Laccophilus guineensis, Bistroem, Olof, Nilsson, Anders N. & Bergsten, Johannes, 2015

Bistroem, Olof, Nilsson, Anders N. & Bergsten, Johannes, 2015, Taxonomic revision of Afrotropical Laccophilus Leach, 1815 (Coleoptera, Dytiscidae), ZooKeys 542, pp. 1-379 : 149-150

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.542.5975

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:02640787-7355-425B-AB10-BF1674510F12

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/29EC75C3-5F13-4530-B8E0-85F0BBB14B70

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:29EC75C3-5F13-4530-B8E0-85F0BBB14B70

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Laccophilus guineensis
status

sp. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Coleoptera Dytiscidae

Laccophilus guineensis View in CoL sp. n. Figs 115, 305, 454, 562

Type locality.

Guinea: Seredou.

Type material

(3 exs.). Holotype: male: "Guinea Seredou, lux, 5.4. 1975 leg. Zott" (ZMHB). - Paratypes: Same data as holotype but "4.4. 1975" (1 ex. MZH); "Rep. Guinea Sérédou, lux, 4. Apr. 1975 leg. A. Zott" (1 ex. ZMHB; habitus in Fig. 454).

Diagnosis.

Closely related to Laccophilus guentheri and Laccophilus bizonatus ; characterized by quite similar, elytral colour pattern. Laccophilus guineensis is separated from them by having a robust penis, the apical half of which is broad, simple and moderately modified; extreme apex formed as a broad, rounded enlargement; not hooked.

Description.

Body length 3.9 mm, width 2.1 mm. Dorsal, aspect of body with stable colour pattern (Fig. 454).

Head: Pale ferrugineous to ferrugineous. Rather shiny, although finely microsculptured. Reticulation double; large meshes in part reduced and only slightly more strongly developed in comparison with fine meshes. Impunctate, except at eyes with a group of irregularly distributed, fine punctures. Area of punctures extended a short distance towards middle of head-disc.

Pronotum: Pale ferrugineous, almost unicoloured. Narrowly darker at foremargin. Basally at moderate distance from midline with two small and vague, dark ferrugineous spots. Submat, finely microsculptured. Reticulation double; large meshes only slightly more strongly developed than small meshes. Large meshes contain, when discernible, 2-6 small meshes (sometimes number difficult to estimate). Impunctate, except laterally and at foremargin; here fine, irregular punctures discernible.

Elytra: Pale ferrugineous, with irregularly distributed, dark ferrugineous irrorations. Frontally at pronotum dark irrorations absent, forming an irregular, pale, transverse area. Posterior to pale area dark irrorations thickened, forming a dark transverse area. Posterior to dark area, irrorations somewhat loosened and appear somewhat irregular (Fig. 454). Rather shiny, although finely microsculptured; reticulation double. In frontal part of elytra division into two mesh-size-categories is clearly discernible. Posteriorly division becomes vague and indistinct. Impunctate, except for three, vague, longitudinal rows of punctures. Pre-apical, lateral row of fine punctures located in shallow furrow, which is finely pubescent.

Ventral aspect: Dark ferrugineous to ferrugineous, no distinct colour pattern. Prothorax somewhat paler, ferrugineous to pale ferrugineous. Almost impunctate; apical ventrite with some punctures. Rather shiny, although finely microsculptured. Prosternal process rather slender; posteriorly somewhat elongated, apically pointed. Metacoxal plates in posterior half smooth; anteriorly with fine, shallow, in part reduced, transversely located furrows. Rather shiny, although very finely microsculptured. Abdomen with fine, curved striae. Apical ventrite as in (Fig. 115); asymmetric knob hardly discernible; rudimentary.

Legs: Pale ferrugineous to ferrugineous. Pro- and mesotarsus slightly enlarged, provided with distinct suckers.

Male genitalia: Penis in lateral aspect curved; extreme apex formed as a broad, rounded enlargement; not hooked (Fig. 305).

Female: Unknown.

Etymology.

The species name guineensis is an adjective meaning "from Guinea", the country from where, the new species is described.

Distribution.

Guinea (Fig. 562).

Collecting circumstances.

Almost unknown. Collected at light.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dytiscidae

Genus

Laccophilus