Monodius laevistriatus (Fairmaire, 1897) Fairmaire, 1897

Kaminski, Marcin Jan, 2014, A cladistically based reinterpretation of the taxonomy of two Afrotropical tenebrionid genera Ectateus Koch, 1956 and Selinus Mulsant & Rey, 1853 (Coleoptera, Tenebrionidae, Platynotina), ZooKeys 415, pp. 81-132 : 104-106

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.415.6406

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:372DF48D-D163-4742-AABF-5D7E4913050C

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6CEBA9E7-74C5-1C54-6614-48F9C49250C3

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Monodius laevistriatus (Fairmaire, 1897)
status

comb. n.

Monodius laevistriatus (Fairmaire, 1897) comb. n. Figs 19, 40, 42, 53

Selinus laevistriatus Fairmaire, 1897: 122. - Gebien 1910: 278, 1921: 21, 1938: 297.

Ectateus laevistriatus (Fairmaire, 1897). - Koch 1956: 237; Ardoin 1969: 143, 1971: 284; Iwan 2002a: 67, 2002b: 265.

Studied material.

Holotype, female (MNHN): “TYPE”, “Sierra-Leone”, "Selinus laevistriatus Frm [unreadable] Type", “Muséum Paris, 1906, Coll. L. Fairmaire". Other material: males and 2 female (MNHN): "Fort Camp, 1070m, 26-V-1963", "Mission ENS-IFAN, aux Monts LOMA, Sierra Leone", “Muséum Paris, coll. P. Ardoin, 1978", " Monodius laevistriatus , Fairm., P. Ardoin det. 1966".

Redescription.

Habitus as in Fig. 53. Body length = 12.0-14.0 mm. Elytra wider and longer than pronotum (width ratio elytra / pronotum = 1.1-1.2; length ratio elytra / the middle of pronotum = 2.2-2.4).

Dorsal side of head dull, with fine punctures (the intervals between the punctures are smaller than the diameter of the puncture). Frontoclypeal suture fine. Clypeal emargination relatively deep (clypeal emargination width / depth ratio = 7.1-7.5). Mentum with median part wide. Submentum with short base. Maxillary palp not widened (width of maxillary palp / length of 3rd antennomere = 1.1-1.2). Length of antennae greater than pronotal length (ratio antenna / pronotum from tip of anterior pronotal angle to tip of posterior pronotal angle = 1.2-1.3). 3rd antennomere relatively long (length ratio of antennomere 3rd / 2nd = 2.8-2.9).

Pronotal disc transverse (middle of pronotum length / width ratio = 0.5-0.6); dull, with fine punctures (the intervals between the punctures are greater than the 2 diameters of the puncture); with two circular depressions in the middle. Anterior pronotal angles sharp and strongly protruding towards front. Lateral margins of pronotal disc rounded. Apophyseal and basal depressions on pronotal disc present; apophyseal depressions trapezoidal. Pronotal hypomera dull; without punctures.

Elytra oblong (elytra length / width ratio = 1.1-1.2). Elytral striae with fine punctures; impressed on the whole length. Elytral intervals shiny, non-convex, with conspicuous punctures (the intervals between the punctures are smaller than the diameter of the puncture). Elytral base slightly sinusoidal. Elytral humeri rounded, not protruding laterad. Wings absent. Scutellum rounded.

Intercoxal process not protruding towards mesoventrite. Metaventrite reduced (length ratio cavity of hind coxa / metaventrite between the insertions of mid and hind coxae ca. 2). In both sexes abdominal process without tubercles, relatively narrow (process of 1st abdominal ventrite / process of metaventrite = 2.1-2.3). 5th abdominal ventrite without bordering; punctures fine (the intervals between the punctures are greater than the 2 diameters of the puncture).

Male legs. Protarsi slightly widened. Protibiae as in Monodius convexipennis . Mesofemorae with a large denticle at the apex, mesotibia with a small denticle at the apex. Metafemorae with an hair fringe. Female legs. Protarsi slightly widened. Other leg parts simple.

Male genitalia. Parameres strongly narrowed toward apex; length equal to the 0.5 of the rest of aedeagal tegmen (Fig. 19). Clavae straight (Fig. 19). Female genitalia. Paraproct equal to coxites. Bursa copulatrix with two sacs. Spermatheca with narrow ducts.

Distribution.

This species has been collected in the following ecoregions of West Africa (Sierra Leone): Western Guinean lowland forests (Fig. 42).