Papuandra rothschildi, Santos-Silva & Heffern & Matsuda, 2010
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5164485 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5169160 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/975887B7-FF9D-FFA3-66D0-FF18132D37D6 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Papuandra rothschildi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Papuandra rothschildi View in CoL sp. nov.
( Fig. 9, 10 View Figure 1-44 , 91 View Figure 90-104 , 151, 152 View Figure 148-176 , 231 View Figure 218-234 , 274 View Figure 252-276. 252-257 , 331 View Figure 329-334 , 400-402 View Figure 397-402 )
Etymology. The name honors Lionel Walter Rothschild, a British zoologist and collector.
Type material. Holotype M (ex. Collection Rothschild; ex. Collection Oberthür), PAPUA NEW GUINEA, Morobe: Mount Alexander to Mount Nisbet , I.1896, Anthony coll. ( MNHN) . Paratypes (1 M, 1 F), as follows: PAPUA NEW GUINEA, Morobe: F, same data as holotype ( MNHN) ; Aseki, M, II.18.1999, native collector ( KMCT) .
Description. Integument shining, brown; parts of head and mandibles, margins of pronotum and scutellum, and elytral suture, blackish.
Male ( Fig. 400 View Figure 397-402 ). Dorsal surface of head, on gibbosities, with punctures fine and somewhat abundant; central area, between gibbosities and occiput, with punctures coarser and sparser than on gibbosities; gibbosities separated by moderately deep furrow, with a punctiform depression near clypeus; area between gibbosities and ocular carina depressed; ocular carina elevated, without bifurcation in “Y” near posterior edge of eyes; area behind eyes coarsely and sparsely punctate. Eyes ( Fig. 91 View Figure 90-104 ) narrow; posterior ocular edge ( Fig. 400 View Figure 397-402 ) distinct. Central area of clypeus oblique. Central area of labrum distinctly tumid and with tuberculiform process frontally; central projection of labrum ( Fig. 9 View Figure 1-44 ) wide and rounded at apex, distinctly lowered. Submentum barely depressed, sparsely, shallowly punctate and transversely striated; pilosity very short and sparse; anterior margin moderately narrow and elevated. Mandibles ( Fig. 151 View Figure 148-176 ) sub-falciform; inner margin with two teeth together protracted; dorsal carina narrow and clearly elevated. Ventral sensorial area of antennomeres III-XI ( Fig. 231 View Figure 218-234 ) visible from side (mainly in distal antennomeres) and divided by carina.
Pronotum somewhat finely, sparsely punctate on central area, and distinctly coarser and more abundant laterally; anterior edge slightly sinuous centrally; anterior angles clearly projected forward. Elytra abundantly and coarsely punctate on basal 3/4, mainly laterally, and finer on apical fourth; each elytron with two carinae. Metasternum and metepisterna glabrous, with punctures coarse and abundant (laterally on metasternum). Metafemur ( Fig. 401 View Figure 397-402 ) short. Dorsal face of metatibia flat, more distinctly on apical half. Metatarsomere V (without claws) as long as I-III together ( Fig. 274 View Figure 252-276. 252-257 ).
Female ( Fig. 402 View Figure 397-402 ). Labrum ( Fig. 10 View Figure 1-44 ) as in male, with central projection narrower. Mandibles as in Fig. 152 View Figure 148-176 . Punctation of head, pronotum finer; punctation of elytra as in male.
Variability. Integument brown to dark-brown.
Dimensions in mm (M / F). Total length (including mandibles), 21.5-21.7/19.7; prothorax: length, 4.7- 4.8/4.1; anterior width, 5.8-5.9/4.6; posterior width, 4.9-5.0/4.6; humeral width, 6.0-6.1/5.6; elytral length, 12.5-12.7/12.8.
Comments. Papuandra rothschildi is similar in general appearance to P. weigeli Mainly , it differs by the ventral sensorial area of antennomeres III-XI divided by carina (without carina in P. weigeli ). From P. araucariae it differs, notably, by dorsal carina of mandibles strongly elevated (distinctly lower in P. araucariae ).
MNHN |
Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.