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The metatibial extensor and flexor tendons in Coleoptera
Authors:DAVID G FURTH  KUNIO SUZUKI
Institution:Division of Entomology, Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511, U.S.A.;*Department of Biology, College of Liberal Arts, Toyama University, Gofuku, Toyama, 930 Japan
Abstract:The metatibiae of genera in several families of Coleoptera with enlarged metafemora are examined, including Chrysomelidae (Alticinae, Galerucinae, Sagrinae), Bruchidae (Pachymerinae, Rhae-binae, Eubaptinae, Bruchinae), Scirtidae and Oedemeridae. There is an evident pattern concerning the relative size of the tibial extensor and flexor tendons that is dependent on the type of hind leg movement of a specific beetle group. Beetle groups that jump (e.g. Alticinae, Scirtidae) always have a greatly enlarged metatibial extensor tendon and associated musculature. However, other groups with swollen metafemora that do not jump have enlarged metatibial flexor tendons with the associated musculature for holding/grasping onto the vegetation (Sagrinae, Bruchidae) or onto the female during copulation (male Oedemera). This indicates a strong functional relationship between Sagrinae and Bruchidae, both with large flexor tendons, and between the Alticinae and Galerucinae, with relatively large extensor tendons; these two cases may also have phylogenetic meaning. This pattern of the metatibial extensor and flexor tendon size related to function is presumably true for at least all other Coleoptera.
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