Stenotarsus smithi Gorham

Arriaga-Varela, Emmanuel, Zaragoza-Caballero, Santiago, Tomaszewska, Wioletta & Navarrete-Heredia, Jose Luis, 2013, Preliminary review of the genus Stenotarsus Perty (Coleoptera: Endomychidae) from México, Guatemala and Belize, with descriptions of twelve new species, Zootaxa 3645 (1), pp. 1-79 : 45-46

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3645.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9DC9FDE7-C9BB-4748-B23C-9DE780A1D375

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6164232

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E287F6-307A-FF88-0B83-F96AFD76F955

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Stenotarsus smithi Gorham
status

 

Stenotarsus smithi Gorham

( Figs. 40 View FIGURES 38 – 42 , 76 View FIGURES 72 – 78 , 112 View FIGURES 105 – 114 , 181 View FIGURES 174 – 185. 174 – 183 , 238 View FIGURES 224 – 243 –239, 264 View FIGURES 263 – 265 )

Stenotarsus smithi Gorham, 1890: 140 . Blackwelder 1945: 440; Strohecker 1953: 56; Arriaga-Varela et al. 2007: 16; Shockley et al. 2009a: 85.

Diagnosis. This species resembles S. monterrosoi sp. nov. by its small size (less than 4.0 mm) and body uniformly brown ( Figs. 29 View FIGURES 26 – 37 , 40 View FIGURES 38 – 42 ). It can be distinguished by the smaller body (3.0 mm), longer antennae (0.4X as long as body) ( Fig. 76 View FIGURES 72 – 78 ), the second tarsomere distinctly widened apically and different shape of median lobe ( Figs. 238–239 View FIGURES 224 – 243 ).

Description of male. Body 3.0 mm long, short oval ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 38 – 42 ), markedly convex; 1.7X as long as wide; 2.6X as long as high. Uniformly dark brown except last four antennomeres which are black. Densely covered with long, suberect, golden setae.

Head: Clypeus slightly transverse 1.6X wider than long. Terminal labial palpomere narrow, acuminate, narrowly truncate apically. Interocular distance 0.7X as wide as head. Antenna moderately long and slender ( Fig. 76 View FIGURES 72 – 78 ), 0.4X as long as body; scape 1.4X as long as wide, 1.4X longer than pedicel; pedicel 1.4X longer than wide; third antennomere 1.7X as long as wide, 1.2X as long as pedicel; fourth 1.5X as long as wide, as long as pedicel; fifth to seventh subequal to fourth; eighth 1.2X as long as wide, as long as pedicel; antennal club 0.4X as long as total antennal length, with segments almost symmetrical; ninth antennomere widened apically, 1.1X as long as wide, 1.6X as long as pedicel; tenth strongly widened apically, 0.8X as long as wide, 1.5X as long as pedicel; terminal antennomere ovoid, widest about midlength, 1.3X as long as wide, 2.9X as long as pedicel.

Prothorax: Pronotum widest at base; transverse ( Fig. 112 View FIGURES 105 – 114 ); 2.08X wider than long; 2.32X wider than head; 2.0X wider at base than at front angles. Sides rounded to front angles. Front angles slightly produced, right-angled, rounded at tip. Hind angles right-angled. Anterior margin narrow, very scarcely arcuate medially. Lateral margins raised, wide, weakly narrowing near base: width of margin at base 1/3 of the distance between basal pore and hind angle; area between marginal line and pronotal edge flat. Disc moderately convex, finely and closely punctate. Longitudinal sulci rather feeble, short, weakly curved. Basal pores small, slightly elongate, weakly oblique. Basal sulcus only impressed near pores. Pronotal base weakly lobed medially, nearly straight near scutellum. Prosternal processnarrow at base, widened posteriorly; as wide as longitudinal procoxal diameter apically.

Pterothorax: Scutellum triangular, small, 1.5X wider than long, 0.12X as wide as pronotum. Elytra length 1.95 mm; 1.06X longer than wide; 2.85X longer and 1.28X wider than pronotum; ovoid, widest near basal third, then roundly converging to the weakly acuminate apex; moderately densely punctate with foveolate punctures moderately large and deep, separated by 2–4 diameters, sparser and larger at sides. Humerus weakly prominent. Epipleuron at base 0.8X as wide as intercoxal process metaventrite. Mesoventrite deeply excavated in front; setose pores small; mesoventral process as wide as longitudinal coxal diameter, without medial carinae. Metaventrite moderately convex, without modifications near the anterior margin; with a pair of small setose pores of approximately same diameter posterior to each mesocoxa. Metepisternum with small setose pore.

Legs: rather short and slender ( Fig. 181 View FIGURES 174 – 185. 174 – 183 ). Trochanters simple. Meso- and metafemora rather slender, scarcely widest before midlength; Meso- and metafemora unarmed; metafemuras long as mesofemur, bearing moderately long decumbent setae. Meso- and metatibiae very slender; metatibia scarcely shorter than metafemur, 0.36X as lons as than elytra; very weakly and gradually widened apically, linear, medial margin unarmed. Metatarsus 0.57X as long as metatibia; second tarsomere produced and widened, 2.0X as wide apically as fourth tarsomere at midlength.

Abdomen: ventrite I as long as metaventrite and ventrites II–V combined, with sparse large foveolate punctation, without protuberances. Ventrite V twice as long as IV, with apex rounded. Ventrite VI rounded apically. Tergite VIII moderately truncate posteriorly. Median lobe small, curved, moderately narrow, widened near apical 2/ 3 in ventral view ( Fig. 239 View FIGURES 224 – 243 ); almost of same width in lateral view ( Fig. 238 View FIGURES 224 – 243 ).

Description of female. Unknown.

Sexual dimorphism. Unknown.

Variation. Unknown.

Material examined. Type. Holotype (male): Holotype [round, red bordered label] / Type [round, red bordered label] / Teapa, Tabasco, Feb, H.H.S. / Sp. figured / B.C.A., VII, Stenotarsus [p] smithi Gorh. [h] (NHM).

Distribution. MEXICO: Tabasco ( Fig. 264 View FIGURES 263 – 265 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Curculionidae

Genus

Stenotarsus

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