taxonID	type	description	language	source
03FE87C9035D7723FF2AFF657B215260.taxon	description	Most herein analysed specimens of Lixinae were sampled during our fieldwork in Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia and Ukraine; the remaining specimens were accumulated through a network of correspondents (see Acknowledgements). All Cleonini specimens sampled by us were either hand-picked during the daytime from under items lying on the ground (mainly dry dung of domesticated ungulates, Fig. 2 L )), or caught in unbaited pitfall traps; a few specimens were picked when walking on the ground or reared from root galls (Fig. 2 J). Conversely, all Lixini and Rhinocyllini specimens were swept or hand-picked from vegetation. All specimens sequenced herein (including the outgroup) are deposited in the Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes (Ottawa). Images and geographic data of each specimen reported in this work, either of Lixinae or non-Lixinae, are available online in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD, Ratnasingham & Hebert 2007; dx. doi. org / 10.5883 / DS-VGDS 21).	en	Volovnik, Semyon V., Boldgiv, Bazartseren, Iderzorig, Badamnyambuu, Khobrakova, Larisa Ts., Kolov, Sergey V., Rudykh, Sergey G., Zabaluev, Ilya A., Grebennikov, Vasily V. (2021): The first molecular phylogeny of the weevil subfamily Lixinae (Coleoptera Curculionidae) casts doubts on the monophyly of its tribes. Zootaxa 5026 (2): 201-220, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5026.2.3
03FE87C903547735FF2AF8CC7D2251BE.taxon	description	Regardless of whether the tribe is monophyletic or not, some Cleonini species do actively fly. This is, however, a poorly documented and rarely observed phenomenon, which misled Arzanov & Grebennikov (2017) into the erroneous conclusion that all Cleonini are flightless. Active flight has been reported for at least three economically important species: Asproparthenis punctiventris (Germar, 1823) (e. g., Orlachiova 1956; Auersch 1961; Tóth et al. 2006), Bothynoderes affinis (Schrank, 1781) (Kokovikhin 1966), and Temnorhinus brevirostris (Gyllenhal, 1834) (Brunner 1959). Meregalli (2005) reported flight in Eurycleonus talamellii Meregalli, 2005. One of us (BI) observed in Mongolia active flight of, likely, Conorhynchus conirostris Gebler, 1829. Robert Stejskal (personal communication) observed in central Europe active flight of Bothynoderes affinis, Asproparthenis punctiventris, Cleonis pigra, and Cyphocleonus dealbatus Gmelin, 1790.	en	Volovnik, Semyon V., Boldgiv, Bazartseren, Iderzorig, Badamnyambuu, Khobrakova, Larisa Ts., Kolov, Sergey V., Rudykh, Sergey G., Zabaluev, Ilya A., Grebennikov, Vasily V. (2021): The first molecular phylogeny of the weevil subfamily Lixinae (Coleoptera Curculionidae) casts doubts on the monophyly of its tribes. Zootaxa 5026 (2): 201-220, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5026.2.3
