Apecholinus canifer, Smetana & Hu, 2019

Smetana, Aleš & Hu, Fang-Shuo, 2019, The genera Agelosus Sharp, 1889 and Apecholinus Bernhauer, 1933 in Taiwan (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylinini: Staphylinina), Zootaxa 4638 (3), pp. 379-388 : 384-387

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4638.3.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:11D9F9AC-01E1-42F7-9A7C-16BFA6F96E45

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5930656

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/177D8786-FFDF-9077-52B9-FB2772DD6FD9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Apecholinus canifer
status

sp. nov.

Apecholinus canifer View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs 15–18 View FIGURES 8–15 View FIGURES 16–18 , 22 View FIGURES 19–24 )

Type locality. TAIWAN: Nantou, Huisun Forest Area .

Type material. Holotype, male: “order Coleoptera Nantou, Huisun Forest Area [in Chinese ] Pitfall Trap G 2 1998 (y) 4. 24 4938” (in NCHU) . Paratype: “order Coleoptera Nantou, Huisun Forest Area [in Chinese ] Pitfall Trap H 1 1998 (y) 4. 24 4670”, 1 ♂ ( CNC) .

Diagnosis. This species differs from all remaining congeners by the body with the spots of grey tomentose pubescence.

Description. Pitchy black with black head, abdomen becoming paler toward apex; pubescence dark brownish, but each elytron with more or less triangular patch of grey tomentose pubescence below humerus; and abdominal tergites 6 and 7 each with a basal spot of grey tomentose pubescence; maxillary and labial palpi dark brown; antennae testaceous, with one to three basal segments darkened; legs dark brown to piceous, with front tarsi usually paler. Head of rounded quadrangular shape with rounded posterior angles, wider than long (ratio 1.24), eyes small, moderately convex, slightly shifted dorsad, tempora much longer than length of eyes seen from above (ratio 1.75); disc of head finely and densely punctate, punctation becoming gradually finer and denser posteriad and posteriolaterad and sparser toward clypeus; rudimentary linear impunctate midline apparent on vertex; interspaces between punctures without microsculpture. Antennae moderately long, hardly thickened toward apex, segment 3 longer than segment 2 (ratio 1.23, segments 4–9 longer than wide, gradually becoming shorter, segment 10 about as long as wide, last segment small, asymmetrically emarginated, along lateral margin shorter than penultimate segment. Neck densely and finely punctate. Pronotum about as long as wide, moderately convex, narrow marginal groove disappearing downwards at about anterior third of pronotal length; punctation on disc about the same as that on disc of head, interspaces between punctures without microsculpture; fine impunctate line present. Prescutum punctate-setose, interspaces with distinct microsculpture of transverse and oblique striae. Scutellum densely punctate-setose, with granulose microsculpture. Elytra moderately long, hardly dilated posteriad, at suture shorter than pronotum at midline (ratio 0.75), at sides as long as pronotum at midline; punctation very fine and very dense, interspaces between punctures with fine microscopic irregularities, elytra therefore appearing slightly dull. Wings folded under the elytra, but probably non-functional. Abdomen with fifth visible tergite without pale apical seam of palisade setae; tergite 2 (in front of first fully visible tergite) moderately densely punctate-setose, surface with extremely fine, superficial microsculpture of mostly oblique striae; punctation of all tergites finer and denser than that on elytra, punctation becoming gradually somewhat sparser toward apex of abdomen, interspaces with extremely fine, granulose microsculpture.

Male. Sternite 8 with shallow, obtuse medioapical sinuation. Genital segment with tergite 10 narrow, markedly, evenly narrowed toward subacute apex, apical portion with moderately long setae at apex, rest of tergite setose as in Fig.15 View FIGURES 8–15 ; sternite 9 long and narrow, with minute basal portion, apical portion with very deep and narrow medioapical emargination, no differentiated setae at each edge of emargination ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 16–18 ). Aedoeagus (Figs 17,18) rather small, median lobe parallel-sided, with subtruncate apex; paramere narrow, situated on median lobe quite asymmetrically toward left margin of median lobe, with asymmetrical, subacute apex, markedly not reaching apex of median lobe, with two rather short and four minute apical setae; underside with numerous sensory peg setae arranged as in Fig. 18 View FIGURES 16–18 .

NCHU

National Chung Hsing University

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Apecholinus

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