Aphelocerus sagittarius, OPITZ, 2005
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1206/0003-0090(2005)293<0001:CNHAEO>2.0.CO;2 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E787FE-9946-1128-FD4F-FE5EFD3EFDE6 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aphelocerus sagittarius |
status |
sp. nov. |
Aphelocerus sagittarius , new species Figures 62 View Figs , 110–113 View Figs , 135, 136 View Figs , 165 View Figs ;
map 21
HOLOTYPE: Male. ‘‘ Guatemala’ ’, L. Conradt ( MNHN). (Specimen mounted on a card, machine printed sex label affixed to specimen card; locality label, white, machine printed; Paris Museum repository label; holotype label, red, machine and hand printed.)
PARATYPES: Twelve specimens from Guatemala, L. Conradt ( DEIC, 3; MNHN, 6; WOPC, 3) .
DIAGNOSIS: Uniformly small beetles (4 mm); the cranium, pronotum, legs, and abdomen are cyanescent; the pygidia are trigonal; aedeagus distinctly sagittate; elytral discal setal tuft as in figure 165. Tegmen as in figures135 and 136.
DESCRIPTION: Size: Length 4.1–4.5 mm; width 1.7–2.0 mm. Integument: Cranium, pronotum, legs, and abdomen cyanescent; elytra piceous. Vestiture: Integument vested predominantly with dark setae, few pale setae; metepisternal, sutural tuft moderately developed, elytral discal tuft bipartite, anterior and posterior patches widely separated, setae of anterior patch directed anteriorly, setae of posterior patch directed posteriorly. Head: Width across eyes same as width across pronotum (22:22) finely punctate; interocular depressions and frontal umbo shallow; eyes subspherical, moderately convex, antenna as in figure 62. Thorax: Pronotum subequal in width and length (22:24), narrower than width of elytron across humeri (22:27); finely punctate, side margins subparallel, feebly incised by anterior transverse depression; elytral depth at humerus 14, greatest depth in posterior half 20; humeral umbo prominent. Abdomen: Pygidia (figs. 110, 112) trigonal; sixth visible abdominal sternum deeply incised in female (fig. 113), moderately incised in male (fig. 111). Male genitalia: As in figures 135 and 136.
VARIATION: In some specimens the elytra tend to be more brunneus than piceous (which may reflect a teneral condition of the specimens). The extent of development of the posterolateral outer angles of the parameres are variously expressed.
NATURAL HISTORY: No information available.
DISTRIBUTION (map 21): Known only from Guatemala.
ETYMOLOGY: The trivial name is taken from the Latin feminine sagitta (arrow). I refer to the arrowshaped apex of the aedeagus.
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.