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A-Szeptycki.Vp:Corelventura Andrzej SZEPTYCKI CATALOGUE of the World Protura Grant No 2PO4C 009 27 State Committee for Scientific Researches WYDAWNICTWA INSTYTUTU SYSTEMATYKI I EWOLUCJI ZWIERZ¥T POLSKIEJ AKADEMII NAUK KRAKÓW 2007 CONTENTS I. Introduction .................................5 II. List of the collections of Protura......................6 III. Ordo: Acerentomata............................7 IIIa. Fam. Hesperentomidae...........................7 IIIb. Fam. Protentomidae ...........................13 IIIa. Fam. Acerentomidae ...........................25 IV. Ordo: Sinentomata ...........................113 IVa. Fam. Fujientomidae ...........................113 IVb. Fam. Sinentomidae ...........................114 V. Ordo: Eosentomata ...........................115 Va. Fam. Eosentomidae ...........................115 Va. Fam. Antelientomidae ..........................178 VI. Bibliography ...............................180 VII. Index ..................................199 5 I. INTRODUCTION The first species of Protura was described hundred years ago by the eminent Italian entomolo- gist, SILVESTRI (1907). In this publication SILVESTRI not only described a new genus and new spe- cies, but also established the new order of apterygote insects and named it “Protura”. Two years latter the first monograph of that group was published by the other Italian zoologist, BERLESE (1909). This monograph contains descriptions of the 3 genera and 11 species as well as many impor- tant data about the morphology of the group. In the course of the hundred years studies, Protura were discovered in the whole world, with the exception of polar regions and nival zones of mountains. The most important lists of the world spe- cies were published by TUXEN (1931b), MILLS (1933), ROSAS COSTA (1950), PACLT (1955) and TUXEN (1964).The last monograph, based on the revision of type materials, contains data on ap- proximately 148 species and 16 genera. Since 1964, many papers dealing with Protura of various regions were published. Among them the most important are the regional monographs concerning Europe (NOSEK 1973), Japan (IMA- DATÉ 1974), New Zealand (TUXEN 1986) and China (YIN 1999). However, there were no syntheti- cal papers concerning the whole world. The present catalogue provides a summary of knowledge of Protura to the first half of the year 2006. It contains a list of available names for about 72 genera and 748 species of Protura occurring in the world, with correct publication dates, verified references to primary descriptions and infor- mative distributions of the species and subspecies. Only the publications containing taxonomical or faunistical data are taken into consideration. Other papers devoted to general problems (anatomy, ultrastructure etc.) are quoted only in the case when contain information important for systematic problems, or new faunistic reports.. The papers dealing with Protura as group (with no data concern- ing individual species) are omitted. The information about the geographic area are given only for the papers based on original records. Other contributions, such as local catalogues, checklists or keys based on published records are quoted in the text with no geographical data. The distribution is given according to the present knowledge of the group. Although the existing data are commonly more or less dubious, I was not able to check most of them. A localization of the type material is given according to the existing bibliography but only a part of the data was checked. List of the institutions preserving the type materials of Protura (and abbreviation used in the text) is given below. I am adopting herein a view that Protura form a separate class in the superclass Hexapoda. The system used here is that of YIN (1999) with some modifications concerning the order Acerentomata. Four families of Yin (Berberentulidae, Acerentomidae, Nipponentomidae and Acerellidae) are in- corporated to the one family, Acerentomidae (after François 2003). This family is divided into four subfamilies: Berberentulinae, Acerentominae, Nipponentominae and Acerellinae. The group of genera distinguished by Yin as subfamily Acerentulinae (with the exception of the genus Fjellber- gella ) is included to the subfamily Berberentulinae. I realize that the present knowledge of Protura does not allow to create a good, phylogeneticaly justified system of the group. The system proposed here is very imperfect and it should be changed and improved in the future. Acknowledgements.Thepreparing of the present catalogue would not be possible without assistance of many persons. I owe my many sincere thanks to the authors who send me their papers concerning Protura, especially to J. ALDABA,E.C.BERNARD,B.CONDÉ,M.C. CVIJOVIÆ, R. DALLAI,J.FRANÇOIS,G.IMADATÉ,O.NAKAMURA,J.NOSEK,J.RUSEK,C.TORTI, S. L. TUXEN,W.Y.YIN and many others. I am very grateful to prof. dr W. M. WEINER,drM. STERZYÑSKA, dr Y. BU and others for their help in the collecting the older papers about Protura. Dr Z. STEBNICKA helped me many times with the problems connected with nomenclature and hardly worked as the editor of the present work. Miss M. BIENIEK helped me with the technical preparing of the manuscript. The work on this catalogue and its publication was possible thanks to the Grant No 2PO4C 009 27 of the State Committee for Scientific Researches in Poland. The catalogue is dedicated to the memory of my late Masters, prof. dr Bruno CONDÉ, dr Gentaro IMADATÉ, dr Josef NOSEK and dr Søren Ludvig TUXEN. 