Megaceras briansaltini Ratcliffe, 2007

López-Guerrero, Irma, 2007, Figs. 30 – 33. Attavicinus monstrosus. 30 in Comparison of Mouthpart Morphology of Three Species of Mexican Oniticellini (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae) in Relation to Their Trophic Habits, The Coleopterists Bulletin 61 (3), pp. 463-467 : 463-467

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1649/0010

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CC6C1721-FFB0-FFCC-1569-FA8AFC19FD6A

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Megaceras briansaltini Ratcliffe
status

sp. nov.

Megaceras briansaltini Ratcliffe , new species

( Figs. 1–3, 5, 7–8 View Figs View Figs , 11 View Fig )

Type Material. Holotype male, labeled ‘‘DYNASTINAE, Dynastinae sp., PERU: Calabaza (5street from Satipo to Huancayo), VI-2006, JPSCOLLNO: DYN/0/P00E, Coll. J.-P. Saltin’ ’, ‘‘ Calabaza 1800-2200m, Junin PERU, 2006’’, and my red holotype label . Holotype deposited at the University of Nebraska State Museum , Lincoln, NE .

Holotype. Length 34.5 mm; width across humeri 14.9 mm. Color of dorsum piceous, weakly shining; venter reddish brown. Head: Dorsal surface completely occupied by stout, recurved horn ( Fig. 2 View Figs ); horn expanded at base and extending

463

464 from clypeal apex to occiput and from eye canthus to eye canthus; surface of horn minutely alutaceous, sides with sparse, moderately large punctures; anterior face with small, sparse punctures; posterior margin just below apex with small swelling (suggestive of a subapical tooth). Clypeus with apex broadly rounded, feebly emarginate at center. Interocular width equals 4.9 transverse eye diameters. Antenna with 10 segments, club subequal in length to segments 2–7. Mandible with large, angulate basal lobe and narrow, acute apical tooth ( Fig. 3 View Figs ). Pronotum: Surface strongly aciculate, minutely shagreened, punctate in anterior angle and on lateral margin; punctures in anterior angle mostly large, extending obliquely onto disc, those along lateral margin large, becoming confluent and rugose anteriorly. Base with very slender marginal bead. Lateral margins arcuate, widest just before middle. Disc at center with raised, bituberculate prominence, tubercles separated from one another by distance equal to transverse eye diameter. Elytra: Surface strongly aciculate, minutely shagreened, rugopunctate at apices. Sutural stria strongly impressed; disc at center and just mesad of humerus with weakly impressed stria. Sides vaguely wrinkled. Lateral margin with strong bead. 466 Pygidium: Surface weakly aciculate, minutely alutaceous. Base with transverse row of large, moderately dense, setigerous punctures; setae long, reddish brown. In lateral view, surface strongly convex in basal fourth, nearly flat elsewhere ( Fig. 5 View Figs ). Legs: Protibia tridentate, teeth subequally spaced. Meso- and metatibia each with 2 transversely oblique carinae. Metatibia at apex with large, narrowly rounded lobe. Venter: Prosternal process long, subconical. Pro-, meso-, and metasternum with long, reddish brown setae. Metasternum either side of middle nearly completely punctate; punctures dense, small; metasternum at center impunctate. Parameres: Figs. 7–8 View Figs .

Etymology. At the request of Jochen-P. Saltin, who graciously donated the specimen for description, this species is named in honor of his son, Brian. Brian has sustained, without complaint, his father’s passion for beetles and is now himself studying biology.

Distribution. Megaceras briansaltini is known only from the type locality near Calabaza (on the road from Satipo to Huancayo), District of Pampa in the Department of Junin, Province of Satipo on the eastern slopes of the Andes in Peru.

Diagnosis. Megaceras briansaltini is most similar to M. morpheus Burmeister and will key to this species in Endrödi (1976, 1985). Megaceras briansaltini differs from M. morpheus in the form of the parameres, head horn, dorsal surface of the clypeus, teeth of the mandibles, and pygidium.

The parameres, in caudal view, of M. briansaltini are subquadrate at their apices ( Fig. 7 View Figs ), whereas they are narrowly rounded in M. morpheus ( Fig. 9 View Figs ). In lateral view, the subapical, lateroventral depression of the parameres is wide in M. briansaltini ( Fig. 8 View Figs ) and narrow in M. morpheus ( Fig. 10 View Figs ).

The form of the head horn in M. briansaltini ( Figs. 2 View Figs , 11 View Fig ) is unlike that of any other dynastine species with which I am familiar, because it is so swollen at its base... so much so that it obscures or encompasses most of the top of the head. The clypeus is not visible except at its extreme apex. In M. morpheus , conversely, the dorsal surface of the clypeus is clearly evident anterior to the base of the horn. Because of the unusual nature of the horn, the possibility remains that the horn configuration is a monstrosity, but additional material is needed to ascertain this.

The form of the horn is startlingly similar to that of Dim, the blue rhinoceros beetle in the Disney/Pixar animated motion picture, A Bug’s Life ( Fig. 11 View Fig ). I know of no dynastine head horn that has ever had the shape of the one seen in M. briansaltini , and so its resemblance to a movie character seems like a case of nature mimicking art... or what could be referred to as ‘‘the Dim Effect.’’ There are numerous examples of art mimicking nature (paintings, sculpture, etc.), but that cannot be the case here, because there had never been a known rhinoceros beetle in nature upon which the creators of Dim could have used as a model for the head horn. In my experience, then, Dim was the first ‘‘rhinoceros beetle’’ to display such a horn, and the discovery of M. briansaltini , a real rhinoceros beetle, came later.

The teeth of the mandibles differ between M. briansaltini and M. morpheus . In M. briansaltini , the basal lobe of the mandible is large, obtusely rounded, weakly bilobed, while the apical tooth is narrow and acute ( Fig. 3 View Figs ). In M. morpheus , the basal and apical teeth are both acute ( Fig. 4 View Figs ).

Lastly, the form of the male pygidium differs between the species. In lateral view, the pygidium of M. briansaltini is strongly convex and protuberant in the basal fourth and nearly flat elsewhere ( Fig. 5 View Figs ). In M. morpheus , however, the pygidium is normally and evenly convex, not strongly protuberant ( Fig. 6 View Figs ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dynastidae

Genus

Megaceras

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