Cyphochilus rohingyae, Sabatinelli, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.35929/RSZ.0014 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5743509 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA41AD4E-7153-FFE9-7CD2-FEF7FEBBFC56 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Cyphochilus rohingyae |
status |
sp. nov. |
Cyphochilus rohingyae n. sp.
Figs 71-73 View Figs 71-79 , 90-91 View Figs 80-91
Holotype: MHNG ( MHNG-ENTO-81702 ); 1 ♂; MALAYASIA: // W. Malaysia, Pahang / Frasier’s Hill , ca 1300 m / 17-21.III.1993, light trap / Löbl & Calame, #14 (P) // HOLOTYPUS ♂ / Cyphochilus / rohingyae mihi / G. Sabatinelli, 2020 (T on red) //. ( Fig. 90 View Figs 80-91 ).
Paratypes: 57 specimens.
MALAYSIA: MHNG; 27 ♂, 16 ♀; Malaysia, Perak State, Taiping ; II.1982 . – MHNG; 2 ♂, 2♀; Malaysia Peninsula, Pahang, Frasier’s Hill , 1300 m; 22.III.-1.IV.2013; leg. Azarov . – MHNG; 2 ♂; West Malaysia, Perak, Taiping, Buki Larut (Maxwell Hill); 14.IV.1996; leg. S. Becwar. – ISNB ( Fig. 91 View Figs 80-91 ); 4 ♀; Malaysia, Perak, Taiping ; IV.1981. – ZMHB; 3 ♂, 1 ♀; Malaysia, Tenasserim ; III.1995; leg. S. Steinke. – PCMN; 3 ♂; Malaysia, Bukit Fraser , 1-5.V.2003; leg B. Mkovský. – PCDK; 1 ♂, Cameron Highlands .
Description of the holotype male: Size – BL: 17.8 mm, BW: 6.9 mm, BWX: 9.2. 4 mm, situated at midpoint of elytra. Color – Integument dark shiny brown; dorsal surface with white-silver scales densely aggregated along the sides of pronotum and margins of elytra. Head – CW/L: 3.2; anterolateral edges of clypeus rounded, lateral edges of clypeus curved divergent posteriad; frons large, making eyes relatively small, not prominent (F/O: 4.9); antennal club longer than antennomeres 2-7 (A2-7/CL: 1.7). Pronotum – Transverse (PnW/L: 1.9), strongly convex; apical angles and lateral margins flattened, apical angles acute and protuberant; basal lateral margins straight, basal angles obtuse and smooth. Elytra – Without any visible striae. Thoracic sterna – Surface with short, white pubescence and scales; mesosternum slightly developed anteriorly (MstL: 0.27 mm) however, visible in lateral view between the mesocoxae. Abdomen – Sternites with sparse scales; pygidium convex with apical margin reflected. Legs – Protibia bidentate; slender apical tooth longer than the basal tooth. Aedeagus – Parameres strongly asymmetric with four appendices ( Figs 71-73 View Figs 71-79 ); the two appendices on the right paramere merged for most of their length.
Variability: BL in males: 15.8-19.2 mm (x = 17.7, n = 34). Cyphochilus rohingyae shows a great variability in the color of scales in males and a strong sexual dimorphism (see below). While the holotype and 52% of male specimens have the integument with whitesilver scales ( Fig. 90 View Figs 80-91 ), in the other 48% of specimens the scales are yellow-ochre. Some of specimens with yellow-ochre scales have humeri and scutellum with patches of white scales ( Fig. 91 View Figs 80-91 ).
Females: The females are substantially larger than the males: BL: 19-21.5 mm (x = 19.5, n = 23); antennal club ovate, shorter than preceding antennomeres (A2-7/ CL: 1.6). All female specimens have dorsal cover of uniform white-silver scales.
Etymology: Dedicated to the Rohingya people, an indigenous ethnic group of western Myanmar who were forced to flee in the recent years to Bangladesh, Malaysia, and Thailand.
Type locality: Fraser’s Hill (in Malay: Bukit Fraser) is a hill resort located on the Titiwangsa Ridge in Raub District of Pahang State in West Malaysia; the resort is situated 64.6 miles (104 km) from the national capital city Kuala Lumpur.
Distribution: Cyphochilus rohingyae is known from the Pahang and Perak States of Western Malaysia on the west coast of the Malay Peninsula. A large series of specimens was collected in Taiping, the wettest location in Peninsular Malaysia where the high rainfall (ca 4000 mm) has led to a profuse flora and century-old rainforest trees.
Remarks: Cyphochilus rohingyae , C. feae and C. proximus have similar conformation of parameres and they are present in Myanmar and Malaysian Peninsula. They can be readily separated mainly by the different shape of the apical part of the right paramere ( Figs 65 View Figs 59-70 , 53 View Figs 47-58 , 71 View Figs 71-79 )
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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