Tobochares sulcatus Short & Garcia , 2007

Kohlenberg, Alex T. & Short, Andrew Edward Z., 2017, Revision of the Neotropical water scavenger beetle genus Tobochares Short & Garcia, 2007 (Coleoptera, Hydrophilidae, Acidocerinae), ZooKeys 669, pp. 113-146 : 136-138

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.669.11773

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:13D2ECC5-A53C-4A19-A00C-406E940BADD2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7D4C914D-BB67-58D2-EA57-E2EBFF5BCAB3

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Tobochares sulcatus Short & Garcia , 2007
status

 

Tobochares sulcatus Short & Garcia, 2007 View in CoL Figs 2A, 5 E–F, 8C, 11F, 14B, 15, 18 A–B

Tobochares sulcatus Short & García, 2007: 4.

Material examined

(100). VENEZUELA: Amazonas: Tobogan de la Selva, 14.i.2009, leg. Short, García, Miller & Joly, wet rock covered with detritus, VZ09-0114-01F (50 exs., SEMC, MIZA, MALUZ; includes DNA vouchers SLE0035, SLE1027); same locality but 14.i.2009, leg. Short & Miller, partly shaded wet rock with algae, VZ09-0114-01G (2 exs., SEMC); same locality but 5.i.2006, leg. Short, wet rock with leaves, AS-06-011e (2 exs., SEMC includes DNA voucher SLE1037); same locality but 5.i.2006, leg. Short, pools in rock with sand, AS-06-011c (12 exs., SEMC); same locality but 16.xi.1987, leg. Spangler & Faitoute, Colln. #7 (1 ex., USNM); same locality but 26.i.1989, leg. Spangler, Faitoute, & Barr, seep at upper shelter (21, USNM); ca. 15 km S. Puerto Ayacucho, 13.ix.2007, leg. Short, AS-07-009a (3 exs., SEMC); nr. Iboruwa, “Tobogancito”, 13.i.2009, leg. Short et al., VZ09-0113-02X (1 ex., SEMC); nr. Hotel Nacamtur, 14.ix.2007, leg. Short, isolated rock seep with algae, AS-07-013x (1 ex., SEMC). Bolivar: Los Pijiguaos, seeps and stream on outcrop at night, 9.vii.2010, leg. Short et al., VZ10-0709-03A (2 exs., SEMC; includes one specimen on SEM stub and DNA voucher SLE1035); ca. 15 km N. Los Pijiguaos, 17.ix.2007, leg. Short & García, outcrop seepage, AS-07-016 (4 exs., SEMC); ca. 25 km E El Burro, 13.i.2009, leg. Short et al., rocky morichal, VZ09-0113-01X (1 ex., SEMC).

Differential diagnosis.

The dark brown coloration and deep elytral grooves, which are impressed along their entire length (Fig. 2A), separate this species from most other Tobochares , including T. canaliculatus , which also has deep grooves but is much paler and has a differently shaped aedeagus. Other congeners with impressed elytral grooves either have them only impressed on the posterior half of the elytra (e.g. T. kasikasima ) or have very large serial punctures in those grooves (e.g. T. striatus , T. kusad ), while the serial punctures themselves are minute to almost appearing absent in T. sulcatus (Fig. 11F).

Description.

Size and form: Body length 1.8-2.2 mm. Body elongate oval, moderately dorsoventrally compressed. Color and punctation. Dorsum of head very dark brown to black, anterolateral margins of clypeus with paler preocular patches (Fig. 5 E–F); maxillary palps distinctly pale, with the apex of palpomere 4 darker (Fig. 8C). Pronotum brown to very dark brown with the lateral margins appearing slightly paler; elytra brown to very dark brown, slightly paler at lateral margins and posteriorly. Meso- and metathoracic ventrites and abdominal ventrites very dark brown (nearly black), with prosternum slightly paler; epipleura, legs, labial palps, and antennae distinctly paler, with antennal club slightly darker than proximal antennal segments. Ground punctation on head, pronotum and elytra moderately fine. Head. Eyes measuring ~100µm anteroposteriorly, continuous with outline of head, emarginate at lateral margin, narrowing to half to slightly more than half the width (Fig. 5 E–F). Thorax. Elytra with ten rows of serial punctures which are depressed into deep, smooth grooves running the full length of the elytra. Metafemora mostly glabrous on ventral face, with narrow band of pubescence along proximal third of anterior margin. Elevation of mesoventrite forming a low transverse carina, not quite elevated to the same plane as the ventral surface of the mesocoxae. Metaventrite with distinct median ovoid glabrous area that is more than half of the total metaventrite length, and about half as wide as it is long. Abdomen. Abdominal ventrites uniformly and very densely pubescent, with small spicules interspersed amongst the setae (e.g. Fig. 13A). Aedeagus (Fig. 14B) with parameres about as wide as median lobe basally, parallel sided in basal half, then strongly narrowing in apical third; apex of parameres then broadly expanded and bluntly rounded. Median lobe gradually tapering to a bluntly rounded apex, which slightly extends beyond the apex of the parameres; gonopore situated distinctly below the apex of the median lobe.

Distribution.

Known from a series of localities along the northwestern edge of the Guiana Shield in Venezuela (Fig. 15), though the vast majority of material has been collected at Tobogan de la Selva.

Biology.

Tobochares sulcatus occurs on wet rocks with fallen leaves and other detritus along stream corridors (Fig. 18 A–B). A handful of specimens have been collected from more isolated seepages, but these seem incidental compared to the long series-some in the hundreds-that have been found at the type locality Tobogan de la Selva. See Short and García (2007) for additional habitat details and images.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Hydrophilidae

Genus

Tobochares