Leiodes osawai Nakane, 1963

Hoshina, Hideto, 2012, Review of the tribes Sogdini and Leiodini from Japan and North Chishima Islands. Part II. Genera Hydnobius and Leiodes (Coleoptera: Leiodidae), Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae (suppl. 1) 52, pp. 1-168 : 129-134

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4272467

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339421

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E98224-3284-07E0-76F4-4148FC6DA6C8

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Leiodes osawai Nakane, 1963
status

 

30. Leiodes osawai Nakane, 1963 View in CoL

Japanese name: Ôsawa-ô-tamakinokomushi ( Figs. 1 View Fig , 6 View Fig , 87–90 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig , 108 View Figs )

Leiodes osawai Nakane, 1963: 41 View in CoL ; DAFFNER (1983): 71 (redescription); PERREAU (2004): 197 (catalogue).

Type locality. Japan, Honshu, Aichi Prefecture, Nagoya, Higashiyama.

Type material examined. JAPAN: HONSHU: HOLOTYPE: ♂, Aichi Pref., Nagoya City, Higashiyama, 1.iv.1947, S. Tabuchi leg. ( HUMS). ALLOTYPE: ♀, same data as the holotype.

Additional specimens examined. JAPAN: HONSHU: 1 ♀, Mie Pref., Kise Town, Nako , 19.i.1997, K. Kannô leg. ( FUFJ) ; 1 ♂, Mie Pref., Kameyama City, Mt. Nonoboriyama , 10.iii.2002, M. Inagaki leg. ( FIT) ( FUFJ) ; 1 ♂, Yamanashi Pref., Nirasaki City, Gozaishi-onsen , 26.iii.1991, K. Hosoda leg. ( KM) ; 2 ♂♂, 1 ♀, Kanagawa Pref., Ninomiya Town, Mt.Adumayama , 17.xii.2000. Y. Hirano leg. ( FUFJ) ; 1 ♂, Tokyo Pref., Okutama Town, Nippara, Ogawadani (alt. 1000m), 24.iii.2007, H. Kamezawa leg. ( FUFJ) ; 1 ♀, Tochigi Pref., Ashikaga City , Ô-numatachô, 23.–31.iii.2010, H. Ohkawa leg. ( FIT) ( FUFJ) ; 1 ♀, Tochigi Pref., Ashikaga City , Ô-numata-chô (alt. 100 m), 30.iii.–4.iv.2011, H. Ohkawa leg. ( FIT) ( FUFJ) .

Diagnosis. Coloration. Dorsum almost bicolored ( Figs. 87D, 87F View Fig ) or tricolored ( Figs. 87C, 87E View Fig ); head brown or dark brown; pronotum brown; elytra bicolored, light brown or brown, with black stripes near elytral suture ( Figs. 87C, 87D View Fig ) and lateral margins ( Figs. 87E, 87F View Fig ); scutellum black; antennomeres 1–6 and 8 reddish brown; antennomeres 7, 9, 10, and basal 3/5 of antennomere 11 black; apical 2/5 of antennomere 11 light brown.

Body 3.8–5.1 mm long, ca. twice as long as wide, cylindrical ( Fig. 87A View Fig ). Head densely and minutely punctate, bearing some large punctures in some specimens ( Fig. 87A View Fig ); antennomeres 1–3 each longer than wide, remaining antennomeres each wider than long; antennomere 11 robust ( Fig. 87G View Fig ). Pronotum simply and very feebly curved at posterior margin and distinctly and densely punctate ( Fig. 87A View Fig ). Elytra not transversely strigose; each elytron with nine rows of punctures, bearing small number of large punctures and many very fine punctures between rows ( Fig. 87H View Fig ); row 9 invisible in dorsal view, subhumeral row as long as ca. 1/4 of elytral length ( Fig. 87B View Fig ); rows composed of punctures larger than those of pronotum ( Fig. 87A View Fig ); sutural stria fine, reaching from apex to ca. apical half of elytral length. Metathoracic wings fully developed. Mesoventrite with one distinct excavation between median carina and transverse carina ( Fig. 87I View Fig ); median carina of mesoventrite low ( Fig. 87I View Fig ); metaventrite sexually dimorphic. Legs showing sexual dimorphism on protarsi, mesotibiae, mesotarsi, metafemora, and metatibiae; protibiae gradually and very feebly widening from base towards apex ( Figs. 89E, 89F View Fig ); metafemur with a small dorsal projection posteroapically ( Figs. 89G, 89H View Fig ).

