Symmela clarki Pacheco, Wipfler, Monné and Ahrens, 2022
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2022.2084649 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5147CC1B-6144-4CA4-BA63-E39ED0A20E1C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7018985 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5D554F4F-2127-FFF0-FEA8-FA553B28FC5C |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Symmela clarki Pacheco, Wipfler, Monné and Ahrens |
status |
sp. nov. |
Symmela clarki Pacheco, Wipfler, Monné and Ahrens sp. nov.
( Figures 4 View Figure 4 , 29 View Figure 29 (a), 30(d), 32(a))
Type material examined
Holotype. ♂ ‘ Constancia Jan 1857 H. Clark /153 Neotropical Sericini spec.’ ( MNHN) . Paratypes: 1 ♂ ‘Constancia Jan 1857 H. Clark/ Symmela mutabilis Er’. ( MNHN), 1 ♂ ‘Constancia Jan 1857 J. Gray’ ( MNHN).
Description
Length: 6.2 mm. Elytral length: 3.5 mm. Width: 2.9 mm. Head blackish brown, shiny, with erect, sparse setae. Labroclypeus as wide as frons, subtrapezoidal; surface convex; plain, without an anterior concavity on each side; anterior margin straight, strongly reflexed, with a rim of sparse setae behind anterior margin; lateral margin not incised anteriorly; punctation of surface posteriorly dense; suture between labrum and clypeus invisible. Smooth area in front of eye distinctly separated from frons by a suture. Frons anteriorly flat, punctation even, dense. Ocular canthus with terminal setae, ratio of length of ocular canthus/eye diameter: 1/3. Eyes evenly spherical, ratio of diameter/interocular width: 0.45. Antenna with eight antennomeres. Antennal club with three antennomeres, yellowish, straight; width of antennal lamella equal to width of antennomeres of funiculus; apical lamella subequal to basal and median ones; length ratio of antennal club vs remaining antennomeres combined: 1/1.1; length ratio of third vs fourth antennomere: 1/2; fourth antennomere without lateral projection; length ratio of fifth vs fourth antennomere: 1/3. Labrum anteriorly without blunt processes. Setae on mentum moderately dense.
Head and pronotum without copper iridescent shine. Pronotum unicoloured, shiny, yellowish; widest at middle, width subequal to width of elytral base at humerus; anterior marginal line not interrupted medially, posterior marginal line absent; lateral margin not serrated, generally weakly convex, behind anterior angles convex, posteriorly weakly convex; setae of lateral margin sparse; basal margin evenly curved; transverse impression beside basal margin absent; anterior angles produced, sharply pointed; antero-lateral and postero-lateral angles not flattened dorso-ventrally; posterior angles blunt; surface without median longitudinal impression, transversal furrows or setae; punctation on disc moderately dense, simple and fine, without well-defined impunctate areas. Scutellum without punctures.
Elytra bicoloured, yellowish brown in major part, margins blackish; surface shiny, without setae and microsculpture; striae and intervals distinct; punctation between striae sparse, diameter of punctures compared to those of striae smaller; intervals flat; posterior edge convex; apical margin chitinous, without microtrichomes.
Abdomen: sternites flat in sagittal plane; lateral carina absent; first visible ventrite with row of setae on posterior edge; second visible ventrite with row of setae in medial region; basal ventrites medially with half length as laterally; ultimate and penultimate apical ventrites simple and flat; apical ventrite short (as long as preceding ventrite); penultimate apical ventrite with row of setae like preceding one; beside the robust row of setae, almost glabrous. Pygidium strongly convex.
Legs yellow. Ratio of length of metepisternum/metacoxa: 1/1.26. Metacoxa entirely plain, without elevated lateral longitudinal carina; without longer lateral bristles, with setae on basal surface, posterior margin densely setose. Metafemur with posterior margin straight. Metatibia widest at apex; ratio of width/length: 1/3.05; dorsal margin not carinated, smooth; interior surface more or less glabrous; median longitudinal punctation absent on interior surface; interior margin of apex sharply and deeply truncate towards ventral margin; punctation on entire lateral face absent; beside dorsal margin without a row of robust setae along entire length; basal group of spines reduced to a single robust spine; distal groups of spines disposed at two-thirds of metatibia length; ventral margin not serrated. Dorsal surface of tarsi glabrous, without punctures. Length ratio of dorsal tibial spur/first metatarsomere: 1/2. Metatarsi at apex weakly widened; first tarsomere straight, its length subequal to second and third tarsomeres combined; laterally not carinate; ventral margin serrated; ventral margin glabrous; medial face glabrous. Protibia with two distinct teeth; spur straight. First protarsomere straight, as long as second; width ratio of first protarsomere vs second protarsomere: 1.5/1; second protarsomere narrow and straight; third and fourth protarsomere elongate and narrow (distinctly longer than wide); fifth protarsomere dorso-ventrally flattened in cross section, a little shorter than third and fourth protarsomere combined. Protarsal claws asymmetrical, shape of inner protarsal claw bifid, apex of basal tooth of inner protarsal claw convex.
Aedeagus: Figure 4 View Figure 4 (c–e).
Female unknown.
Variation
Length: 5.8–6.2 mm. Elytral length: 3.5–3.6 mm. Width: 2.8–2.9 mm. Pronotum bicoloured, blackish brown.
Diagnosis
Symmela clarki sp. nov. is in external appearance similar to Symmela capixaba . Symmela clarki sp. nov. differs by the dorso-ventrally flattened protarsomere 5, which in S. capixaba is circular in cross section, and by the very short ventral lobe of parameres (long in S. capixaba ).
Etymology
This species is named after H. Clark, a British entomologist, the collector of the type specimen (noun in genitive case).
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.
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