Seeversiella lativentris Gusarov

Gusarov, Vladimir I., 2003, A revision of the genus Seeversiella Ashe, 1986 (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Aleocharinae), Zootaxa 142, pp. 1-102 : 68-70

publication ID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6274677

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/62088784-C36D-C735-E12E-75C8FED2FA2E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Seeversiella lativentris Gusarov
status

 

19. Seeversiella lativentris Gusarov View in CoL , sp. n. ( Figs. 265­277 View FIGURES 265 ­ 268 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 )

Type material. Holotype ,, COSTA RICA: San Jose: 2 km S Villa Mills, 3000 m, ridgetop oak forest litter (R.Anderson), 10.ii.1996 ( KSEM).

Paratypes: COSTA RICA: San Jose: 78 specimens, same data as the holotype ( KSEM).

Diagnosis. Seeversiella lativentris can be distinguished from other species of Seeversiella by having brown body with lighter pronotum and elytra; temples 1.5­1.8 times as long as eyes; elytra much shorter than pronotum; reduced wings (shorter than elytra); by lacking clear medial emargination at posterior margin of male tergum 7 ( Fig. 265 View FIGURES 265 ­ 268 ); tergum 8 with three pairs of macrosetae; by the distinct shape of aedeagus ( Figs. 269­276 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ) and spermatheca ( Fig. 277 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ).

Seeversiella lativentris differs from S. curtipennis in having stronger basal constriction of the apex of median lobe (in parameral view) ( Figs. 269­270 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ; 251­252).

ML – medial lamellae.

Seeversiella lativentris differs from S. luridicollis and S. micralymma in having matte pronotum with strong isodiametric microsculpture; tergum 8 with three pairs of macrosetae; medial lamellae of internal sac long ( Fig. 274 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ), the apices of lamellae protruding from retracted sac ( Fig. 269 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ); different shape of the median lobe ( Figs. 269­270 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ; 282­283; 295­ 296) and L­shaped spermatheca with large umbilicus ( Fig. 277 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ).

Description. Length 2.0­ 2.6 mm. Head and abdomen brown to dark brown; pronotum reddish brown; elytra reddish brown or yellowish brown; antennae and legs brown.

Head surface matte, with fine and dense isodiametric microsculpture, and fine and poorly visible punctation. Temples 1.5­1.8 times as long as eyes. Antennal article 2 as long as 3, article 4 transverse (ratio 1.2), 5­10 strongly transverse (ratio 1.5­2.0).

Pronotum slightly transverse, 1.2 times as wide as head, width 0.41­0.47 mm, length 0.34­0.43 mm, width to length ratio 1.1, surface matte, with fine and dense isodiametric microsculpture, and fine and poorly visible punctation. Elytra wider and much shorter (measured from humeral angle) than pronotum (pronotal length to elytral length ratio 1.3), 1.7 times wider than long, matte, with fine and weak isodiametric microsculpture, and fine punctation, distance between punctures equals ½­1 time their diameter. Wings reduced to short vestiges, shorter than elytra.

Abdominal terga glossy, with fine microsculpture consisting of transverse meshes, with fine punctation, distance between punctures equals 1­4 times their diameter on terga 3­5 and 3­5 times on tergum 7. Apical margin of tergum 7 without white palisade fringe. Tergum 8 with three pairs of macrosetae ( Figs. 265, 267 View FIGURES 265 ­ 268 ).

In large males posterior angles of tergum 3 projecting as spines up to half as long as tergum 3 (measured medially); tergum 7 with medial carina along midline, the carina up to ½ as long as tergum length; posterior margin of tergum 8 without clear emargination ( Fig. 265 View FIGURES 265 ­ 268 ).

Aedeagus as in Figs. 269­276 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 . Apex of paramere narrow, proximal seta approximately as long as the other three setae ( Fig. 273 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 ).

Spermatheca as in Fig. 277 View FIGURES 269 ­ 277 .

Distribution. Known from Cerro de la Muerte, Costa Rica ( Fig. 389 View FIGURE 389 ).

Natural History. Seeversiella lativentris was collected in forest litter at altitude of 3000 m.

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