Endocephalus Explained
Endocephalus is a genus of leaf beetles in the subfamily Eumolpinae. It is distributed in South America.[1]
Species
- Endocephalus clytroides (Lefèvre, 1875)
- Endocephalus fasciatus Lefèvre, 1889
- Endocephalus femoralis (Lefèvre, 1875)
- Endocephalus flavipennis Guérin, 1855
- Endocephalus freyi Bechyné, 1950[2]
- Endocephalus geniculatus Guérin, 1855
- Endocephalus lefevrei Harold, 1874
- Endocephalus lineatus (Fabricius, 1775)
- Endocephalus maronicus Bechyné, 1949
- Endocephalus militaris Jacoby, 1900
- Endocephalus nigripes Jacoby, 1900
- Endocephalus novogranadensis Bechyné, 1950[2]
- Endocephalus octopunctatus (Germar, 1824)
- Endocephalus quadripunctatus Lefèvre, 1875
- Endocephalus spilotus Baly, 1865
- Endocephalus suffriani (Harold, 1874)[3]
- Endocephalus suffriani paraguayensis (Jacoby, 1900)
- Endocephalus suffriani suffriani (Harold, 1874)
- Endocephalus tibialis Jacoby, 1900
Synonyms:[4]
- Endocephalus biguttatus Lefèvre, 1875: synonym of Endocephalus flavipennis Guérin, 1855
- Endocephalus fenestratus Harold, 1874: synonym of Endocephalus flavipennis Guérin, 1855
- Endocephalus fulvicollis Lefèvre, 1891: synonym of Endocephalus suffriani (Harold, 1874)
Notes and References
- Bechyné. J.. 1953. Katalog der neotropischen Eumolpiden (Col. Phytoph. Chrysomeloidea). Entomologische Arbeiten aus dem Museum G. Frey. 4. 26–303. German.
- Bechyné. J.. 1950. Notes sur les eumolpides américains. Mitteilungen der Münchner Entomologischen Gesellschaft. 40. 245–263.
- Bechyné. J.. 1954. La liste des Eumolpides de Rio Grande do Sul (Brésil) et observations diverses sur les espéces néotropicales. Arquivos do Museu Paranaense. 10. 141–226. 2019-03-30. 2019-03-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20190330233101/http://chrysomelidae.miza-ucv.org.ve/sites/chrysomelidae.miza-ucv.org.ve/files/1954_Separata_101.pdf. dead. (note: pages 196–199 are missing in the PDF)
- J.. Bechyné. 1955. Reise des Herrn G. Frey in Südamerika: Eumolpidae (Col. Phytophaga). Entomologische Arbeiten aus dem Museum G. Frey Tutzing bei München. 6. 569–657.