Pedilia sirena, Duckett, 2003

Duckett, Catherine N., 2003, A new species of flea beetle, genus Pedilia Clark (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Galerucinae), from Osa Pennisula, Costa Rica, Zootaxa 158, pp. 1-8 : 2-8

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.158.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E0F410BC-7E6E-462C-8E29-73BDEAD39336

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13969424

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/20118797-FFE8-FF85-FEF8-057F9C5BFC80

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pedilia sirena
status

sp. nov.

Pedilia sirena , new species

( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 a­f, 4a­f, 5)

Diagnosis. Pedilia sirena can be distinguished from other described species of Pedilia by the slightly concave shape of the ventral lip of the median lobe ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ) and by a unique combination of female genital characters, including presence of a gonophysis and the shape of sternite VIII.

Description. Body robust, very broadly ovate, convex, 4.2 ­ 5.5 mm long, 3.1 ­ 4.2 mm wide at elytral midpoint. Color orange (see Figure 2 View FIGURE 2 ) or fulvous after death, antennomeres III ­ XI andmandibles piceous.

Head ovate, widest dorsally with mouth small, ( Figs.1 View FIGURE 1 , 3a View FIGURE 3 ) eye deeply emarginate, upper ocular lobe smaller than lower; occiput narrow, less than one­third head width; vertex glabrous and lightly punctate, one postocular seta, postantennal calli pronounced, medially delimited by suture ( Fig. 3a View FIGURE 3 ); occiput with pronounced bilobed depression abutting ocular setae; frontal carina pronounced, forming a broad based inverted Y over clypeus, ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 and Fig. 3a View FIGURE 3 ). Labrum: broader than long, slightly emarginate apically, bearing four pairs of setae ( Fig. 3b View FIGURE 3 ) with many stout setae on apical margin. Mandible: palmate bearing four teeth ( Fig. 3e View FIGURE 3 ), mandibular mola with two grinding surfaces, apical surface bearing transverse ridges when unworn and basal surface bearing honeycomb­like reticulations ( Figure 3f View FIGURE 3 ); prostheca bearing long,dense microtrichia ( Fig. 3e View FIGURE 3 ), exterior face glabrous. Maxillary palpus: last segment,incrassate ( Fig. 3c View FIGURE 3 ), bearing many setae (see Figure 3d View FIGURE 3 ). Antenna long, very thin, extending to between elytral midpoint and apex; antennomere III (0.35 mm) less than 2/3 length IV; V slightly shorter than IV; XI slightly longer than III. Pronotum transverse, convex, width 2.5 ­ 3x length; anterior angles level with eyes, beveled, with seta on posterior edge of anterior angle and setal pit prominent; pronotal lateral margins distinct, wide, convergent towards head, accompanied by single row of fine punctures two antennal widths from margin, lateral margins convergent towards head; posterior angles anteriorly directed; disc punctation confused and lightly impressed; prebasal pronotal impression bearing sharp lateral prebasal folds, oblique impression arising at anterior corner of lateral impression, fading posteriorly near midline. Elytral punctation indistinct; elytral margin, wide, translucent; epipleuron horizontal, ventrally concave. Scutellum triangular, glabrous.

Prosternum excavated anteriorly to receive head; prosternal process setose ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ), narrow, extending just beyond procoxae; procoxal cavity open; procoxa oblique. Mesosternum short, transverse, finely pilose, concave anteriorly, posterior edge sinuate.

Male sternum VII with small trapezoidal internal flange at midline articulating with pygidium ( Fig. 4a View FIGURE 4 ). Pygidium unmodified ( Fig. 4a View FIGURE 4 ).

Male genitalia ( Fig. 4c, d View FIGURE 4 ) with ventral lip of median lobe truncate and concave. Median dorsal process of median lobe thin with very small rounded apex, lateral median process wide, shorter than median dorsal process; apically pointed; basal half of median lobe unmodified. Tegmen narrow.

Female sternum VII and pygidium evenly convex.

