identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
709AC78541855C9BA856A876256D340A.text	709AC78541855C9BA856A876256D340A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Macrispa Baly 1859	<div><p>Genus Macrispa Baly, 1859</p><p>Macrispa Baly, 1859: 90. Chapuis 1875: 294 (redescription); Gemminger and Harold 1876: 3606 (catalog); Baly 1879: 465 (note); Donckier 1899: 559 (catalog); Gestro 1905: 130 (note); Weise 1911 a: 40 (catalog), 1911 b: 57 (catalog); Maulik 1915: 368 (redescription), 1919: 23 (India species); Uhmann 1954: 39 (catalog), 1958: 160 (catalog); Descarpentries and Villiers 1959: 499 (types); Abdullah and Qureshi 1969: 99 (Bangladesh species, misspelling); Würmli 1975: 10 (genera); Anand 1984: 11 (note); Staines and Staines 1999: 526 (note); Kimoto 2005: 105 (faunal list).</p><p>Botryonopa Würmli 1976: 88 (synonymy); Seeno and Wilcox 1982: 162.</p><p>Macrispa Sekerka 2015: 718 (stat. restit.).</p><p>Type species.</p><p>Macrispa saundersii Baly, 1859, by monotypy; TL unknown, TD BMNH.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>The elytra of Macrispa are noticeably different from those of Botryonopa, as they exhibit predominantly irregular punctation (with only the first two rows being relatively regular) and convex, forming a uniform arch in cross-section (Fig. 1). In contrast, Botryonopa has entirely regular punctation and a flattened elytral disc. Additionally, Macrispa possesses longer, more slender antennae, which are not tubular like those found in Botryonopa (Sekerka 2015) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/709AC78541855C9BA856A876256D340A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Huang, Zheng-Zhong;Zhang, Chao-Fan;Leng, Shi-Xing;Yang, Xing-Ke;Ge, Si-Qin	Huang, Zheng-Zhong, Zhang, Chao-Fan, Leng, Shi-Xing, Yang, Xing-Ke, Ge, Si-Qin (2025): First record of the genus Macrispa in China, with a redescription of Macrispa saundersii Baly, 1859 (Chrysomelidae, Cassidinae, Botryonopini). ZooKeys 1252: 69-76, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1252.142681
388773742236529C8E161EB3FC853562.text	388773742236529C8E161EB3FC853562.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Macrispa saundersii Baly 1859	<div><p>Macrispa saundersii Baly, 1859</p><p>Figs 1–3, 4–9, 10–13</p><p>Macrispa saundersii Baly, 1859: 91; TL unknown, TD BMNH.</p><p>Botryonopa saundersii (Baly, 1859). Würmli 1976: 88.</p><p>Macrispa krishnalohita Maulik, 1915: 369 synonymized by Würmli 1976: 88.</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>CHINA • 1 male; Xizang province, Xiayadong, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=89.01945&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=27.256111" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 89.01945/lat 27.256111)">Kangyang Base</a>; 27°15'22"N, 89°01'10"E; alt. 1832 m; 08 Jul. 2023; Bai Xinglong, Ji Quanyu, and Song Jian leg.; MHBU 20250412 .</p><p>Redescription (based on one male specimen).</p><p>Body length: 22.5 mm; body width: 8.0 mm. Body large, flat; elytra orange-red; labrum yellow; remaining parts shiny black.</p><p>Head narrower than anterior margin of pronotum. Antennae with 11 antennomeres; antennomere 1 robust, cylindrical; antennomere 2 shortest; antennomere 3 longest, slightly longer than antennomere 4; antennomere 4 longer than antennomere 5; antennomeres 6–11 approximately equal in length, with antennomere 11 tapering at the tip. antennomeres 1–4 glossy, antennomeres 5–11 densely covered with short black hairs. Vertex with irregular, coarse punctures, coarser than those on base of pronotum but finer than those on pronotal disc. Compound eyes elongate, oval, finely faceted. Vertex with depressions near compound eyes, which bear coarse punctures and long, yellow hairs. Occiput with triangular stridulatory file area (Fig. 4). Gena smooth, impunctate or only few shallow wrinkles. Short, deep median groove between antennae. Frons smooth, without punctures, with depressions near compound eyes, containing dense yellow hairs. Mouthparts (Fig. 5) hypognathous. Labrum yellow and densely covered with long, yellow hairs along anterior margin. Mandibles robust. Maxillary palps with 4 palpmeres; palpomere 1 shortest, palpomeres 2–4 swollen, palpomere 4 longest with flattened, truncated yellowish tip; palpomeres 2–4 bear scaly surface with several punctures. Labial palps with 3 palpomere; palpomere 1 shortest, palpomere 2 broad, palpomere 3 longest, with yellowish, truncate tip.</p><p>Pronotum (Fig. 6) flattened, with weak wrinkles near the anterior margin. Anterior third relatively smooth with fine and weak punctures; coarser irregular punctures present on sides, some punctures confluent. Two depressions present on either side of central area, separated by smoother region with fine punctures. Base of pronotum with strong transverse wrinkles. Sides of pronotum slightly curved and rough, with irregular rounded edges that taper slightly near base. Anterior angles rounded; posterior angles nearly right-angled, neither sharp nor prominent.</p><p>Scutellum black, shiny, tongue-shaped, smooth, impunctate.</p><p>Elytra longer than abdomen, fairly flat, and broader at base compared to pronotum. Each elytron has prominent humeral region and folded edge extending to apex. Elytra hairless but with coarse punctures, more prominent on disc and sides, weakening toward apex. Each coarse puncture accompanied by two shallow circular protrusions (Fig. 7). Elytra with mesh-like surface with weak ridges. Sides expand toward apex, with weak lateral edges. Exterior apical angle rounded, with small tooth at each sutural angle.</p><p>Prosternum with lateral folds mostly smooth with a few coarse punctures. Base of prosternum, like base of pronotum, with strong transverse wrinkles. Procoxal cavities closed, and prosternal process very narrow, with strong wrinkles, strongly arched, expanding significantly toward wide, flat, and nearly straight apex.</p><p>Mesosternum T-shaped, with strong wrinkles. Lateral parts flatter with weak punctures.</p><p>Metasternum with transverse wrinkles, stronger on sides and weaker at middle. Weak median line present, slightly depressed toward anterior margin. Posterior sides strongly wrinkled, becoming weaker toward apex.</p><p>All femora thicker than tibiae, especially profemur. Males have one or two transverse lamellate protrusions on midsection of each femur (Fig. 8). All femora with wrinkles, particularly near base. Tibiae slightly curved, with long groove on ventral side. Apex of tibiae swollen, with short dense bristles, especially on protibia, with lamellate protrusion ventrally. Tarsi 4-4 - 4; first three tarsomeres flattened, wide, and densely covered with short hairs ventrally. Third tarsomere longer than either first and second tarsomeres. Claws simple.</p><p>Abdomen flattened, with five visible sternites; sterna 1 and 2 appear fused medially, remaining sternites clearly separated (Fig. 9). Central part of each sternite with weak wrinkles, with stronger folds and depressions on sides. Last sternum smooth, with wavy edges, a rounded depression in center, and short, dense, yellow hairs.</p><p>Male genitalia (Figs 10–13). Median lobe of aedeagus strongly sclerotized, with parallel sides and slightly expanded base and apex; in lateral view, median lobe of aedeagus slightly curved (Fig. 12). Basal piece unsclerotized. Ventral surface convex proximally, flattened towards apex. In ventral view, widened towards apex, apex rounded (Fig. 13). Tegmen with each arm a little shorter than stem. Stem of tegmen characteristic with a laminate vertical process along middle.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>China (Xizang, Xiayadong), India, Bhutan, Bangladesh.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/388773742236529C8E161EB3FC853562	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Huang, Zheng-Zhong;Zhang, Chao-Fan;Leng, Shi-Xing;Yang, Xing-Ke;Ge, Si-Qin	Huang, Zheng-Zhong, Zhang, Chao-Fan, Leng, Shi-Xing, Yang, Xing-Ke, Ge, Si-Qin (2025): First record of the genus Macrispa in China, with a redescription of Macrispa saundersii Baly, 1859 (Chrysomelidae, Cassidinae, Botryonopini). ZooKeys 1252: 69-76, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1252.142681
