Dyscolus crespoae Moret, 2020

Moret, Pierre & Murienne, Jérôme, 2020, Integrative taxonomy of the genus Dyscolus (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Platynini) in Ecuadorian Andes, European Journal of Taxonomy 646, pp. 1-55 : 30-32

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.646

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4C9F63B2-DB17-4EDB-ADEE-13AC9EFB921B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3848389

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AEA12495-C2BD-4A65-AACF-C54DB6CAFBA7

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:AEA12495-C2BD-4A65-AACF-C54DB6CAFBA7

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Dyscolus crespoae Moret
status

sp. nov.

Dyscolus crespoae Moret View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:AEA12495-C2BD-4A65-AACF-C54DB6CAFBA7

Fig. 29 View Figs 29–31. 29

Etymology

Noun in the genitive case, dedicated to Verónica Crespo, professor at the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, limnologist and specialist of the ecology of Andean tropical streams.

Type material

Holotype

ECUADOR • ♀; Zamora-Chinchipe Province, Parque Nacional Podocarpus, Estación El Colibrí ; 3°59′16.1″ S, 79°5′39.0″ W; 2110 m a.s.l.; 18 Mar. 2015; P. Moret and C. Ruiz leg.; by night 19.30– 21 pm; on the ground; QCAZ. GoogleMaps

Paratype

ECUADOR • 1 ♀; same collection data as for holotype; COI voucher PM402-03, BOLD sequence SUM188-18; CPM GoogleMaps .

Diagnostic description

Habitus: Fig. 29 View Figs 29–31. 29 . Wingless. Body length: 10.6 mm (paratype) to 11.3 mm (holotype). Head and pronotum black, elytra nigropiceous; legs, antennae and mouthparts brownish to reddish brown. Dorsal integuments shiny, elytral microsculpture transverse. Head relatively small, elongate, eyes prominent, genae long, almost flat. Pronotum cordiform; sides markedly sinuate basally, hind angles obtuse and sharp; laterobasal impressions deep, lateral margins reflexed; two pairs of lateral setae. Elytra oval, convex; striae entire, shallowly impressed, distinctly punctate; intervals flat; preapical sinuation weakly marked. Third elytral interval without discal setae. Last visible abdominal ventrite with two pairs of setae along its apical margin. Legs moderately slender, all tarsi densely pubescent ventrally; metatarsomeres 1–3 bisulcate; external lobe of the fourth metatarsomere 2.5 times longer than inner lobe; fifth metatarsomere asetose ventrally. Male unknown. Female genitalia: unstudied.

Comparisons

This species belongs to the same clade as D. ravidus Moret sp. nov. Both have the same general aspect and share the character of an asetose third interval, but in D. crespoae Moret sp. nov. the dorsal surface is shiny with a transverse microsculpture on the elytra, the elytra are more convex, the hind angles of

the pronotum more obtuse, the ventral pubescence of the tarsi denser, the apical lobes of the fourth metatarsomere more asymmetrical.

Habitat

Montane forest on the Eastern slope of the Andes , at around 2100 m a.s.l. Active at the beginning of the night (7.30–9 pm) on the surface of the leaf litter above ground.

Geographic distribution

Only known from the type locality in Southern Ecuador, in the Parque Nacional Podocarpus. Probably microendemic.

QCAZ

Museo de Zoologia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador

CPM

Christoffel Park Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Dyscolus

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF