Tomarus amazonicus ( Arrow, 1914 ) López-García & Deloya, 2022
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.7383771 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A209493B-FD69-FFB6-AFA6-1E07FE43BB43 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Tomarus amazonicus ( Arrow, 1914 ) |
status |
new status and combination |
Tomarus amazonicus ( Arrow, 1914) new status and combination
( Figs. 8G, K View FIGURE 8 , 16B View FIGURE 16 , 19B View FIGURE 19 , 23A View FIGURE 23 , 27B View FIGURE 27 ; 42 View FIGURE 42 )
Ligyrus amazonicus Arrow, 1914: 273 .
Female lectotype (BMNH) “ SYNTYPE // Ega / Braz. // Ligyrus ♀ / amazonicus Arr. / M.E. Bacchus det. 1970” here designated. Female paralectotype (BMNH) “ SYNTYPE // ♀ // Amazon / Bates // Fry Coll. / 19051100. // 19194 // Ligyrus / amazonicus Arr. / M.E. Bacchus det. 1970”. Female paralectotype (BMNH) “ SYNTYPE // Obydos. / Lower Amazon. / 2. II. 9– / E.E. Austen. / 96--80 // Ligyrus ♀ / amazonicus Arr. / M.E. Bacchus det. 1970”.
Description. Habitus as in Fig. 27B View FIGURE 27 . Length 22.0–25.0 mm; humeral width 11.0– 12.5 mm. Color dark brown to black. Head: Frons and clypeus coarsely and densely rugose. Frontoclypeal region with 2 transverse tubercles separated by about 4.5 tubercle diameters. Clypeus narrowed towards apex, base 3 times wider than apex. Clypeal teeth triangular, separated by a tooth diameter. Mandible with 2 apical teeth and a lateral, narrowly rounded tooth. Mentum abruptly constricted at apical 3rd. Galea of maxilla with teeth 5 and 6 well developed. Interocular distance 3.5 times an eye width. Pronotum: Surface with small punctures, denser and deeper on anterior and posterior angles. Apical tubercle small, rounded. Subapical fovea shallow, narrow (1/3 as wide as interocular distance), equal in both sexes, surface transversely rugose. Scutellum: With minute, sparse punctures. Elytra: Punctures on first interval as large as those on other intervals. Inner surface of apex with rounded large tubercles forming 11–12 parallel lines ( Fig. 8K View FIGURE 8 ). Abdomen: Apex of tergite IV with a triangular wide area with large, rounded tubercles forming 18 diagonal parallel lines ( Fig. 8G View FIGURE 8 ). Pygidium with dense rugosity on basal 3rd; apex rounded. Venter: Apex of prosternal process flat, longitudinally oval to subrectangular. Metasternum with minute setae on anterior angles. Legs: Protibia tridentate, with a basal small denticle.Apex of metatibia crenulate, with 23–28 spinules. Male genitalia: Phallobase as long as parameres. Parameres with 1 dorsal tooth each side; tooth long, acute; apices roundly expanded ( Figs. 16B View FIGURE 16 , 19B View FIGURE 19 ). Internal sac with copulatory lamella and short lamellar spiny belt; with a complex of 8 spine-like accessory lamellae, without or with reduced granules at base ( Fig. 23A View FIGURE 23 ).
Taxonomic remarks. This species was described by Arrow (1914) and then synonymized by Endrödi (1969) under T. gyas based on the approximate shape of the parameres and difficulty to delimitate the differences on the shape of pronotal fovea and protibia. Despite the convergence in the shape of parameres, the phylogenetic analysis evidenced that this species is not close to T. gyas , and they are different in several characters, such as the shape of the frontal tubercles, setation on the metasternum, the stridulatory apparatus, and the internal sac of the aedeagus. Therefore, T. amazonicus is treated here as a valid species and classified in the genus Tomarus .
Diagnosis. Tomarus amazonicus is recognized by the following character combination: frontoclypeal tubercles transverse; pronotal tubercle small and rounded ( Fig. 27B View FIGURE 27 ); subapical fovea shallow, narrow (1/3 as wide as interocular distance), equal in both sexes; metasternum with minute setae on anterior angles; protibia tridentate and with an additional basal denticle; apex of metatibia with 23–28 spinules; parameres with a long, acute tooth on each side, apical half strongly contracted, apices roundly expanded ( Figs. 16B View FIGURE 16 , 19B View FIGURE 19 ).
Distribution. Amazon region of Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia.
Locality records ( Fig. 42 View FIGURE 42 ). 462 specimens examined from BMNH, CEIOC, CERPE, FSCA, IAvH, ICN, MEKRB, MN / UFRJ, MZUSP, SENASA, UNAB, UNSM, and USNM. Some records from CMNC and Endrödi (1969). BOLIVIA (11). Beni (10): Riberalta; Rurrenabaque; Trinidad; Vaca Diez. Buena Vista (1): Tacaraundi. BRAZIL (319). Acre (3): Cruzeiro do Sul; Porto Walter; Vila Fejo. Amazonas (118): Benjamin Constant; Boca do Rio Madeira; Borba; Coari; Codota’s; Curucuri; Guajará; Ipixuna, Rio Gregorio ; Itacoatiára; Lago Januaca; Manaus; Rio Japula ; Rio Liberdade , Estirao da Preta ; Rio Salimoes , entre Lago Jacaré e Purus; São Sebastian do Uatuma ; Tabatinga; Tefé (Ega). Pará (125): Boca do Lago de Terra Santa ; Ilha do Itanduba ; Maicurú; Obidos; Oriximiná; Paraná de Alenquer; Prainha; Rio Paru ; Santarém. Rondônia (73): Guapore; Porto Velho, Rio Madeira ; Samuel. Tocantins (1): Buriti do Tocantis , Assentamento Ouro Verde, Chacára da Bisa. No data (6). COLOMBIA (41). Amazonas (22): Leticia; Leticia (20 km N); Purité, San Juan. Caquetá (19): Florencia; Río Orteguaza near Río Peneya. ECUADOR (18). Napo (15): Jatun Sacha Biological Station ; Lago Agrio (18 km E); Misahualli Jungle Lodge. Imprecise data (3): Quito. PERU (72). Junín (1): Satipo, Huancayo. Loreto (55): Iquitos; Explorama Inn; Jungle Amazon Inn; Maynas; Yanamono. Huánuco (7): Marañón; Tingo María. Madre de Dios (6): Reserva Nacional Tambopata. Ucayali (1): Laguna Yarinacocha. No data (2). IMPRECISE DATA (2). Amazonas .
Natural history. This species is restricted to the Amazon rainforest between 300–1050 m. Some specimens were collected using light traps.
FSCA |
Florida State Collection of Arthropods, The Museum of Entomology |
ICN |
Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Museo de Historia Natural |
MEKRB |
Kebun Raya Bogor |
MN |
Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro |
UFRJ |
Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro |
MZUSP |
Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo |
UNAB |
Universidad Nacional, Facultad de Agronomia |
UNSM |
University of Nebraska State Museum |
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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 amazonicus ( Arrow, 1914 )
López-García, Margarita M. & Deloya, Cuauhtémoc 2022 |
Ligyrus amazonicus
Arrow, G. J. 1914: 273 |