identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03A6D949FF99FFDAFF6FFD15FA07BE2A.text	03A6D949FF99FFDAFF6FFD15FA07BE2A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Neocherentes , Tippmann 1960	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Neocherentes Tippmann, 1960</p>
            <p> Type species.  Neocherentes dilloniorum Tippmann, 1960: 156 . </p>
            <p> The genus  Neocherentes currently contains a single species. The following key treats all currently known species of  Neocherentes including two new species described herein. </p>
            <p> 1. Apical 1/3 of elytra without distinct punctation; mesosternal process medially concave; mesosternum and abdominal sternites with similar coloration and striped pattern as elytra (Fig. 4b, e); usually found in lower elevation habitats, below 1,000 m (Brazil)...................................................  N. adrianoi Nearns and Monné ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p>— Apical 1/3 of elytra with distinct punctation; mesosternal process medially flat; mesosternum and abdominal segments with similar coloration and striped pattern as elytra or not; found in a wide range of elevations....................................................... 2</p>
            <p> 2. Abdominal segments with mottled whitish-grey coloration, without striped pattern as in elytra (Fig. 4c, f); usually found in lower elevation habitats, below 1,000 m (Bolivia)....................................................  N. pergeri Nearns and Monné ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p> — Mesosternum and abdominal segments with similar coloration and striped pattern as elytra (Fig. 4a, d); usually found in high elevation Andean habitats, above 1,000 m (Bolivia, Peru)....................................................  N. dilloniorum Tippmann, 1960</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6D949FF99FFDAFF6FFD15FA07BE2A	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.		Plazi	Nearns, Eugenio H.;Monné, Miguel A.	Nearns, Eugenio H., Monné, Miguel A. (2019): Two new species of South America Neocherentes Tippmann, 1960 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae: Onciderini). Insecta Mundi 2019 (699): 1-10, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3673160
03A6D949FF99FFDCFF6FFA65FC64B8A4.text	03A6D949FF99FFDCFF6FFA65FC64B8A4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Neocherentes dilloniorum F. Tippmann 1960	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Neocherentes dilloniorum Tippmann, 1960: 156</p>
            <p>(Fig. 1 a−d, 4 a, d)</p>
            <p>Redescription. Male. Length 11.5–9.0 mm (measured from vertex to elytral apices), width 4.4–4.0 mm (measured across humeri). Habitus as in Fig. 1a. General form elongate-oblong, moderately sized. Integument dark-brown to almost black, with white, gray, ochraceous, testaceous, and dark-brown pubescence; elytra with distinct pattern formed by curved and sinuate stripes of contrasting colors, forming almost an “X” shape extending from humeri to apices; mesosternum and abdominal sternites with similar stripes and colors.</p>
            <p>Head. Frons subquadrate, about 4 times width of lower eye lobes. Eyes with lower lobes moderately sized, narrow, elongate; narrowest area connecting upper and lower eye lobes about 2 ommatidia wide. Genae elongate, about 1/2 as tall as lower eye lobes. Antennae distinctly longer than body, surpassing elytral apices by 5 antennomeres; antennal tubercles prominent, widely separated; tubercles armed at apex with short, blunt horn; scape clavate; antennomere III slightly sinuate. Antennal formula based on antennomere III: scape = 0.63; II = 0.18; IV = 0.87; V = 0.62; VI = 0.52; VII = 0.44; VIII = 0.37; IX = 0.36; X = 0.37; XI = 0.38.</p>
            <p>Thorax. Pronotum roughly cylindrical, transverse, about 1.25 times as wide as long; disk densely pubescent, with two large, subround tumescences, one on each side of midline, each tumescence depressed obliquely by shallow furrow; each side of disk with short, glabrous line extending obliquely from base to about basal 1/3. Mesosternal process about 2/3 as wide as mesocoxal cavity, medially flat, emarginate apically. Scutellum transverse, apex rounded. Elytra. Slightly more than 2 times as long as width at humeri, about 3.7 times as long as pronotal length, about 1.5 times broader basally than pronotum at its widest (at base); lateral margins slightly attenuate, gradually rounded to apices at apical 1/3, apices jointly rounded; basal 1/2 with moderately dense, moderately deep punctation; humeri prominent, anterior margin arcuate. Legs. Short; femora robust; metafemora clavate apically; tibiae slightly expanded apically; metafemora about 1/3 as long as elytra; tarsomere V about as long as I–IV combined. Procoxae large, globose; apex of prosternal process subtriangular.</p>
