Tomarus maternus ( Prell, 1937 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5211.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5754769C-B747-4714-BDD9-7D5509D48BEB |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7399820 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A209493B-FD1E-FFC3-AFA6-18A9FE6ABCB5 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Tomarus maternus ( Prell, 1937 ) |
status |
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Tomarus maternus ( Prell, 1937)
( Figs. 4G View FIGURE 4 , 5H View FIGURE 5 , 6E View FIGURE 6 , 7G View FIGURE 7 , 8I, M View FIGURE 8 , 13I View FIGURE 13 , 16K View FIGURE 16 , 20B View FIGURE 20 , 22C View FIGURE 22 , 28B View FIGURE 28 ; 46 View FIGURE 46 )
Ligyrus maternus Prell 1937: 89 . Original combination.
Male lectotype designated by Endrödi (1969: 70) (ZMHB) “Gf. Madre de Dios / III. Peru 500 m. // Tomarus / maternus Prell / ♂ -Type // Lectotypus / Ligyrus / maternus / Prell / Endrody”. Female paralectotype (ZMHB) “Gf. Madre de Dios / III. Peru 500 m. // Tomarus / maternus Prell / ♀ -Type // Paratypus / Ligyrus / maternus / Prell” Type locality: Madre de Dios, Peru.
Male paralectotype “ Umbria / Guines Fluss / Columbien // Paratypus / maternus / Prell // Tomarus gyas / Erichson, 1848 / Det. López-García M.M. 2016” corresponds to a male of Tomarus gyas (aedeagus dissected) .
Description. Habitus as in Fig. 28B View FIGURE 28 . Length 24.0–25.0 mm; humeral width 12.0– 12.5 mm. Color dark reddish brown to black. Head: Frons coarsely rugose. Frontoclypeal region with 2 transverse tubercles separated by about 3.0–3.5 tubercle diameters. Clypeus narrowed towards apex, base 3 times wider than apex. Clypeal teeth triangular, separated by 1.0–1.5 tooth diameters. Mandible with 2 apical teeth and a lateral, slightly rounded tooth ( Fig. 5H View FIGURE 5 ). Mentum abruptly constricted at apical 3rd. Galea of maxilla with teeth 5 and 6 well developed. Interocular distance 3.8 times an eye width. Pronotum: Surface smooth on disc, with minute punctures on lateral margins. Apical tubercle small, rounded, not visible in lateral view. Fovea shallow, striate and about 1/2 as wide as interocular distance. Scutellum: Surface with deep, small punctures forming 2 lines parallel to margins. Elytra: First interval punctate, punctures smaller than on other intervals, sutural stria complete. Inner surface of apex with rounded, small tubercles not forming parallel lines ( Fig. 8M View FIGURE 8 ). Abdomen: Apex of tergite IV with a triangular wide area with small and large, irregular tubercles not forming defined lines ( Fig. 8I View FIGURE 8 ). Pygidial surface rugose on basal 3rd and on lateral angles in male, nearly smooth in female; disc with minute punctures; apex regularly rounded. Venter: Apex of prosternal process flat, oval to rounded. Metasternum with minute setae. Legs: Protibia tridentate, rarely with an additional small, basal denticle. Metatibia with sides nearly parallel. Apex of metatibia crenulate, with 14–17 spinules. Male genitalia: Spiculum gastrale without basal plates. Phallobase 1.2 times longer than parameres. Parameres with 2 pairs of dorso-lateral teeth; the main teeth short, wide, acute; the secondary teeth rounded ( Figs. 16K View FIGURE 16 , 20B View FIGURE 20 ). Internal sac with copulatory lamella and short lamellar spiny belt; with a complex of 8 spine-like accessory lamellae, without granules at base ( Fig. 22C View FIGURE 22 ).
Diagnosis. Tomarus maternus can be recognized by the nearly impunctate pronotum; small pronotal tubercle not visible in lateral view; pronotal fovea shallow and narrow (1/3 as wide as interocular distance); scutellum with deep, small punctures forming 2 lines parallel to margins; protibia tridentate; and apex of metatibia with 14–17 spinules; parameres with 2 pairs of dorsal lateral teeth, the main teeth short, wide, acute, and the secondary teeth rounded ( Figs. 16K View FIGURE 16 , 20B View FIGURE 20 ); spine-like accessory lamellae of internal sac without granules at base ( Fig. 22C View FIGURE 22 ).
Distribution. Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Panama, and Costa Rica.
Locality records ( Fig. 46 View FIGURE 46 ). 82 examined specimens from FSCA, MERKB, UNSM, USAAC, USNM, and ZMHB. Some records from CMNC and Endrödi (1969), Ratcliffe (2003), and Escalona & Joly (2006). BOLIVIA (10). Beni (2): Rurrenabaque. Cochabamba (4): Chaparé. La Paz (2): Coroico, Guanay; Río Bopi. Santa Cruz (2): Buena Vista. COLOMBIA (14). Chocó (1): Riosucio. Cundinamarca (2): La Esperanza; Quetame. Meta (8): Villavicencio. Valle del Cauca (3): Buenaventura; Calima; Dagua. COSTA RICA (12). Limón (12): Amubri; Hamburg Farm; Hitoy Cerere. ECUADOR (27). Guayas (1): Guayaquil. Napo (12): Lago Agrio; Jatun Sacha; Misahualli; Puerto Agrio; Puerto Napo; Río Arajuno. Zamora-Chinchipe (3): Yantzaza. Imprecise data (3). Ecuador. PANAMA (1). Darien (1): Cana. PERU (27). Ayacucho (2): La Mar, Santa Rosa. Cuzco (6): Pilcopata. Huánuco (13): Tingo María. Madre de Dios (4): Shintuya. San Martín (1): Huagalla. Imprecise data (1): Peru. VENEZUELA (2). Portuguesa (1): San Nicolás. Táchira (1): San Cristobal.
Natural history. Tomarus maternus is mainly found below 450 m in tropical forests and near mangroves, and adults are attracted to lights.
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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Tomarus maternus ( Prell, 1937 )
López-García, Margarita M. & Deloya, Cuauhtémoc 2022 |
Ligyrus maternus
Prell, H. 1937: 89 |