Emphytoeciosoma flava, Martins, Ubirajara R., Santos-Silva, Antonio & Galileo, Maria Helena M., 2015

Martins, Ubirajara R., Santos-Silva, Antonio & Galileo, Maria Helena M., 2015, Fourteen new species, one new genus, and eleven new country or state records for New World Lamiinae (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae), Zootaxa 3980 (1), pp. 81-105 : 102-103

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3980.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F50239AB-6186-4CB8-B74C-239FAD09BB85

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6093199

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3C5F0175-FFB8-FF8C-FF4E-7C486BD422C2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Emphytoeciosoma flava
status

sp. nov.

Emphytoeciosoma flava View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs. 54–58 View FIGURES 46 – 58. 46 – 49 )

Description. Integument dark-brown to black; head, apex of scape, antennomere III and prothorax black.

Head. Frons subquadrate, moderately coarsely, punctate; with short, grayish pubescence not obscuring integument (more conspicuous in some areas depending on angle of light source); with moderately long, sparse dark setae. Antennal tubercles elevated, distinctly separated from each other; pubescence and setae as on frons. Coronal suture barely visible. Vertex coarsely, abundantly punctate; pubescence as on frons; with long, moderately abundant, dark setae. Area behind eyes with wide, yellow band of pubescence obscuring integument, from superior ocular lobe to near middle of inferior ocular lobe; area between middle of inferior ocular lobe, coarsely, abundantly punctate, with pubescence as on frons, and long, moderately abundant setae. Genae as long as 1.3 times inferior ocular lobe; with whitish-yellow pubescence. Distance between superior ocular lobes equal to 0.70 times scape length; distance between inferior ocular lobes, in frontal view, equal to 0.95 times scape length; superior ocular lobes very short, narrow, not totally involving antennal socket, not distinctly separated from inferior ocular lobe. Setae on scape and antennomere III longer ventrally; apex of antennomere III reaching basal one-sixth of elytra; scape as long as 0.44 times antennomere III; pedicel as long as 0.11 times antennomere III.

Thorax. Prothorax subcylindrical, longer than wide; sides rounded from basal one-fourth to lateroanterior angle, with small, spiny tubercle at basal one-third; sides coarsely, densely punctate laterally; pubescence inconspicuous. Pronotum lacking distinct discal tubercles, sides coarsely, densely punctate; with large spot of yellow pubescence, from near apex of basal one-fifth to base of distal one-fifth, with abundant, long dark, setae throughout. Prosternum coarsely, abundantly punctate. Metepisterna coarsely, abundantly punctate; with narrow band of white pubescence on inner side. Metasternum coarsely, abundantly punctate laterally, abruptly, distinctly finer, towards middle; with yellow pubescence not obscuring integument. Elytra coarsely, densely punctate; with indistinct carina from humerus to near apex; apex truncate; with long, moderately abundant setae throughout, gradually shorter towards apex.

Abdomen. Urosternites with grayish pubescence; urosternite V distinctly emarginate at distal margin. Legs. Metatarsomere I as long as 1.3 times II–III together.

Dimensions in mm (male). Total length, 6.5; length of prothorax at center, 1.3; widest width of prothorax (between apices of tubercles), 1.3; anterior width of prothorax, 1.1; posterior width of prothorax, 1.1; humeral width, 1.6; elytral length, 4.8.

Type material. Holotype male from PERU, Piura: Nomara, 27.IV.2012, C. H. T. Townsend col. ( USNM).

Diagnosis. Emphytoeciosoma flava differs from E. daguerrei (monotypic genus) mainly by sides of the pronotum with large spot of yellow pubescence (unicolored pronotum in E. daguerrei ) and elytral apex truncated (rounded in E. daguerrei ).

Remarks. The holotype is damaged, missing left antennomeres IV–XI of left antennae; right antennae; left protarsomeres IV–V; right protarsus; claws of left mesotarsus; left metatarsomeres IV–V; right hind leg; and the abdomen is glued on the label.

Etymology. Latin, flavus = yellow; relating to the color of the pubescent pronotal maculae.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

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