect! The small species is a female of Neoplocaederus viridipennis (Hope, 1843).
The other two species (a pair) belong to another group, which includes cyanipennis, viridescens and opalinus (I have split the topic since it is very easy to mix up these names...)
Is the scape of this pair wrinkled, punctured or smooth?
Pierre Posted - 05/03/2010 : 16:05:34
The small specimen shows a punctuation very regular allover the elytra; it changes only along the suture, where it becomes finer and more superficial.
The two larger ones show stronger and more dense puncturing towards the basal third and especially the humeral areas.
If these observations fit with the descriptions you mention, we could have both species, viridipennis and basalis.
Francesco Posted - 04/03/2010 : 18:01:40
Well: such furrows allow distinguish these species from P. chloropterus and P. gabonicus.
It might be P. viridipennis or P. basalis according to the elytral puncturing: uniformly sparse on the whole surface (viridipennis) or evidently closely serrate on the basal third (basalis).
Unfortunately, the definition of the picture does not allow me to distinguish this difference.
Pierre Posted - 04/03/2010 : 17:47:02
Yes this furrow is present on each side.
By the way, the other two larger specimen also have this kind of furrow. The main difference is that their ridges on the disk of the pronotum are much more confused, not as regular and parallel than in the small specimen.
Francesco Posted - 04/03/2010 : 09:32:20

These three specimens belong to two different species of Neoplocaederus.
Could you confirm me that this one has an oblique furrow, which cut the transversal ridges, on each side of the pronotum?

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