Melathra huyenae Franz

Franz, Nico M., 2011, Melathra Huyenae Franz, A New Genus And New Species Of Entimine Weevil (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Entiminae) From Southwestern Hispaniola, The Coleopterists Bulletin 65 (4), pp. 352-362 : 359-360

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1649/072.065.0406

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10238568

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AE6D4D0F-FF8F-5C59-A081-2C84FB83FE13

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Melathra huyenae Franz
status

sp. nov.

Melathra huyenae Franz View in CoL , new species ( Figs. 1–14 View Figs View Figs View Figs View Figs View Figs )

Diagnosis. Melathra huyenae is diagnosed by the following combination of traits: integument black, legs dark reddish brown; scales predominantly pale white, grey-silver to tan or brown, yet turquoise metallic on the rostrum, and with two conspicuous sub-elliptical patches of rusty brown metallic scales on anteromesal edges of elytra. The post-epistomal region is not distinctly depressed, and the median rostral sulcus is short and not narrowly linear. The head has a postocular constriction. The profemur is toothed, whereas the female metatibia has neither a row of teeth nor a mucro. The humeri are not well-developed. The female declivity bears a mesal tuft of suberect scales. The female sternum is VIII elliptical ( Fig. 10 View Figs ) and the corpus of the spermatheca is swollen ( Fig. 12 View Figs ). The male median lobe has a strongly sclerotized flagellum and paired anterior, narrowly plicate sclerites ( Fig. 14 View Figs ). Further differential traits are provided in the genus-level diagnosis.

Description. General morphological characteristics and measurements as specified in genus-level account above. Post-epistomal area of rostrum with more widely spaced, bluish or pale turquoise metallic scales, thereafter with contiguous pale silver/grey to brown scales typically forming alternating linear stripes along dorsal surface of rostrum ( Figs. 1 View Figs , 5 View Figs ). Body surface primarily covered with homogeneously intermixed pale white to grey-silver and variously brown scales, resulting in uniform dark brown appearance without magnification; patches of rusty (to orange) brown metallic scales present on lateral sides of pronotum, thoracic and abdominal sterna, and elytra as well as 2 distinct sub-elliptical patches of such scales in mesal anterior corners of elytra ( Figs. 1 View Figs , 4 View Figs ). Lateral and ventral sides of rostrum, head, and femora (particularly on lateral sides near region of ventral tooth) more frequently with pale white scales ( Figs. 2, 3 View Figs ). Setae short, lobulate, recurved, rusty brown and inconspicuous except on nasal plate, femora, ventral sides of tibiae (particular male metatibiae), and ventral sternites.

Variation. Other than substantive differences in body size, there is little apparent variation among specimens in terms of shape, surface structure, and coloration. Macroscopic differences in color patterns are largely due to varying levels of scale abrasion; worn specimens show more parts of the underlying black integument.

Type Material. H o l o t y p e f e m a l e “D. R. [ Dominican Republic] Pedernales [Province], Las Cuevas, Bahía de las Aguilas Station , afternoon & night collecting (incl. Hg & UV lights), 40 m, N 17°51′43.8″ W 71°38′18.3″ / June 08/2008 ( GoogleMaps RD 8-3 ), Leg. N.Franz, J.Girón, A. Mazo, S.Navarro ” ( UPRM) ; paratypes, same label as female holotype (18 males, 9 females); “ DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, Pedernales Prov. [ince], Cabo Rojo , 18- V/1992 , M. C. Thomas ” (8 males, 6 females) ; “ DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, Pedernales Prov. [ince], Cabo Rojo , 21-V-1992, M. C. Thomas (4 males, 4 females) .

Etymology. Named to acknowledge the author’ s love and appreciation for his best friend and greatest supporter, Huyen Dotran.

Natural History. Numerous specimens of M. huyenae were collected while beating shrubby plants at night along trails in the coastal dry forest (“main platform”) of the Jaragua National Park, near the Bahía de las Águlas Station, at only 40 m above sea level ( Fig. 15 View Fig ; see also León et al. 2011). The host plant associations remain unknown. No additional specimens were taken while collecting repeatedly on similar vegetation at higher elevations, i.e. moving uphill from Carretera 44 along the Carretera Cabo Rojo to Aceitillar, thus suggesting that M. huyenae is narrowly restricted to the coastal zone of the Jaragua National Park. Similarly, narrowly endemic species are reported for the phylogenetically and ecologically related Greater Antillean genera Apotomoderes , Artipus , and Scelianoma Franz and Girón (Woodruff 1985; Franz and Girón 2009; Franz 2010a).

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

UV

Departamento de Biologia de la Universidad del Valle

UPRM

University of Puerto Rico at Mayagueez, Rhizobium Culture Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Curculionidae

Genus

Melathra

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