Chrysobothris (Chrysobothris) fallax Juárez-Noé & González-Coronado, 2023

Juárez-Noé, Gino & González-Coronado, Uzbekia, 2023, A new species of Chrysobothris (s. str.) Eschscholtz, 1829 (Coleoptera: Buprestidae) from northwestern Peru, Revista Chilena de Entomología (Rev. Chil. Entomol.) 49 (1), pp. 213-219 : 214-217

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.35249/rche.49.1.23.21

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1F5DDFAA-459A-4718-B007-A1D5024FE5F3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10950315

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E649A50D-FFFC-FFC9-FF60-354EFC350D89

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chrysobothris (Chrysobothris) fallax Juárez-Noé & González-Coronado
status

sp. nov.

Chrysobothris (Chrysobothris) fallax Juárez-Noé & González-Coronado , sp. nov.

( Figs. 1-7 View Figures 1-3 View Figures 4-6 View Figure 7 )

Type material. Holotype male. PERÚ, Piura, distrito Castilla / Universidad Nacional de Piura / 05°10’51’’S- 80°37’31’’O, 29 m, 12.IV.2017 / colecta manual, U. González & G. Juárez leg. [ MUPRG] GoogleMaps . Paratypes. 2 females, 1 male / PERÚ, Piura, distrito Piura, Universidad de Piura / 05°10’11’’S- 80°36’51’’O, 26 m // 19-II-2017, colecta manual / G. Juárez & U. González leg. [ MUPRG] GoogleMaps . 1 male / PERÚ, Piura, Talara, distrito Los Órganos / 04°10’38’’S- 81°07’27’’O, 10 m // 05-V-2017, golpeteo de vegetación / G. Juárez leg. [ GJNC] GoogleMaps . 2 females, 1 male / PERÚ, Piura, Sechura, Vice, Desierto de Sechura / 05°59’47’’S- 80°27’02’’O, 10 m // 12-XII-2017, golpeteo de vegetación / G. Juárez leg. [ GJNC] GoogleMaps . 1 female / PERÚ, Piura, Sechura, Illescas / 05°58’38’’S- 81°05’51’’O, 10 m // 12-XI-2017, golpeteo de vegetación / G. Juárez leg. [ GJNC] GoogleMaps . 1 female, 1 male / PERÚ, Piura, Morropón, distrito Chulucanas / 05°05’47’’S- 80°09’39’’O, 350 m // 22-I-2015, colecta manual / G. Juárez leg. [ GJNC] GoogleMaps . 1 male / PERÚ, Piura, Morropón / 05°51’67’’S-80°09’78’’O, 653 m // 11-III-2011, golpeteo de vegetación / G. Juárez leg. [ GJNC] . 1 female / PERÚ, Piura, Ayabaca, distrito Suyo / 04°30’45’’S- 80°02’10’’O, 554 m // 20-VI-2011, colecta manual / G. Juárez leg. [ GJNC] GoogleMaps . 1 female / PERÚ, Piura, distrito Veintiséis de Octubre / 05°10’55’’S- 81°40’08’’O, 25 m // 04- I-2023, colecta manual / U. González leg. [ GJNC] GoogleMaps .

Description. Male holotype ( Figs. 1-5 View Figures 1-3 View Figures 4-6 ). Length 16.10 mm, width 5.10 mm. Elongate, depressed above; dorsal surface black shiny with coppery-gold reflections and faint greenish-blue reflections; frons with coppery-gold reflections; vertex with golden and green reflections; clypeus with coppery-gold and green reflections along margin; antennomeres 1-3 with faint green reflections, antennomeres 4-11 with reddish-brown reflections; basal pits and foveae of elytra brassy; legs with coppery-gold reflections, tarsi with greenish-blue reflections. Ventral surface black shiny with coppery-gold reflections and faint greenish-blue reflections; tarsi and posterior margins of ventrites with greenish-blue reflections.

Head. Frons convex, shallowly and densely reticulate-punctate, densely clothed with long, silver-white hairs; with a median longitudinal carina and coarsely elevated ridge above clypeus and arching above antennal insertions; vertex densely punctate, punctures small, with a fine median carina; clothed with short, silver-white hairs; clypeus with anterior margin broadly, deeply, arcuately emarginate; antennomeres clothed with anteriorlydirected, silver-white hairs; antennomere 1 longer with wide, wider at apex ( Fig. 5a View Figures 4-6 ); antennomere 2 short, longer than wide; antennomere 3 slender and slightly equal size than antennomere 1; antennomeres 4-11 serrate. Thorax. Pronotum with surface evenly convex, wider than long, widest at apical fourth, with irregular depressions on each apical margin, near lateral margin at middle and before basal margin; punctures of disk fine and shallow, punctures coarse, deep and rugose laterally around depressions; apical angles weakly produced, basal angles bluntly triangular; hind margin strongly bisinuate, arcuately emarginate in front of scutellum. Prosternum sparsely punctate, clothed with short, semierect, silver-white hairs; prosternal process wide, flat, sparsely punctate, front margin subtruncate; meso and metasternum densely punctate, with disk glabrous and laterally clothed with short, semierect, silver-white hairs. Elytra. 1.7 times longer than wide, width at humeral angles 1.1 times wider than pronotum at hind angles, sides wider at middle, then strongly tapering to apex; lateral margins serrate on apical half, apices terminating in distinct acute tooth; surface finely densely punctate. Each elytron with a deep median basal pit, a transverse discal fovea at basal third, and an irregularly rounded discal fovea, behind middle; four strongly elevated costae as follows: costa 1 from near base, extending uninterrupted to apex, costa 2 from near base, extending to near apex, costa 3 short, from basal third to half, interrupted by apical fovea, costa 4 following outline of lateral margin, obsolete from near base to half, extending more distinctly from half to near apex; discal fovea at basal third between costae 1-3, discal fovea behind middle between costae 1-4. Scutellum strongly produced and acuminate posteriorly. Legs. Clothed with short, silver-white hairs. Anterior femur with a short, truncate tooth, denticulate on outer margin ( Fig. 5b View Figures 4-6 ). Anterior tibia arcuate, somewhat wider on apical half, 5 small blunt teeth on apical half of inner margin, one spine at apex; middle tibia evenly arcuate, two spines at apex; hind tibia straight, unmodified, one spine at apex. Pygidium. Densely punctate, apical margin subtruncate. Abdomen. Shallowly concave, finely and densely punctate, glabrous on middle, laterally clothed with short, silver-white hairs laterally; broadly, feebly flattened at middle, lateral callosities absent; Ventrites with acute posterior angles; ventrite 5 deeply, semicircularly emarginate at apex, posterior angles broad, slightly emarginate and acutely produced externally; surface broadly, longitudinally concave at middle, limited on each side by a longitudinal carina, and with a slightly elevated, serrate submarginal ridge ( Fig. 2 View Figures 1-3 ). Aedeagus. Median lobe upcurved apically, tip narrowly rounded ( Figs. 4a, 4b View Figures 4-6 ).

Female. Similar to male, differs as follows: antennomeres dark with faint green reflections; pygidium with apical margin rounded; apex of ventrite 5 slightly emarginate at middle, with a median longitudinal carina ( Fig. 6 View Figures 4-6 ).

Variation. Most individuals are black with coppery-gold reflection and faint greenish-blue reflections; however, a few individuals greenish-blue reflections are absent. The frons of some specimens, including the holotype, is densely clothed with silver-white hairs, but in other individuals it is glabrous; the longitudinal carina and ridge on the frons are distinctly developed in most individuals, but in a few individuals they are weakly developed. Males vary from 15.10-16.10 mm long (mean = 15.80, n = 6) and 5.10-5.20 mm wide (mean = 5.10, n = 6) and females from 14.50-16.30 mm long (mean = 15.50, n = 8) and 5.0- 5.30 mm wide (mean = 5.20, n = 8).

Diagnosis. C. fallax sp. nov. is related to C. acutipennis by its greatly elongated, strongly acuminate scutellum, the size and form of the foveae and costae of the elytra, and the distinct tooth at each elytral apex. It can be distinguished from the latter by the short truncate tooth on the profemora and the narrowly rounded, upcurved tip of the median lobe in the male genitalia. In contrast, C. acutipennis has a short, rounded tooth on the profemora and the more broadly rounded tip of the median lobe on the male genitalia ( Fisher 1942). C. fallax also resembles Chrysobothris pseudacutipennis Obenberger, 1940 ; however, the latter has the scutellum much shorter, and the elytral apices rounded with a minute tooth ( Obenberger 1940).

Etymology. The specific epithet is from the Latin fallax (= deceptive, false); named in reference to its external similarity to C. acutipennis .

Distribution. Known only from the seasonally dry coastal forests and desert habitats (deserts scrub, coastal plains, mountain dry forests) up to 800 m altitude in the Piura region of northwestern Peru ( Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ).

Ecology. Most individuals have been beaten and collected on live or dead branches of Neltuma piurensis (L. Vásquez, Escurra & Huamán) C.E. Hughes & G.P. Lewis ( Fabaceae ). A few individuals have been collected on live branches of Vachellia spp. ( Fabaceae ). Presumably, these species also serve as hosts for larval development, but this remains to be confirmed. Juárez-Noé & González-Coronado (2020, 2021), reported adults of Chrysobothris sp. collected on branches of Prosopis pallida (Humb. & Bonpl. ex. Wild.) Kunth [= N. piurensis ]; all these specimens, in fact, represent C. fallax sp. nov.

Remarks. Most of the Chrysobothris species cited for Peru are characterized by brilliant colorations on body (usually green, red and purple) and green spots or fasciae on the elytra ( C. hypochloris , C. banghaasi , C. peruviae and C. frey i). Only two species, C. decolorata and C. fallax sp. nov., have dull colorations (usually black) without metallic fasciae on the elytra, however, both species are not externally similar. The recognition of C. fallax as a distinct species necessitates reconsideration of records of distribution attributed to C. acutipennis . Based on available specimens, C. fallax appears to be restricted to coastal desert and seasonally dry forest habitats in northwestern Peru (Piura region). Conversely, C. acutipennis occurs widely from south Texas in the United States through coastal or nearcoastal areas of Mexico (except Baja Peninsula) and Central America ( Belize, Costa Rica, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panamá) to northern South America ( Colombia, French Guiana, Venezuela) ( Fisher 1942; MacRae 2022). Seasonally dry forests in northwestern South America range from southern Ecuador to northern Peru (Tumbes, Lambayeque and La Libertad regions), and as a result it is possible that C. fallax also occurs in these areas, as well more extensively as along the Peruvian coastal desert. More collecting in these areas would be helpful in further delimiting the distribution of this species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Buprestidae

Genus

Chrysobothris

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