6 II. LIST OF THE COLLECTIONS OF PROTURA AMNH – American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA ANIC – The Australian National Insect Collection, Canberra, Australia AOMT – Abteilung Ökologie und Morphologie der Tiere, Biologie III, Universität Ulm, Ulm, Germany BMNH – British Museum (Natural History), London, Great Britain CARC – The Albert J. Cook Arthropod Research Collection, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA CAUC – College of Agriculture, University of California, Berkeley, USA CMNZ – Canterbury Museum, Christchurch, New Zealand CNC – Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids and Nematodes, Ottawa, Canada coll. Bonet coll. Torti DBTU – Department of Biology, Tunghai University, Taichung, Taiwan ESCA – Sección de Entomología de la Sociedad de Ciencias Aranzadi, San Sebastian, Spain HNHM – Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary IEAP – Instituto di Entomologia agraria dell’Universitá di Napoli-Portici, Napoli, Italy INHS – Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaing, Il., USA ISB – Institute of Soil Biology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Èeske Budejovice, Czech Rep. ISEA – Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków, Poland JNU – Insect Collection of the Department of Biology Education, Jeonbug National University, Jeonju, Korea LEMQ – Lyman Entomological Museum, McGill University, Quebec, Canada LSD – Laboratoire du sol, I.N.R.A. Dijon, France LSNK – Landessammlungen für Naturkunde, Karlsruhe, Germany LZFD – Laboratoire de Zoologie de la Faculté des Sciences, Université de Nancy, France MHNG – Muséum d’Histoire naturelle, Gèneve, Switzerland MHNP – Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France MLP – Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina MZB – Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense, Bogor, Indonesia MZSP – Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil MZUC – Museo Zoológico de la Universidad de Coimbra, Portugal MZUN – Museo de Zoología, Universidad de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain NCTA – National Collection of Insects, Dep. of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Israel NMGA – National Museum of Natural History “Grigore Antipa”, Bucharest, Romania NMNH – National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC., USA NSMT – National Science Museum (Natural History), Tokyo, Japan NZAC – New Zealand Arthropod Collection, Auckland, New Zealand SAFM – South African Museum, Cape Town, Rep. of South Africa SAMA – South Australian Museum, Adelaide, Australia SEAF – Stazione di Entomologia Agraria in Firenze, Italy SIE – Shanghai Institute of Entomology, Academia Sinica, China SMNL – State Museum of Natural History, Lviv, Ukraine SPSU – Dep. of Entomology, Saint-Petersburg State University, Russia ZMP – Zoological Museum of St. Petersburg, Russia ZMUC – Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen, Denamark ZSIC – Zoological Survey of India, Calcutta, India 7 III. ORDO: ACERENTOMATA Acerentomidae (family): WOMERSLEY 1927a, p. 141; WOMERSLEY 1928a, p. 114; IONESCO 1930a, p. 2; TUXEN 1931b, p. 710; MILLS 1932, pp. 126, 127; WOMERSLEY 1932, p. 71; IONE- SCO 1932a, p. 80; WOMERSLEY 1939, p. 282; STRENZKE 1942, pp. 78, 89; CONDÉ 1945b, p. 100; IONESCO 1951, p. 18; PACLT 1955, pp. 8, 9; NOSEK 1957, p. 33; YIN 1963, p. 268; PALISSA 1964, p. 305 Acerentomonidae (family): CONDÉ 1946c, p. 177; CONDÉ 1948a, p. 196; KRATOHVIL 1959, p. 88 Acerentomonoidea (subordo): CONDÉ 1951b, p. 169; CONDÉ 1951c, p. 123; CUNHA, da 1952, p. 2 Acerentomoidea (subordo): TUXEN 1963a, pp. 86, 87, 92; TUXEN 1964, pp. 80, 167, 335; IMADATÉ 1965a, p. 44; IMADATÉ 1965b, p. 246; NOSEK 1973d, pp. 87, 136; TUXEN 1976a, p. 419; YIN 1983c, pp. 152, 162; YIN 1984a, p. 155; TUXEN 1986, pp. 6, 15, 29; MARTYNOVA 1986, p. 37, 38; BERNARD &TUXEN 1987, pp. 48, 49; COPELAND &IMADATÉ 1990, pp. 920, 921; FRANÇOIS 2003, p. 122 Acerentomida (ordo): NOSEK 1980c, p. 41 Acerentomata (ordo): YIN 1996, p. 60; YIN 1999, pp. 95, 104, 474, 475; ZHANG Z.Q. 2000, p. 11; BALKENHOL &SZEPTYCKI 2003, p. 8. Familia: Hesperentomidae PRICE, 1960 Hesperentomidae PRICE 1960, p. 676 Meroentominae: IONESCO 1932a, p. 87; IONESCO
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