Female genitalia with prominent triangular gonocoxae (vaginal palpi of Konstantinov 1998) ( Fig. 4e View FIGURE 4 ), each with 17 - 19 short setae distributed along gonocoxal perimeter. Gonapophysis or genital sclerite ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ) convex, roundly triangular, glabrous. Sternite VIII (the"tignum" of Konstantinov 1998) apically spatulate though narrow, basally broad with highly emarginate proximal edge ( Fig.4b View FIGURE 4 ). Spermatheca curved ( Fig. 4f View FIGURE 4 ), receptacle smoothly ovate, pump and proximal spermathecal duct long relative to receptacle. Bursa copulatrix covered with microtrichia, specialized epithelium present at apex, where distal spermathecal duct enters bursa ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ).

Karyotype. Male with 25 chromosomes, sex determination system unknown (Segarra and Duckett, unpublished data).

Holotype. COSTA RICA: Puntarenas, Osa Peninsula, Parque Nacional Corcovado, Sirena station , 8º 28'N, 83º 35'W, July1985, ex Passiflora pittieri, C.N Duckett , ( MCZ). GoogleMaps

Paratypes (39). COSTA RICA: 15, Puntarenas, Osa Peninsula, Parque Nacional Corcovado, Sirena station , 8º 28'N, 83º 35'W, July 1985, ex Passiflora pittieri, C.N Duckett leg. (2 each deposited in MCZ, CASC, MNCR, MIZA, BMNH, USNM) GoogleMaps 3 (CNDC) GoogleMaps ; 5, same location and collector, July 1986, 3, (EGRC), GoogleMaps 1 (CNDC), GoogleMaps 1 (CUIC) GoogleMaps ; 7, same location and collector, Jan 1988, 5 (CNDC) 2 (MZSP) GoogleMaps ; 8, same location, vi.1986, C.D. Thomas, 4 (FAMU), 2 (TAMU), 2 (AMSA) GoogleMaps ; 1, same location, 23.vii.1980, J. Longino, (FAMU) GoogleMaps ; 1, same location and collector, 6.viii.1980, & 7.v.1981, ( FAMU) GoogleMaps ; 2, same location, vi 1993 "L S 2705000_5083000 #2098" and vii 1994 "L S 2705000_5083000 #2853", both G. Fonseca leg. (INBIO). GoogleMaps

Etymology. Named for the type locality, sirena , which is also Spanish for mermaid; to be treated as noun in apposition. Gender is feminine.

Remarks. The life history and basic oviposition and feeding behaviors of Pedilia sirena were reported by Duckett (1989). Pedilia sirena is strictly monophagous on Passiflora pittieri ( Passifloraceae : subgenus Astrophea ) ( Duckett 1989), a woody liana (See Fig 2 View FIGURE 2 ), which also occurs in Panama and parts of northern Venezuela ( Longino 1984). Further collections in these areas might expand the known range of P.sirena .

This species has been mentioned in at least three publications as " Pedilia sp. A " in a phylogenetic analysis of the sub­tribe Disonychina (Duckett 1999) , in a comparison of female reproductive structures ( Duckett 1995) and in an ecological study ( Duckett 1989). Pedilia sirena is brilliant orange in life ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ) but may fade to a pale creamy white if preserved in alcohol. The living orange color is the same as the eggs of Heliconius hewitsoni Stgr. ( Lepidoptera : Nymphalidae ), a species which is also monophagous on Passiflora pittieri and which will avoid shoots that have received conspecific eggs in previous days ( Longino 1984, Duckett pers. Obs.). Therefore the similarity in color of Pedilia sirena to an egg mass of H. hewitsoni may have ecological significance (Duckett, in prep).

It is also notable that Pedilia sirena has a prominent mandibular mola ( Figure 3e,f View FIGURE 3 ) and that this mola has two separate grinding surfaces and textures (See Figure 3f View FIGURE 3 ). Mandibular molae have been reported for few galerucines. Lingafelter and Konstantinov (1999) code the mandibular mola as missing for all but two of 21 galerucine genera analyzed. Crowson and Crowson 1996 report mandibular molae from Arisopoda, Diabrotica , Diacantha, Ergana Nonarthra and Prosmidia , noting it as a Galerucine feature probably associated with pollen feeding. Pedilia sirena is not known to feed on pollen despite extensive observations by the author (see also Duckett 1989). However, a single, but similarly ridged mola, was reported from a disonychine flea beetle on Ptocadica tica Duckett and Moyá (1999) that has never been reported to feed on pollen, and from a still undescribed species of Alagoasa ( Duckett and Daza 2003) whose eating habits are unknown.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Chrysomelidae

Genus

Pedilia

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