Corthylus spinosulus Atkinson, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4564890 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CF7B0E89-C497-408C-B359-B33939AB5C58 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4586120 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A4926F-FF91-884D-FF61-60A6BCDBA284 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Corthylus spinosulus Atkinson |
status |
sp. nov. |
Corthylus spinosulus Atkinson , new species
Fig. 2 View Figure 2 A–D; Fig. 3 A, B View Figure 3
Diagnosis. This species would key out to couplet 43 in Wood’s 1982 key along with C. spinosus Wood ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 C–D). An additional species, C. spinipennis Wood (2007: 850) , was described from Costa Rica after 1982 and would also key to the same couplet ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 E–F). All three species share the character of large, acute denticles on the elytral declivity. The species described here is larger than the other two, has an elytral declivity that is more gradually rounded in lateral profile, and has proportionately smaller and less acute denticles on the declivity. All three species are known only from their unique holotypes, a female for C. spinosulus and males for C. spinosus and C. spinipennis ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ).
Female. Length: 2.70 mm, maximum width: 1.14 mm; length of elytra: 1.65 mm; length to width: 2.4; elytral length/total length: 0.618; elytral length/width: 1.45. (n = 1). Color dark brown, slightly paler at base of elytra.
Frons evenly concave from epistoma to vertex, weakly impressed longitudinally in middle up to a low, blunt elevation at upper level of eyes. Surface shallowly, densely punctured throughout. Vestiture of short, yellowish setae, uniform in length over entire concavity, without longer fringes at the sides or vertex. Antennal club slightly asymmetrical, 1 st suture septate, 2 nd marked by an external groove. Well-developed cirrus of reddish-brown setae, not exceeding the width of the club.
Anterior margin of pronotum rounded, unarmed. Asperities low, small, reduced to impressed lines at summit. Disc of pronotum smooth, shining. Shallow punctures widely separated by more than 5x the diameter of punctures.
Striae and interstriae on elytral disc not impressed, punctures shallow and confused, without associated setae. Declivity evenly rounded in profile. A well-developed, elevated marginal crest extends from the declivital suture to about interstriae 4, about 10% of the declivital circumference. Striae poorly defined on declivity, with strial and interstrial punctures confused. Declivital interstriae 1 slightly elevated (but not costate) with 5 widely spaced blunt tubercles, these increasing in size posteriorly. Interstriae 2 weakly impressed, punctures confused, with a blunt tubercle near the apical margin. Interstriae 3 weakly elevated, with 4–5 blunt tubercles, these slightly larger than those on interstriae 1. Additional smaller tubercles on interstriae 5 on declivital face.
Male. Frons flattened, slightly impressed at epistomal margin. Surface of frons without setae, with widely spaced punctures. A sparse row of setae just above epistoma. Antennal club widened distally.
Pronotum and declivity similar to female. The allotype male has several small denticles on the upper portion of interstriae 2 that are not present in the holotype female. Without more specimens it is not clear whether or not this is a sexual difference.
Type material. Holotype female. Mexico: Chiapas, Chiquihuites , 15.09 N, 92.0798 W, 1,700 m, 5–11-V-2013, flight intercept trap with ethanol and methanol, F. Infante ( CNIN) GoogleMaps . Allotype male. Same data except 3-XII-2013, UFFE:12087 ( UFFE in ethanol) .
Etymology. The species name is chosen to indicate the similarity to C. spinosus Wood.
Species with third declivital interstriae serrate and displaced mesally towards suture
Fig. 3 G, H View Figure 3 ; Fig. 4 View Figure 4 A–H.
The following four species have the third declivital interstriae strongly elevated with prominent granules giving a serrate appearance. These interstriae are in the “normal” position at the base and apex of the declivity but strongly displaced mesally towards the elytral juncture in the center of the declivity. The degree of displacement is so pronounced in several of these species that the elevation appears to be on the second interstriae ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 , A–F). These species would key out to couplet 40 in Wood’s 1982 key but would not go further. They would key to couplet 87 in his 2007 key but would not progress beyond this point. The declivity in these species resembles that of C. senticosus Wood ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 , G, H), but the female frons is totally different and the depth and size of the punctures on the disc of the declivity is much less pronounced. In the three of the four species described here the female frons is convex with no pubescence or surface features in the lower portion and with short, straight setae along the upper and lateral margins; in C. senticosus there are large, yellow spongy areas occupying most of the frontal concavity, a prominent elevation above the epistoma, and a recurved margin of long hairs along the vertical margin ( Wood, 1986: 271). The female of C. poblanus is not known.
CNIN |
Coleccion Nacional de Insectos, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico |
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |