Mizotrechus bellorum, Erwin, 2011

Erwin, Terry L., 2011, Rainforest understory beetles of the Neotropics, Mizotrechus Bates 1872, a generic synopsis with descriptions of new species from Central America and northern South America (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Perigonini), ZooKeys 145, pp. 79-128 : 86-87

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.145.2274

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:94F032BD-93F2-4652-B7A3-E914EAB8BB92

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E336EDFB-B152-4B87-8C8E-1AE5A4B8B377

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:E336EDFB-B152-4B87-8C8E-1AE5A4B8B377

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Mizotrechus bellorum
status

sp. n.

Bells’ trough beetle Mizotrechus bellorum sp. n. Figs 2 View Plate 1 25 View Plate 7 40 View Figure 40

Holotype.

Guyane, Saut Pararé, Arataie River, Nouragues Field Station, 51 m, 4.0378°N, 52.6725°W, 13 September 2009 (S Brule, PH Dalens, & E Poirier)(NMNH: ADP124890, male)

Derivation of specific epithet.

The epithet “bellorum” is an eponym, based on the family name of Ross and Joyce Bell, with a special thanks for a career that brought light to the rhysodine clade of very interesting beetles with colors and tough cuticle also found in adults of Mizotrechus species.

Proposed English vernacular name.

Bells’ trough beetle.

Diagnosis.

With the attributes of the genus as described above and medium sized for the genus as it is presently understood; adults have castaneous integument, except anterior parts of mandible, baso-lateral corner of labrum, and clypeal suture piceous. Frons at sides with evident rugae, punctulate. Occiput at sides with evident rugae, punctulate. Pronotum nearly quadrate, narrowed behind, with straight margins to hind angle, hind angle dentate, tooth small; base sparsely rugulose. Elytra broad and short, much wider than the width of pronotum across anterior third, and with only interneurs 1-3 moderately engraved, 4-8 evident yet shallowly impressed, more so toward margin, not punctate; margin behind humerus uneven, yet not serrate. Foreleg femur subdentate at the base of postero-ventral margin.

Description.

( Figs 2 View Plate 1 , 25 View Plate 7 ). Size: See Appendix 1. Medium sized for the genus, ABL = 6.9 mm, SBL = 5.87 mm, TW = 2.55 mm. Color: see diagnosis, above. Luster: Head, pronotum, and legs shiny, elytra slightly duller due to shallowly engraved slightly stretched microsculpture. Head: Labrum quadrate and apico-medially emarginate. Eye large, moderately convex. Gena moderately short, straight. Frons, occiput and gena glabrous. Prothorax: Narrow, quadrate, narrowed slightly toward base, margins not emarginate before hind angle, angle dentate, tooth small, margin moder ately explanate except wider at hind angle; surface punctulate, punctures widespread, glabrous. Pterothorax: Elytron moderately convex, disk flat, intervals flat, interneurs not punctate, apex moderately oblique and straight, sutural apex narrowly rounded. Metasternum sparsely setiferous in male. Legs: Normal in male; foreleg femur (as in Fig. 20 View Plate 6 ) with a small obtuse tooth at basal third of postero-ventral margin; posterior trochanter narrowly acute at apex, about half the length of the femur. Abdomen: Abdominal sterna moderately setiferous; sternum IV of male with narrow and dense patch of decumbent setae. Male genitalia: Median lobe ( Fig. 25 View Plate 7 ) elongate and robust with ostium moderately elongate, over half the length of the median lobe; apex a losp. n.tulate distal end less bent ventrad than in Mizotrechus dalensi and thicker in cross section, moderately curved in lateral aspect, ventral margin proximal to apex straight then evenly curved to apex; endophallus with complexly folded tracheal fields; phallobase hooded, not crested, opening more or less 30 degrees off axis with that of shaft. Parameres large, left a half longer than the right, both broadly rounded, asetose. Female genitalia: Unknown.

Dispersal potential.

These beetles are macropterous and capable of flight. They are moderately swift and agile runners.

Way of life.

The adult holotype was collected in a flight intercept trap in the rainforest understory. Adults are active in September, near the end of the dry season.

Other specimens examined.

None.

Geographic distribution.

( Fig. 40 View Figure 40 ). This species is currently known only from the type locality in the lowlands of Guyane.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Mizotrechus