            <p>Abdomen. Fifth abdominal ventrite about 1.25 times longer than IV.</p>
            <p>Female. Length 13.0−9.0 mm (measured from vertex to elytral apices), width 5.3– 3.7 mm (measured across humeri). Similar to male except antennae slightly longer than body; antennomeres X and XI decreasing in length compared to IX; basal 1/3 of profemora not transversely rugose; ventrite V with a median triangular impression.</p>
            <p> Material examined.   Holotype, ♂, PERU, Cusco, Cosñipata, 1700 m, XII 1951 F. Woytkowski //  Neocherentes dilloniorum F. Tippmann , Wien ♂ // Typus // BLNO000671 (NMNH).   Four ♀♀, BOLIVIA,  Cochabamba , Museum Frey Tutzing (NHMB);  1 ♀, BOLIVIA, Sur - Yungas, Chulumani, I-48, Bridarolli // Coleção J.M. Bosq (MNRJ); 1 ♂, BOLIVIA, Sur - Yungas, Chulumani, I-48, Williner // Coleção J.M. Bosq (MNRJ); 1 ♀, PERU, S.A., 1940 10.28, F. Woytkowski, No. 4110 // Dept. Junin, Prov. Tarma, Loc. Vitoc, 1400 m.a.s.l. (MZSP).</p>
            <p> Diagnosis and remarks.  Neocherentes dilloniorum can be separated from its congeners by the following combination of characters: apical 1/3 of elytra with punctation, mesosternal process medially flat, and mesosternum and abdominal sternites with distinct striped pattern similar to dorsal surface (Fig. 4a, d). This species is known from a total of eight specimens (2 males, 6 females). All known specimens of this species were collected in Peru and Bolivia (Fig. 5) at relatively high elevation (1,400 −2,558 m). Monné (2005) was the first to report this species from Bolivia, followed by Wappes et al. (2006). Lingafelter et al. (2014) provided color photographs of the holotype specimen. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6D949FF99FFDCFF6FFA65FC64B8A4	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.		Plazi	Nearns, Eugenio H.;Monné, Miguel A.	Nearns, Eugenio H., Monné, Miguel A. (2019): Two new species of South America Neocherentes Tippmann, 1960 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae: Onciderini). Insecta Mundi 2019 (699): 1-10, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3673160
03A6D949FF9FFFDEFF6FFBE7FA29B807.text	03A6D949FF9FFFDEFF6FFBE7FA29B807.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Neocherentes adrianoi Nearns and Monne 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Neocherentes adrianoi Nearns and Monné ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p>(Fig. 2 a−d, 4 b, e)</p>
            <p> Neocherentes dilloniorum ; Nearns and Swift (2011) </p>
            <p>Description. Female. Length 15.0−14.0 mm (measured from vertex to elytral apices), width 6.0− 5.4 mm (measured across humeri). Habitus as in Fig. 2a. General form elongate-oblong, moderately sized. Integument dark-brown to almost black, with white, gray, ochraceous, testaceous, and dark-brown pubescence; elytra with distinct pattern formed by curved and sinuate stripes of contrasting colors, forming almost an “X” shape extending from humeri to apices; mesosternum and abdominal sternites with similar stripes and colors.</p>
            <p>Head. Frons subquadrate, about 4 times width of lower eye lobes. Eyes with lower lobes moderately sized, narrow, elongate; narrowest area connecting upper and lower eye lobes about 2 ommatidia wide. Genae elongate, about 1/2 as tall as lower eye lobes. Antennae slightly longer than body; antennal tubercles prominent, widely separated; tubercles not armed at apex; scape clavate; antennomere III moderately sinuate. Antennal formula based on antennomere III: scape = 0.63; II = 0.18; IV = 0.8; V = 0.62; VI = 0.5; VII = 0.44; VIII = 0.34; IX = 0.31; X = 0.22; XI = 0.21.</p>
            <p>Thorax. Pronotum roughly cylindrical, transverse, about 1.3 times as wide as long; disk densely pubescent, with two large, subround tumescences, one on each side of midline, each tumescence depressed obliquely by shallow furrow; each side of disk with short, glabrous line extending obliquely from base to about basal 1/3. Mesosternal process nearly as wide as mesocoxal cavity, medially concave, emarginate apically. Scutellum transverse, apex rounded. Elytra. About 1.8 times as long as width at humeri, about 3.6 times as long as pronotal length, about 1.5 times broader basally than pronotum at its widest (at base); lateral margins slightly attenuate, gradually rounded to apices at apical 1/3, apices jointly rounded; basal 1/3 with sparse, shallow punctation; humeri prominent, anterior margin arcuate. Legs. Short; femora robust; metafemora clavate apically; tibiae slightly expanded apically; metafemora about 1/3 as long as elytra; tarsomere V about as long as I–IV combined. Procoxae large, globose; apex of prosternal process subtriangular.</p>
            <p>Abdomen. Fifth abdominal ventrite with a median triangular impression; ventrite V about 1.5 times longer than IV.</p>
            <p>Male. Length 12.0 mm (measured from vertex to elytral apices), width 4.5 mm (measured across humeri). Similar to female except antennae distinctly longer than body, surpassing elytral apices by 4 antennomeres; antennal tubercles armed with short, blunt horns; basal 1/3 of profemora transversely rugose; ventrite V without a median triangular impression.</p>
            <p> Type material.  Holotype, ♀ (Fig. 2 a−d), BRAZIL: Espírito Santo, Linhares, Maio 1970, Fragoso // Coleção Fragoso // comp. con foto de holotipo de Paracherentes ferruginea Breun. MNHN Paris (MNRJ) .  Allotype, ♂, BRAZIL: Rio, Riachuelo, vii 1932, M. Souza Gomes coll. (MNRJ).  Two paratypes, 1 ♀ BRAZIL: Minas Gerias,  Mar de Hespanha (MNHN);  1 ♀, “ Shtt ” [handwritten label on green paper] (NHMW) . </p>
            <p>Etymology. This species is named in memory of the late José Adriano Giorgi (1970−2018), longhorned beetle expert and friend, who will be missed. The epithet is a noun in the genitive case.</p>
            <p> Diagnosis and remarks.  Neocherentes adrianoi can be separated from its congeners by the combination of the following characters: apical 1/3 of elytra without punctation, mesosternal process medially concave, and mesosternum and abdominal sternites with distinct striped pattern similar to dorsal surface (Fig. 4b, e). In both  N. dilloniorum and  N. pergeri , the apical 1/3 of elytra has punctation and the mesosternal process is flat. This species is described from four specimens (one male, three females), three of which were collected in Brazil from near sea level to approximately 500 m (Fig. 5). One of the two female paratypes (NHMW) contains only a handwritten label on green paper which reads “ Shtt,” which we believe is short for Heinrich Wilhelm Schott (1794−1865), Austrian botanist and royal gardener who spent many years in Brazil (1817−1821) collecting specimens (Antonio Santos-Silva, pers. comm.). The late Stephen Breuning recognized the Mar de Hespanha (Minas Gerais) female paratype (MNHN) as distinct from  N. dilloniorum , which he labeled with the manuscript name “ Paracherentes ferruginea.” To the best of our knowledge, this name was never published. The female holotype from Linhares (Espírito Santo) was incorrectly listed as a male  N. dilloniorum by Nearns and Swift (2011), in recording a new country record for Brazil. Accordingly,  N. dilloniorum is formally excluded from the Brazilian fauna. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6D949FF9FFFDEFF6FFBE7FA29B807	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.		Plazi	Nearns, Eugenio H.;Monné, Miguel A.	Nearns, Eugenio H., Monné, Miguel A. (2019): Two new species of South America Neocherentes Tippmann, 1960 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae: Onciderini). Insecta Mundi 2019 (699): 1-10, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3673160
03A6D949FF9DFFD3FF6FFC46FE38BD20.text	03A6D949FF9DFFD3FF6FFC46FE38BD20.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Neocherentes pergeri Nearns and Monne 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Neocherentes pergeri Nearns and Monné ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p>(Fig. 3 a−d, 4 c, f)</p>
            <p>Description. Female. Length 14.0− 13.1 mm (measured from vertex to elytral apices), width 6.0 mm (measured across humeri). Habitus as in Fig. 3a. General form elongate-oblong, moderately sized. Integument dark-brown to almost black, with white, gray, ochraceous, testaceous, and dark-brown pubescence; elytra with distinct pattern formed by curved and sinuate stripes of contrasting colors, forming almost an “X” shape extending from humeri to apices; mesosternum and abdominal sternites with similar stripes and colors.</p>
            <p>Head. Frons subquadrate, about 4.5 times width of lower eye lobes. Eyes with lower lobes moderately sized, narrow, elongate; narrowest area connecting upper and lower eye lobes about 2 ommatidia wide. Genae elongate, nearly 2/3 as tall as lower eye lobes. Antennae slightly longer than body; antennal tubercles prominent, widely separated; tubercles not armed at apex; scape clavate; antennomere III moderately sinuate. Antennal formula based on antennomere III: scape = 0.56; II = 0.16; IV = 0.84; V = 0.62; VI = 0.44; VII = 0.38; VIII = 0.35; IX = 0.33; X = 0.28; XI = 0.26.</p>
            <p>Thorax. Pronotum roughly cylindrical, transverse, about 1.25 times as wide as long; disk densely pubescent, with two large, subround tumescences, one on each side of midline, each tumescence depressed obliquely by shallow furrow; each side of disk with short, glabrous line extending obliquely from base to about basal 1/3. Mesosternal process nearly as wide as mesocoxal cavity, medially flat, emarginate apically. Scutellum transverse, apex rounded. Elytra. About 1.6 times as long as width at humeri, about 3.3 times as long as pronotal length, about 1.6 times broader basally than pronotum at its widest (at base); lateral margins slightly attenuate, gradually rounded to apices at apical 1/3, apices jointly rounded; basal 1/3 with sparse, shallow punctation; humeri prominent, anterior margin arcuate. Legs. Short; femora robust; metafemora clavate apically; tibiae slightly expanded apically; metafemora about 1/3 as long as elytra; tarsomere V about as long as I–IV combined. Procoxae large, globose; apex of prosternal process subtriangular.</p>
            <p>Abdomen. Fifth abdominal ventrite with a median triangular impression; ventrite V nearly 2 times longer than IV.</p>
            <p>Male. Length 11.3− 10.5 mm (measured from vertex to elytral apices), width approx. 4.4 mm (measured across humeri). Similar to male except antennae distinctly longer than body, surpassing elytral apices by 5 antennomeres; antennal tubercles armed with short, blunt horns; basal 1/3 of profemora transversely rugose.</p>
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                 Type material.   Holotype, ♀, BOLIVIA, Santa Cruz de la Sierra,  Buena Vista , Nov.– Dec. 1992, R. Clarke, coll. (ex ACMT, to be deposited in NMNH)  .   Allotype, ♀, BOLIVIA, Santa Cruz de la Sierra,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -63.457333/lat -17.671)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-63.457333&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-17.671">Potrerillos del Guendá</a>
                 ; 17°40.26′ S, 63°27.44′ W, 9–29-XI-2006, B.K. Dozier collector (FSCA).  Two paratypes, 1 ♂ and 1 ♀, BOLIVIA, Santa Cruz: La Guardia (pre-Andean Chiquitano forest; 17°52′59″ S, 63°19′04″ W; 480 m a.s.l.), XI–XII.2015, beating tray, R. Perger col. (RPPC).
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            <p>Etymology. This species is named for our friend Robert Perger (Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia), who collected part of the type series, for his spirit of collaboration and contributions to the study of Neotropical longhorned beetles. The epithet is a noun in the genitive case.</p>
            <p> Diagnosis and remarks.  Neocherentes pergeri can easily be separated from its congeners by the metasternum and abdominal ventrites with mottled whitish-grey coloration (in  N. dilloniorum and  N. adrianoi , the metasternum and abdominal ventrites continue the distinct pattern found on the elytra (Fig. 4c, f )). This species is known from four specimens (one male, three females) collected in pre-Andean Chiquitano transition forest in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia at approximately 480 m (Fig. 5). Nothing is known about the biology of this species. The allotype male of this species was recently figured in a beautifully illustrated photographic guide to longhorned beetles of Bolivia by Lingafelter et al. (2017) as  N. dilloniorum . </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6D949FF9DFFD3FF6FFC46FE38BD20	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.		Plazi	Nearns, Eugenio H.;Monné, Miguel A.	Nearns, Eugenio H., Monné, Miguel A. (2019): Two new species of South America Neocherentes Tippmann, 1960 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae: Onciderini). Insecta Mundi 2019 (699): 1-10, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3673160
