Phrynidius guifarroi, Santos-Silva & Roie & Jocqué, 2021

Santos-Silva, Antonio, Roie, Martijn Van & Jocqué, Merlijn, 2021, Longhorned woodboring beetles (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae) from Cusuco National Park, Honduras: new species, new records, and revalidation, European Journal of Taxonomy 764, pp. 37-61 : 48-52

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.764.1469

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E95FEAA6-160A-4938-8F42-9F685BF28FAF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5237340

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B90887C9-FFBA-A612-F06D-FA360193A7E7

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Phrynidius guifarroi
status

sp. nov.

Phrynidius guifarroi View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:A45ED7C3-2D75-4648-A768-4B1C64F1768F

Figs 20–25 View Figs 20–23 View Figs 24–30. 24–25

Diagnosis

Phrynidius guifarroi sp. nov. is similar to P. jonesi Gutiérrez, Toledo-Hernández & Noguera, 2020 ( Figs 26–30 View Figs 24–30. 24–25 ), but differs as follows: pronotum with wide, elevated crest centrally, from anterior fifth to after middle, with its dorsal surface rugose and uniformly convex ( Figs 24–25 View Figs 24–30. 24–25 ); elytra with nearly glabrous area on basal fifth, close to scutellum and suture; and posterior tubercles of the elytra smaller. In P. jonesi , the central crest of the pronotum is nearly conical, placed before the middle ( Fig. 26 View Figs 24–30. 24–25 ), elytra with large nearly glabrous area placed centrally, and posterior tubercles of the elytra distinctly larger.

Etymology

This species is named after Mario Guifarro from Olancho, Honduras, a hunter and gold miner who turned into a dedicated conservationist when he experienced the degradation of rainforests in eastern Honduras. He was murdered in Moskitia in 2007 while setting up a protected forest zone.

Type material

Holotype HONDURAS • ♀; Cortés, Cusuco National Park, Danto , close to camp; 29 Jun. 2015; M. Jocqué leg.; RBINS 34.248 View Materials .

Paratype HONDURAS • ♀; Cortés, Cusuco National Park, Base Camp, Transect 4; 14 Jul. 2015; T. Brown leg.; MZSP .

Measurements in mm (female holotype / female paratype)

Total length, 11.25/ 12.05; prothoracic length, 3.05 / 3.45; anterior prothoracic width, 2.65 / 3.10; posterior prothoracic width, 2.60 / 2.90; widest prothoracic width, 3.10 / 3.45; humeral width, 2.70 / 3.10; elytral length, 7.30 / 7.85.

Description

Female holotype ( Figs 20–24 View Figs 20–23 View Figs 24–30. 24–25 )

COLORATION. Integument mostly black dorsally and laterally, mostly dark brown ventrally; head mostly black except apex of labrum orangish brown, basal area of anteclypeus, parts of labium, and apex of palpomeres reddish brown; scape, pedicel, and antennomeres III–IV dark brown; remaining antennomeres dark reddish brown. Posterocentral area of pronotum dark reddish brown. Scutellum orangish brown.

HEAD. Frons with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence obscuring integument, and short, sparse whitish setae interspersed. Vertex and area behind eyes coarsely, sparsely punctate; with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence obscuring integument, except glabrous median groove. Antennal tubercles moderately elevated, slightly separated from each other, together forming V-shaped sulcus; pubescence as on frons, except narrow glabrous apex. Median groove distinct from clypeus to prothoracic margin (more distinct on vertex). Genae coarsely, sparsely punctate; with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence except narrow glabrous apex. Wide central area of postclypeus with pubescence as on frons, with long, erect brownish setae near anteclypeus; sides glabrous. Labrum coplanar with anteclypeus at posterior ⅔, inclined at anterior third; posterior ⅔ smooth close to anteclypeus, finely punctate close to inclined area; with very sparse yellowish-white pubescence on posterior ⅔, nearly glabrous close to anteclypeus, and long, erect yellowish-brown setae directed forward close to inclined area; anterior third with moderately short and abundant nearly golden setae. Gulamentum glabrous except narrow anterior area with pale yellowish-brown pubescence not obscuring integument. Lower eye lobes 0.43 times as long as genal length; distance between upper eye lobes 0.42 times length of scape, 0.40 times distance between outer margins of eyes; in frontal view, distance between lower eye lobes 0.75 times length of scape, 0.71 times distance between outer margins of eyes. Antennae 1.55 times elytral length, almost reaching elytral apex. Scape, pedicel, antennomere III, and basal 4/5 of IV with dense pale yellowishbrown pubescence obscuring integument, and short, sparse, decumbent or arched yellowish-white and brown setae interspersed; apical fifth of antennomere IV, and remaining antennomeres with very sparse yellowish-white pubescence. Antennal formula (ratio) based on length of antennomere III: scape = 0.98; pedicel = 0.09; IV = 0.81; V = 0.32; VI = 0.30; VII = 0.30; VIII = 0.28; IX = 0.30; X = 0.26; XI = 0.28.

THORAX. Prothorax as long as wide; sides arched on anterior quarter, slightly convergent, irregular on posterior ¾. Pronotum entirely rugose; in lateral view, distinctly, gradually elevated from anterior margin to near middle, then distinctly, gradually inclined toward posterior margin; with wide, elevated crest centrally, from anterior fifth to after middle, with its dorsal surface rugose and uniformly convex; coarsely, moderately abundantly punctate; with dense pale yellow pubescence, not obscuring punctures, except nearly glabrous posterocentral area, and small, irregular glabrous area on each side of middle. Sides of prothorax entirely rugose; coarsely, moderately abundantly punctate; with dense pale yellowishbrown pubescence not obscuring punctures. Prosternum with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence obscuring integument laterally, moderately sparser centrally. Prosternal process gradually widened from base to posterior quarter, strongly, moderately abruptly widened on posterior quarter; with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence, and irregular areas with slightly sparser pubescence interspersed. Central area of mesoventrite with moderately abundant pale yellowish-brown pubescence distinctly not obscuring integument; sides of mesoventrite, mesanepisternum, mesepimeron, metanepisternum, metaventrite, and mesoventral process with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence; mesanepisternum coarsely, moderately sparsely punctate; apex of mesoventrite emarginate centrally; metaventrite with short, decumbent, sparse yellowish-white setae interspersed. Scutellum very narrow, transverse, glabrous.

ELYTRA. Entirely rugose, coarsely, deeply, moderately abundantly punctate; widest area (without tubercles) 1.8 times humeral width; with large conical tubercles, with glabrous apex; surface with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence, except glabrous apex of tubercles and glabrous large area close to scutellum and suture on basal fifth.

LEGS. Femora with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence, glabrous or almost so on apex, and short, decumbent yellowish-white setae interspersed. Tibiae with dense light beige pubescence, and short, decumbent yellowish-white setae interspersed, except almost glabrous area close to apex; apical margin of all tibiae, and dorsal area close to apex of mesotibiae with thick, nearly golden setae. Dorsal surface of tarsomeres with minute, slightly distinct yellowish-brown pubescence, not obscuring integument; central area of apex of tarsomeres I and II with two pairs of short, thick yellowish setae.

ABDOMEN. Ventrites with dense pale yellowish-brown pubescence.

Remarks

The male of P. jonesi examined by us is from the same Mexican state as the holotype ( Gutiérrez et al. 2020): “ Chiapas: Montebello lake area, 15-16.VI.1987, J.E. Wappes leg.” (ACMT).

MZSP

Brazil, Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo

MZSP

Sao Paulo, Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cerambycidae

Genus

Phrynidius

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