Liodessus thespesios, Balke & Megna & Zenteno & Figueroa & Hendrich, 2020

Balke, Michael, Megna, Yoandri S., Zenteno, Nilver, Figueroa, Luis & Hendrich, Lars, 2020, New Liodessus species from the high Andes of Peru (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae Bidessini), Zootaxa 4852 (2), pp. 151-165 : 157-162

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4852.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2A612C28-2E39-4729-9DDD-27EE6ED90F4E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4519041

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EDDF2B-FFC0-F216-FF0C-FD4619F8FEDB

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Liodessus thespesios
status

sp. nov.

Liodessus thespesios View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs 3A, B View FIGURE 3 , 4E View FIGURE 4 , 6A, B View FIGURE 6 , 7 View FIGURE 7 )

Type locality. Peru, Cusco, Calca, Lares District, Abra Lares , 4,353 m , -13.190° -71.940°.

Type material. Holotype: Male ( MUSM): “ Peru: Cusco, Calca, Lares District, Abra Lares, 4353 m, 2.ix.2018, -13.190° -71.940°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_42)”; “ Holotype Liodessus thespesios sp. nov. Balke, Megna, Hendrich des. 2020” [red printed label].

420 Paratypes ( MUSM, ZSM) : 50 exs.: same data as holotype ; 54 exs.: “ Peru: Cusco, Quispicanchi, Marcapata, Yanatturo , 4433 m, 23.viii.2018, -13.633° -71.151°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_23)” ; 35 exs.: “ Peru: Cusco, Quispicanchi, Marcapata, Yanatturo , 4458 m, 23.viii.2018, -13.634° -71.143°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_24)” ; 37 exs.: “ Peru: Cusco, Quispicanchi, Pirhuayani , 4662 m, 23.viii.2018, -13.641° -71.107°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_25)” ; 19 exs.: “ Peru: Cusco, Quispicanchi, Pirhuayani , 4702 m, 23.viii.2018, -13.641° -71.104°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_26)” ; 35 exs.: “ Peru: Cusco, Calca, Calca District, Chaypa , 4129 m, 2.ix.2018, -13.202° -71.92°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_ 40)” ; 171 exs.: “ Peru: Cusco, Calca, Calca District, Pitociray , 4315 m, 2.ix.2018, -13.203° -71.94°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_41)” ; 50 exs.: “ Peru: Cusco, Calca, Lares District, Abra Lares , 4353 m, 2.ix.2018, -13.19° -71.94°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_2018_42)” ; 19 exs.: “ Peru: Cajamarca, Cajamarca, Lares District, Pampacorral, Mapacocha , 3948 m, 2.ix.2018, -13.178° -72.004°, Y. S. Megna & N. Zenteno ( PER _YSM_ 2018_43)”. All paratypes are provided with our red printed paratype labels

Description of holotype. Habitus with distinct discontinuity between pronotum and elytra (as in Figs 3A, B View FIGURE 3 ). TL: 2.2 mm; TL-H: 2.0 mm; TW: 1.0 mm.

Colouration. Mostly dark dorsally and ventrally (as in Figs 3A, B View FIGURE 3 ).

Surface sculpture. Head with faint microreticulation at base and along hind angles of eyes, frons and clypeus more or less smooth and with few fine setiferous punctures; pronotum shiny with sparser and fine setiferous punctation; elytra shiny with dense and coarser setiferous punctation.

Structures. Antenna stout. Head without cervical line but few serial punctures instead. Pronotum on each lateral side (or margin) with distinct bead; with distinct and deep basal plicae. Elytron without basal plicae. Metathoracic wings short, about half the length of elytron.

Genitalia. Median lobe of aedeagus thick in lateral view, tip with short nose; lateral lobes (parameres) with distal part appearing comparably broad ( Fig. 4E View FIGURE 4 ).

Variation. TL: 2.2–2.3 mm; TL-H: 1.8–2.0 mm; TW: 1.0–1.0 mm. Very few specimens show a short depression at the elytral base in place of the elytral plicae. Additionally, very few specimens show an extremely faint, interrupted occipital line. We assessed the length of the metathoracic wings in 10 specimens, which all had the same short wing length. While these specimens are certainly not able to fly actively, there might be few fully winged individuals that are capable of flight.

Female. Dorsal surface dull due to distinct microreticulation ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ).

BOLD platform. We provided 30 entries in the “COLLI” project, all retrieved in one cluster. Assignment to that cluster was unambiguous, meaning all specimens were correctly assigned to this morphologically delineated species.

Etymology. From the Greek thespesios (divine, wondrous). The name is a noun standing in apposition.

Distribution. High Andes of southeastern Peru ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ), ca. 3,900 –4,700 m.

Habitat. Shallow and exposed puddles, collected with strainer out of mats of vegetation ( Fig. 6A, B View FIGURE 6 ). Other Dytiscidae associated with this species were species of Rhantus Dejean, 1833 and Lancetes Sharp, 1882 , as well as Liodessus acollensis .

PER

City Museum

ZSM

Bavarian State Collection of Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dytiscidae

Genus

Liodessus

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