Aclopinae
Subfamily of beetles
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aclopinae is a subfamily of Scarabaeidae or scarab beetles in the superfamily Scarabaeoidea.[2][3][4]
| Aclopinae | |
|---|---|
| Aclopus, Brazil | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Clade: | Pancrustacea |
| Class: | Insecta |
| Order: | Coleoptera |
| Suborder: | Polyphaga |
| Infraorder: | Scarabaeiformia |
| Superfamily: | Scarabaeoidea |
| Family: | Scarabaeidae |
| Subfamily: | Aclopinae Blanchard, 1850 |
| Tribes | |
| |
| Synonyms[1] | |
|
Aclopidae Blanchard, 1850 | |
Distribution
The subfamily is found in northern Australia, Borneo and southern South America (Brazil and Argentina).[5]
Genera
These 11 genera belong to the subfamily Aclopinae.[6]
- Tribe Aclopini Blanchard, 1850
- Aclopus Erichson, 1835 (Neotropics)
- Desertaclopus Ocampo & Mondaca, 2012
- Gracilaclopus Ocampo & Mondaca, 2012
- †Cretaclopus Nikolajev, 2004
- †Juraclopus Nikolajev, 2005 (Upper Jurasic)
- †Prophaenognatha Bai, Ren & Yang, 2011
- Tribe Holcorobeini Nikolajev, 1992 (Mesozoic)
- †Antemnacrassa Gomez Pallerola, 1979
- †Holcorobeus Nikritin, 1977 (Lower Cretaceous)
- †Mongolrobeus Nikolajev, 2004
- Tribe Phaenognathini Iablokoff-Khnozorian, 1977
- Neophaenognatha Allsopp, 1983 (Neotropics)
- Phaenognatha Hope, 1841 (Australia)