Male. Metaventrite pubescent on middle portion ( Fig. 88A View Fig ); tarsomeres 2–4 of protarsi and mesotarsi expanded ( Figs. 88C, 88E View Fig ); mesotibiae expanded at interoapical corner, longest spine at the corner almost straight or strongly curved inwards ( Figs. 88E, 88F View Fig ); metafemora feebly or strongly protuberant at about midlength of posterior margins ( Figs. 89A, 89B, 89C View Fig ); metatibiae almost straight or moderately to strongly curved ( Figs. 89A, 89B, 89C View Fig ); abdominal sternite 8 strongly curved ( Fig. 90C View Fig ); aedeagus as shown in Figs. 90A and 90B View Fig .

Female. Metaventrite almost glabrous on middle portion ( Fig. 88B View Fig ); protarsi and mesotarsi slender ( Figs. 88D, 88G View Fig ); mesotibiae feebly and simply widening from base to apex, longest spine at interoapical corner almost straight ( Fig. 88G View Fig ); metafemora slender, almost straight at posterior margins ( Fig. 89D View Fig ); metatibiae almost straight ( Fig. 89D View Fig ); abdominal sternite 8 with a spiculum ventrale at central point of anterior margin ( Fig. 90D View Fig ); coxites and stylus as shown in Fig. 90E View Fig .

Morphological variability. The present species shows intraspecific variation in dorsal coloration and the shape of the male mesotibiae, metafemora, and metatibiae. In the specimens collected in the western region (Mie and Aichi Prefectures, see Fig. 108 View Figs ), the elytra are light brown with relatively slender black stripes near the elytral suture and along the lateral margins ( Figs. 87C, 87E View Fig ), and the male hind legs are conspicuously curved (i.e., secondary sexual characters are well-developed ( Fig. 89A View Fig )). On the other hand, specimens from the eastern region (Yamanashi, Kanagawa, and Tokyo Prefecturs, see Fig. 108 View Figs ) have the elytra brown with relatively broad black stripes ( Figs. 87D, 87F View Fig ) and the male hind legs have relatively indistinct secondary sexual characters ( Figs. 89B, 89C View Fig ). In contrast, the male genitalia do not show the regional variation in the specimens examined. For that reason, I do not establish any new species or subspecies and consider the observed differences as intraspecific regional variation. This needs to be confirmed by additional specimens in the future, as only nine specimens were examined for this study. One male specimen from the Tokyo Prefecture ( Fig. 108 View Figs ) is the smallest (body length 3.8 mm) and has mesotibiae, metafemora and metatibiae similar to those of females ( Fig. 89C View Fig ). It is possible that those features are correlated to body size, and body size varies regionally.

Differential diagnosis. Leiodes osawai can be easily distinguished from all other Japanese species of Leiodes by having an elongate cylindrical body ( Fig. 87A View Fig ).

Distribution. Japan: Honshu.

Taxonomic note. DAFFNER (1983) mentioned that L. osawai is morphologically very similar to L. lucens ( Fairmaire, 1855) . However, this note was solely based on the original description of L. osawai by NAKANE (1963), not on the examination of type specimens. The original description of male legs of L. osawai may really resemble those of L. lucens and the original description does not include any figures. In addition, both L. osawai and L. lucens have a similar large trident sclerite in the inner sac of the aedeagus ( Fig. 79A View Fig , 90A View Fig ). However, L. osawai can be separated from L. lucens by having a cylindrical body ( Fig. 87A View Fig ), bicolored or tricolored dorsum ( Figs. 87C, 87D, 87E, 87F View Fig ), relatively slender metafemora ( Figs. 89A, 89B, 89C, 89D View Fig ), and the aedeagus feebly curved in lateral view ( Fig. 90B View Fig ). In contrast, L. lucens has a long oval body ( Fig. 77A View Fig ), unicolor dorsum, relatively robust metafemora ( Figs. 78C, 78D View Fig ), and the aedeagus relatively strongly curved in the lateral view ( Fig. 79B View Fig ).

KM

Kotel'nich Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Leiodidae

Genus

Leiodes

Loc

Leiodes osawai Nakane, 1963

Hoshina, Hideto 2012
2012
Loc

Leiodes osawai

PERREAU M. 2004: 197
DAFFNER H. 1983: 71
NAKANE T. 1963: 41
1963
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF