Nitidotachinus brunneus, Zheng, Dan-Lin, Li, Li-Zhen & Zhao, Mei-Jun, 2014

Zheng, Dan-Lin, Li, Li-Zhen & Zhao, Mei-Jun, 2014, Review of Nitidotachinus Campbell (Staphylinidae, Tachyporinae) from Mainland China, ZooKeys 447, pp. 87-107 : 90

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.447.8129

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E078072E-8EBB-44F9-B906-831AFE206685

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/719CF9A5-E3B5-46AA-9FC2-59491B99F87A

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:719CF9A5-E3B5-46AA-9FC2-59491B99F87A

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Nitidotachinus brunneus
status

sp. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Coleoptera Staphylinidae

Nitidotachinus brunneus View in CoL sp. n. Figs 1B, 3

Type specimens.

Holotype:China: male, Mt. Longwang Reserve (alt. 950-1200m), Anji County, Zhejiang Prov., 25.IV.2004, Li-Long Zhu leg. Paratypes:China: 1 female, same data as holotype; 2 males, same locality as holotype, Liang Tang leg.; 1 male, 1 female, same locality as holotype, Jia-Jie Huang leg.; 1 male, same locality as holotype, Jia-Yao Hu leg.; 1 male, same locality as holotype, 25.IV.2006, Liang Tang leg.; 1 female, same locality as holotype, 25.IV.2006, Shan-Jia Shen leg.

Description.

Body (Fig. 1B) medium in size, 5.4-5.7 mm (total length); 2.9-3.2 mm (length of forebody). Color dark reddish brown with shine; first and second segments of antennae, mouthparts, sides of pronotum, and legs dark red.

Head subtriangular, 0.47 times as wide as pronotum. Surface finely and sparsely punctate, with dense and coarse microsculpture consisting mostly of irregular meshes. Antennae moderately long, reaching the apical third of elytra; 1st and 2nd segments glabrous except for a few long setae, 3rd to 11th densely pubescent; the relative length of each segment from base to apex: 13.0: 8.0: 16.0: 13.0: 14.0: 15.0: 14.0: 13.0: 13.0: 13.0: 17.0; the 10th segment 1.86 times as long as wide. Maxillary palpus moderately long, relative lengths of 4th and 3rd segments: 16.5: 9.0.

Pronotum broad, transverse, 0.64 times as long as wide, widest at basal third. Surface with dense and fine microsculpture consisting of transverse wave lines, punctures slightly sparser and finer than those on head.

Elytra in sutural length 0.69 times as long as wide; 1.06 times as long as the median length of pronotum; sides gradually widened posteriad; apical margins sinuate; apical angles sharp. Surface with punctures much coarser than, and microsculpture similar to those on pronotum.

Abdomen gradually narrowed from base to apex. Surface with many long bristles which are becoming denser towards anal apex, very finely and sparsely punctate and pubescent, with minute microsculpture only at sides of third tergite.

Male: Fore tarsal segments I–IV dilated; the relative lengths of hind tarsal segments from base to apex: 13.0: 6.0: 4.5: 4.0: 10.0. Eighth tergite (Fig. 3C) 4-lobed; inner lobes separated from each other by a V-shaped emargination and much longer than outer lobes. Sixth sternite (Fig. 3A) slightly emarginate at middle in apical margin, with 7-8 granules on each side of the emargination. Seventh sternite (Fig. 3B) subtriangularly depressed at middle in posterior part, deeply and sinuately emarginated in apical margin, symmetrically covered with some short peg setae near posterior margin; densely bordered by long black spiniform setae on posterior margin. Eighth sternite (Fig. 3D) 2-lobed, deeply incised between two lobes, the depth 0.28 times as long as the median length of sternite; Aedeagus (Figs 3 G–H) moderate in size; parameres longer than median lobe, strongly narrowed apicad, slightly curved ventrad in apical fourth.

Female: Fore tarsal segments I–IV normal. Eighth tergite (Fig. 3E) 4-lobed; inner lobes deeply separated with each other, much narrower and slightly shorter than outer lobes. Eighth sternite (Fig. 3F) 6-lobed; inner lobes much broader than intermediate lobes, separated from each other by a shallow, “V” shaped emargination.

Distribution.

China (Zhejiang Province).

Remarks.

This new species can be easily separated from the other species from Mainland China by the area of short peg setae on male seventh sternite smaller, about 1/6 times as long as entire sternite.

Etymology.

The specific name is derived from a Latin word “brunneus” (= brown), which refers to the body color.