Gymnochthebius weiri, Perkins, 2005
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1024.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:03B4C12B-E293-4006-86E8-14AA4634F663 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5052530 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/975A7812-FFED-FFDF-FEC7-7AD96861F02B |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Gymnochthebius weiri |
status |
sp. nov. |
Gymnochthebius weiri View in CoL new species
(Figures 46, 47, 74)
Type Material. Holotype (male): Australia: Northern Territory: Finke River xing, Stuart Highway , flowing river (temporary), sandy base, overhanging vegetation, 24° 33' S, 133° 14' E, 4 March 1995, T. Weir. Deposited in the ANIC GoogleMaps . Paratypes: Same data as holotype (2 ANIC) GoogleMaps .
Differential Diagnosis. Recognized by elongate body form and legs, the comparatively large elytra, the large and deep pronotal foveae, the shining dorsal reliefs, the light brown to testaceous color, and the raised evennumbered elytral intervals which are distinctly higher than the oddnumbered intervals. Distinguished from similarly shaped species G. benesculptus and G. coruscus by the elytral sculpture, the smaller size (ca. 1.70 mm vs. 2.00 mm), and the nonbarbed aedeagus (Figs. 46, 47).
Description. Size (length/width, mm) holotype: body (length to elytral apices) 1.67/ 0.76; head 0.31/0.36; pronotum 0.39/0.53; elytra 1.03/0.76. Form moderately ovate, moderately convex. Head piceous, pronotum and elytra light brown to testaceous. Dorsal reliefs shining.
Head finely sparsely punctate, weakly pubescent; interocular foveae deep; interocular tuberculi distinct; basomedial fovea narrowly confluent with interocular foveae. Frontoclypeal suture deeply impressed, bisinuate. Clypeus midlength 0.5 apical width, pubescence very sparse on disc, denser and longer laterally. Labroclypeal suture straight in dorsal view, evenly arcuate in anterior view. Labrum length 0.5 width, anterior margin strongly arcuate; apicomedian tooth strong, behind which is weak oval depression.
Pronotum lateral hyaline border well developed, origin at base of lateral depression, margin straight then markedly arcuate to posterior angles, very narrow around posterior margin; anterior margin of pronotum weakly arcuate in midregion; each lateral depression wide, posterior angle produced to acute point, lateral margin arcuate, with very short fringe of setae; lateral fossulae deep, very effacedly if at all microreticulate; pronotal disc transversely weakly convex, finely sparsely punctate, each puncture with a very small recumbent seta; median groove wide and deep, markedly constricted slightly behind midlength, extending nearly to margins, tapering at ends; anterior foveae oval, deep and large, width about equal widest part of median groove; posterior foveae oblique, deep, slightly more than 1/2 as long as and as wide as median groove; posterolateral angles without impressions.
Elytra moderately convex on disc, with six rows of punctures in deep striae between suture and humeri; punctures round, usually separated from each other by less than puncture width, sometimes narrow walls; evennumbered intervals raised, distinctly higher than oddnumbered intervals, width slightly greater than that of punctures; summit of declivity near apical 0.66; striae 2 and 3 terminating into 4 at about apical 1/4; intervals 4 and 6 continuing in raised condition to apices; sutural margin slightly raised; elytral explanate margin moderately developed, without fringe of setae.
Metasternal glabrous area longer than wide (as 14:12), oval, shining, convex. Abdominal ventrites 1–3 and basal part of 4 with hydrofuge pubescence.
Aedeagus (Fig. 47): Length of mainpiece 0.32 mm, length to tip of parameres 0.38 mm; lobes relatively wide, not barbed; notches Ushaped, narrowed slightly subapically; duct markedly arcuate subapically; apical paramere seta elongate, much longer than other setae.
Females have the explanate elytral margin about twice as wide as it is in males, about equal to the width of the mesotibia; the elytral sutural margins are sometimes weakly emarginate just before the apices, forming a narrow gap between the elytra; the labrum is simple, lacking the apicomedian tooth found in males.
Etymology. Named in honor of the collector, Tom Weir.
Distribution. Currently known only from the type locality in the Finke River Gorge National Park area of central Australia (Fig. 74).
ANIC |
Australian National Insect Collection |
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.
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