Triodontus inexpectatus Frolov, Montreuil & Akhmetova

Frolov, Andrey V., Montreuil, Olivier & Akhmetova, Lilia A., 2016, Review of the Madagascan Orphninae (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) with a revision of the genus Triodontus Westwood, Zootaxa 4207 (1), pp. 1-93 : 88-91

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4207.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F2875582-31E2-496F-AEEF-1D657DD86C33

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6057714

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5B4FBD00-FF86-6130-FF02-64C4FA1BFD5D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Triodontus inexpectatus Frolov, Montreuil & Akhmetova
status

sp. nov.

Triodontus inexpectatus Frolov, Montreuil & Akhmetova , new species

( Figs. 46 View FIGURE 46 A–F)

Type material. Holotype (46 A–E), male, “ MADAGASCAR E . Masoala, 50–470 m R. Antsamanarana 3–7/xii/ 1993, Flight Intercept Trap BMNH(E) 1994-138 / Holotypus Triodontus inexpectatus Frolov et al. 2010 ” (BMNH).

Diagnosis. Triodontus inexpectatus is most similar to T. hanskii but can be separated from it in having inner lobes of the parameres relatively larger (in lateral view) and outer lobes as long as the inner lobes.

Description. Male. Body length 12.5 mm, width 6.5 mm. Body strongly shiny, uniformly colored ( Figs. 46 View FIGURE 46 A– B). Color of head, pronotum, and elytra dark brown; legs, antennae, and underside of body brown.

Frontoclypeus convex anteriorly, rounded laterally, anterior margin crenulate and setose in dorsal view. Eyes relatively small (diameter slightly smaller than the distance between eye and gula in ventral view), incompletely divided by canthus into small, dorsal and large, ventral parts. Frontoclypeus with tubercles mediad of each eye and with short obtuse horn in center of frontoclypeus.

Pronotum convex, without tubercles or ridges, with shallow concavity in the middle. Lateral margins with wide border appearing somewhat crenulate in dorsal view. Anterior margin with wide, smooth border. Posterior margin with fine border; not crenulate; punctate with narrow, longitudinal punctures laterally. Surface of pronotum mainly smooth, anterior angles with a few coarse punctures.

Scutellum rounded apically, visible part is about 1/15 length of elytra.

Elytra convex, with distinct humeral humps. Maximum width approximately at middle. Elytra with 10 feebly visible striae and with oblique line from base of 6th stria to approximately middle of 8th stria. Stria marked with small, indistinct punctures. Intervals with minute punctures, almost smooth. Base of elytra with an irregular row of coarse, semicircular punctures each bearing small, yellow seta.

Sternite 8 medially about 2 times as short as other sternites combined, slightly sinuate apically, without tubercles or concavities in the middle ( Fig. 46 View FIGURE 46 E).

Parameres with apices of upper lobes being obtusely rounded, strongly sclerotized; upper lobes deeply sinuate laterally, the sinuation forms a tooth in dorsal view ( Fig. 46 View FIGURE 46 D). Internal sac of aedeagus with a somewhat pentagonal main sclerite.

Female. Unknown.

Distribution. The species in known from a single specimen collected in the Masoala Peninsula ( Fig. 46 View FIGURE 46 F).

Etymology. From Latin, “ inexpectatus ” for unexpected. This name is an adjective in the nominative singular.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Orphnidae

Genus

Triodontus

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