Trechus batuensis Magrini & Sciaky, 2006

Schmidt, Joachim & Faille, Arnaud, 2018, Revision of Trechus Clairville, 1806 of the Bale Mountains and adjacent volcanos, Ethiopia (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechini), European Journal of Taxonomy 446, pp. 1-82 : 61-62

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2018.446

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:56E50F4E-6A7E-4CE6-963E-3B49AA7A03B6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3848511

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DF87A4-FFF3-FF90-FDFD-FBB8FC1E5F20

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Trechus batuensis Magrini & Sciaky, 2006
status

 

Trechus batuensis Magrini & Sciaky, 2006 View in CoL

Figs 93–94 View Figs 91–94 , 97–98 View Figs 95–98 , 101–102 View Figs 99–102 , 129–130 View Figs 126–137

Trechus batuensis Magrini & Sciaky, 2006: 186 View in CoL ; locus typicus: Prov. Bale, SW Goba, Monte Batu, Nordic Lake.

Trechus batuensis View in CoL – Ortuño & Novoa 2011: 137.

Type material

Not studied. Identification of this species is based on its detailed original description including photos of habitus and genital characters, and on additional material from the type locality.

Material examined

ETHIOPIA: 19 ³³, 8 ♀♀, Oromia, Bale Mts, env. Wasama Camp, alt. 3900–4150 m, 23–25 Feb. 2013, 06°55′ N, 39°46′ E ( CAF, CSCHM); 12 ³³, 10 ♀♀, Bale Mts, Sanetti Plateau, W of Tulu Dimtu, alt. 4000–4100 m, 26 Feb. 2013, 06°51–52′ N, 39°47′ E ( CAF, CSCHM); 7 ³³, 7 ♀♀, Bale Mts, river S of Tulu Dimtu, alt. 3850–4150 m, 27 Feb. 2013, 06°48–49′ N, 39°47–48′ E ( CAF, CSCHM); 4 ³³, 3 ♀♀, N-slope Bale Mts, Kaficha Valley, alt. 3960 m, 06°59′12″ N, 39°51′53″ E, 27 Feb. 2015 ( CSCHM); 1 ³, Oromia, Goro, Batu Ridge, alt. 3960 m, 06°53′06″ N, 39°51′42″ E, 27 Feb. 2015 ( CSCHM); 35 specimens (³³, ♀♀), Sanetti Plateau, Buye Mo Vall., alt. 4000–4050 m, 06°54′ N, 39°45′ E, 24 Feb. 2015 ( CSCHM); 1 ³, Sanetti Camp, near road, alt. 3865 m, 06°47′42″ N, 39°47′03″ E, 28 Feb. 2015 ( CSCHM); 1 ³, 2 ♀♀, Bale Mts, Tegona Valley above Goba, alt. 3550 m, 20 Feb. 2017, 06°54′42″ N, 39°53′35″ E ( CAF, CSCHM); 1 ³, Bale Mts, SE Sanetti Plateau, near Mt Abalk-hasim, alt. 3760 m, 10 Dec. 2017, 06°45′10″ N, 39°49′36″ E ( CSCHM); 6 ³³, 7 ♀♀, Bale Mts, Sanetti Plateau, Tulu Dimtu, alt. 4180–4380m, 11 Dec. 2017, 06°49′ N, 39°49′ E ( CAF, CSCHM); 126 exx (³³, ♀♀), Bale Mts, SE Sanetti Plateau, SW of Tulu Dimtu, alt. 3820 m, 15 Dec. 2017, 06°46′43″ N, 39°46′47″ E ( CAF, CSCHM, NHMUK, MNHN, ZMAA).

Identification

Within the Trechus fauna of the Bale Mts, this species is recognized based on the combination of the following characters: body length moderately small (3.5–4.3 mm); elytral microsculpture consisting of deeply engraved isodiametric meshes; pronotum suggestively discoidal with base markedly bent anteriorly towards laterobasal angle, latter obtuse, marked as small blunt tooth; two basal protarsomeres of male dilated; aedeagal median lobe moderately short with dorsal margin distinctly convex; endophallus situated in apical half of median lobe, shaped like a fish trap, in dorsal view evenly narrowed towards aedeagal median lobe apex.

Distribution

Endemic to the Bale Mts. The species seems widely distributed on the Sanetti Plateau and on its northern margin. It has been found at altitudes of 3550–4150 m.

Geographical variation

Specimens from a population found in the Tegona Valley on the northern slope of the Bale Mts differ markedly by broader oval elytra which are not depressed on disc ( Fig. 102 View Figs 99–102 ), while specimens from the other populations studied are characterized by slenderer oval elytra, which are distinctly depressed on disc ( Fig. 101 View Figs 99–102 ). Trechus batuensis specimens from the Tegona valley are thus more similar to the sympatric and syntopic species T. fisehai sp. nov., however, the former can be recognized by the larger and almost isodiametric sculpticells of elytral microsculpture, and by the shape of the sclerotized portion of the endophallus ( Fig. 130 View Figs 126–137 ), which is evenly narrowed towards apex if viewed from dorsad, but abruptly narrowed in middle portion in T. fisehai sp. nov. ( Fig. 134 View Figs 126–137 ). It seems possible that the T. batuensis population from the Tegona valley represent a geographical subspecies. However, additional material needs to be studied before taxonomic conclusions can be drawn.

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Trechus

Loc

Trechus batuensis Magrini & Sciaky, 2006

Schmidt, Joachim & Faille, Arnaud 2018
2018
Loc

Trechus batuensis

Ortuno V. M. & Novoa F. 2011: 137
2011
Loc

Trechus batuensis

Magrini P. & Sciaky R. 2006: 186
2006
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