Pegylis majori Sehnal, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4323.3.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A5915Db0-147E-4D61-8925-C44C75Fdfdc5 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6033335 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039487D6-0568-374B-34BD-FB0C7A51715A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Pegylis majori Sehnal |
status |
sp. nov. |
Pegylis majori Sehnal , new species ( Figs. 1A–J View FIGURES 1 ; 2A–C)
Type locality. Ethiopia, Hamer Region , Turmi.
Type material. Holotype and 15 paratypes (11 males and 4 females): “ETHIOPIA—Hamer or. / Turmi near 950 m. / 04°58´31”N 036°30´53”E / 27- 30.11.2016 / Vladimír Major leg. [printed]”. Type depository: holotype in Národní muzeum Praha, Prague, Czech Republic ( Jiří Hájek ); 13 paratypes in Richard Sehnal Collection , Velenice , Czech Republic; 2 paratypes in Wits Life Sciences Museum , Johannesburg , South Africa (James du G. Harrison). GoogleMaps
Description of holotype (♂). Body length 15.1 mm, elongate, almost parallel-sided, gently convex. Dorsal and ventral surface weakly metallic, glossy; head, pronotum, and elytra blackish brown to almost metallic black; pronotum with lighter sides; elytral disc metallic black, posterior sides shiny orange, macrosetation almost reddish yellow ( Fig. 1A–D View FIGURES 1 ). Dorsal surface of head, pronotum, scutellum, and elytra covered with narrow, short, recumbent macrosetae; ventral surface of thorax and abdomen with narrow, whitish-yellow, short and long, recumbent macrosetae and with sparse long, yellow, erect macrosetae. Head appendages and legs covered with reddish-yellow, moderately short macrosetae.
Head with labrum transverse, deeply bilobed; lobes rounded, irregularly and weakly punctate, covered with long, erect macrosetae. Head including clypeus strongly wrinkled, densely coarsely punctate; each puncture with a semierect macroseta as long as puncture diameter. Clypeus sparsely, evenly, moderately punctate, with macrosetae 2x longer than puncture diameter. Convex frontoclypeal carina sinuate in forward direction. Frontoclypeal suture undulate. Frons densely punctate, punctures arranged in rows with ensuing macrosetae as long as puncture diameter. Occipital carina absent ( Fig. 1G View FIGURES 1 ). Occiput sparsely, evenly, moderately punctate. Occular canthus narrow, short, glabrous. Width of both eyes combined approximately equal to maximum width of frons between eyes, eye distinctly extending beyond canthus. Antenna with 10 antennomeres; club with three antennomeres, almost straight, same length as antennal shaft (antennomeres 1–7 combined). Antennomeres 1–7 with sparse, long macrosetae; club sparsely, shortly macrosetose. Terminal maxillary palpomere expanded medially, club-shaped, longer than palpomeres 2 and 3 combined ( Fig. 1G View FIGURES 1 ).
Pronotum transverse, widest in basal half, with a small but shallow, anterolateral wrinkles. Lateral margins noncrenulate and macrosetose. Base bordered, medially gently arched toward elytra, with smooth margin paralleled by a row of fine punctures and hind angles broadly rounded. Disc deeply punctate, with setae as long as puncture diameters; punctures separated by 3x their diameters. Punctation of remaining surface same, macrosetae yellowish white, semirecumbent ( Fig. 1G View FIGURES 1 ).
Scutellum large, almost equilaterally triangular, sides and apex rounded; punctuation irregular, each puncture bearing a narrow, white, almost recumbent macroseta shorter than puncture diameter.
Elytra weakly convex, posteriorly widening, apically rounded; apical angle approximately rectangular. Striae present but feeble. Humeral umbones present, weakly swollen. Surface not microsculptured (at 20 magnification), metallic shiny; punctures shallow, regularly spaced, separated by 2x their diameters. Each puncture bearing a narrow, yellowish-white, almost recumbent macroseta shorter than puncture diameter. Epipleuron distinct, complete, wide, membranous, glabrous laterally. Macropterous.
Legs with femora narrow, shiny, irregularly punctate, macrosetose. Protibia narrow, distinctly bidentate; without terminal spine. Mesotibia and metatibia slightly expanded distally, with two macrosetiferous longitudinal carinae. Metatibial carina vague. Upper terminal spine of metatibia slightly longer than lower spine, both spines apically pointed. Claws bifid, with ventrobasal teeth ( Figs. 1A View FIGURES 1 ).
Ventral surface covered only by narrow, recumbent, yellowish-white macrosetae. Pygidium slightly transverse, convex, completely bordered; apically broadly rounded; irregularly covered by fine, macrosetose punctures.
Male genitalia ( Figs. 2A–C View FIGURES 2 ). Parameres asymmetrical, both longer than phallobase; left paramere slender and nearly straight, curved out only at apex; right paramere thicker, gently curved medially throughout length, near apex with a large ventrolateral extension appearing semicircular in dorsal view and finger shaped in lateral view.
Variability in males. Paratypes 14.4–16.3 mm (n = 11) in body length, slightly variable in dorsal punctation density and length and in distribution of macrosetae. Colour as in holotype.
Sexual dimorphism. Females differ from males in the following characters: body length 18.0– 18.5 mm (n = 4); antennal club shorter; border of clypeus regularly rounded ( Fig. 1H View FIGURES 1 ); distal protibial tooth wider and longer; shape of protarsal claw ( Fig. 1J View FIGURES 1 ); elytra widest in apical half ( Fig. 1B View FIGURES 1 ); pygidium wider, concave ( Fig. 1F, 1D View FIGURES 1 ); metatibia more strongly expanded distally; tarsomeres of all legs shorter.
Distribution. Ethiopia, Hamer Region, Turmi.
Differential diagnosis. PegYlis majori falls in group 1 ( Lacroix, 2015) because of the following characters: mesosternal process absent; antenna with 10 antennomeres, inner protarsal claw with inner tooth near apex; protibia bidentate. From other species of group 1 it can be differentiated using the following diagnostic characters: anterior angles of the pronotum rounded; metasternum weakly pubescent, setae absent in the middle; elytra blackish brown to almost metallic black; pronotum irregularly rounded; elytral striae prominent; antennal shaft the same length as club; parameres asymmetrical, shape of aedeagus ( Figs. 2A–C View FIGURES 2 ).
Etymology. Patronymic, named in honour of Mr. Vladimír Major (Brno, Czech Republic), my friend and collector of this species.
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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Melolonthinae |
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