Seeversiella badia Gusarov

Gusarov, Vladimir I., 2003, A revision of the genus Seeversiella Ashe, 1986 (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Aleocharinae), Zootaxa 142, pp. 1-102 : 43-45

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.156420

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6274658

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/62088784-C304-C75C-E12E-750AFED2FD26

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Seeversiella badia Gusarov
status

 

11. Seeversiella badia Gusarov View in CoL , sp. n. ( Figs. 150­160 View FIGURES 150 ­ 153 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 )

Type material. Holotype ,, EL SALVADOR: Santa Ana: Montecristo, 21.7 km NE Metapan, 2100 m, cloud forest litter (R.S.Anderson), 29.viii.1994 ( KSEM).

Paratypes: EL SALVADOR: Santa Ana: 2, same data as the holotype (all ­ KSEM).

Diagnosis. Seeversiella badia can be distinguished from other species of Seeversiella by having brown body; temples 1.7­2.0 times as long as eyes; glossy pronotum with weak isodiametric microsculpture; elytra as long as pronotum; tergum 8 with four pairs of macrosetae; the distinct shape of aedeagus ( Figs. 154­159 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 ) and spermatheca ( Fig. 160 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 ).

Seeversiella badia differs from closely related S. similis in that the apex of median lobe in lateral view is emarginate on parameral side ( Figs. 156­157 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 ; 167­168).

Seeversiella badia can be distinguished from S. globicollis and the other similar species (3, 5­8, 10) with long elytra and weak pronotal microsculpture by the combination of the following characters: distal sclerites of internal sac poorly sclerotized, not dentiform or hook­shaped and have small spicules ( Fig. 158 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 ); apex of median lobe in lateral view widened subapically and emarginate on parameral side ( Figs. 156­157 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 ); spermatheca Sshaped with umbilicus facing laterally ( Fig. 160 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 ).

Description. Length 2.5 mm, pronotal width 0.50­0.53 mm. Body brown to dark brown with lighter elytra, legs brown to yellowish brown.

In all character states S. badia is very similar to S. globicollis , but differs in the shape of the aedeagus and spermatheca as described in the diagnosis.

In the only known male specimen the posterior angles of tergum 3 projecting as spines, as long as tergum 3 (measured medially), tergum 7 with medial carina along midline, the carina up to 2/3 as long as tergum length.

Aedeagus as in Figs. 154­159 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 .

Spermatheca as in Fig. 160 View FIGURES 154 ­ 160 .

Distribution. Known from El Salvador ( Fig. 387 View FIGURE 387 ).

Natural History. Seeversiella badia was collected in cloud forest litter at altitude of 2100 m.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF