Orphnus (Orphnus) longicornis Frolov & Akhmetova

Frolov, Andrey & Akhmetova, Lilia, 2015, A new brachypterous scarab species, Orphnus longicornis (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Orphninae), from the East African Rift, Zootaxa 4039 (3), pp. 475-477 : 475-477

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4039.3.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A842F68F-0334-428C-A042-2EAE590AE47B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6093726

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F54EE90A-5E7B-B25F-1F99-37F9FB25B09C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Orphnus (Orphnus) longicornis Frolov & Akhmetova
status

sp. nov.

Orphnus (Orphnus) longicornis Frolov & Akhmetova , new species Figs. 1–7 View FIGURES 1 – 7 .

Type material. Holotype, male with the label "D. Ost-Africa Iringa [ Tanzania, Iringa]" ( ZMHUB). Paratypes, males: 6 specimens with the same data as the holotype; 5 specimens with the label “Mittel Uhehe [ Tanzania, Iringa region], 1500- 1700 m, 30.XI. [19]12”; 1 specimen with the label “D. O.Africa Oldoway [ Tanzania, Oldoway Gorge]” ( ZMHUB).

Description. Holotype, male. Body elongate, convex, shiny ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ); length 10.5 mm, width 6.1 mm. Color uniformly black. Head: Clypeus wide, with convex anterior margin, rounded laterally, finely bordered. Genae small, not protruding past eyes. Frontal suture feebly distinct laterally, broadly interrupted in the middle. Clypeus with long, slender horn, curved apically in lateral view ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ); the horn is at least 1/ 3 longer than in other described Orphnus species. Dorsal surface of head almost impunctate. Labrum deeply sinuate in the middle, feebly protruding past clypeus. Pronotum: with rounded sides, about 1.2 times wider than long, with impressed and slightly concave disc and large tubercle in the middle near base. Anterior angles acute; posterior angles rounded, indistinct in dorsal view. Pronotum bordered on anterior margin and base. Base of pronotum rugose. Sides with coarse, rounded punctures separated by about 0.5–1.0 puncture diameters. Lateral margins with long, sparse, brown setae. Scutellum : shape subtriangular, narrowly rounded apically, about 1/20 the length of elytra. Elytra: convex, about as wide as long, widest in the middle, with almost indistinct humeral umbones. Striae indistinct. Elytra with coarse, ocellate punctation; punctures sparser on disc. Wings: reduced, about 1/3 length of elytra. Legs: Protibiae with 3 outer teeth. Lateral margin basad of outer teeth not crenulate. Apical spur of protibia absent. Protarsi of the holotype broken. Mesolegs and metalegs similar in shape; metafemora and metatibiae about 1/8 longer than the mesofemora and mesotibiae. Tibiae somewhat triangular with 2 apical spurs, inner margin almost straight, with 1 transverse keel. Upper spur of tibiae as long as two basal tarsomeres. Claws 1/3 length of apical tarsomere. Femora almost impunctate. Abdomen: Abdominal sternites irregularly punctate, pubescent, with sparse, long setae. Visible sternite 6 medially about 2 times longer than sternites 2–5 combined. Pygidium: Surface irregularly punctate with transverse punctures. Aedeagus: with long, curved downwards parameres tapering apically ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ).

Female. Unknown.

Variability. The paratypes are smaller than the holotype, with the body length from 9.2–6.0 mm; most specimens are around 7.0 mm long. Body color varies from almost black to dark brown; the specimen from Oldoway has the pronotum and head darker than the elytra ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 1 – 7 )—the coloration rarely encountered in the Orphninae , which are normally uniformly colored. Most of the examined specimens have more or less distinct bronze and greenish metallic tint of the upper side of the body (especially apparent on the pronotum, Figs. 4–5 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ). In the Orphninae , distinct metallic tint of the dry specimens is rarely found. It is prominent in the similar species O. luminosus Benderitter and in Stenosternus costatus Karsch from São Tomé island ( Frolov & Akhmetova, 2015). Head and pronotum armature vary reasonably within the type series. Clypeal horn varies from long, slightly shorter than that of the holotype in the larger specimen to rather short yet distinct in the smallest specimen ( Figs. 3–5 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ). Shape of the pronotum varies from slightly excavated disc and pulled, tubercle-shaped base (similar to the holotype); to almost flat, slightly excavated disc and a tubercle basad of the disc (not protruding past pronotum base in dorsal view); to almost convex dorsal side with a shallow depression posteriorly and without a tubercle.

Diagnosis. Males of O. longicornis with well-developed head and pronotum armature can be easily separated by the shape of this armature: a very long, slender clypeal horn (almost 1.5 longer than head width) and a protruding, tubercleshaped basal margin of pronotum. Males of O. longicornis with less developed armature are similar to the males of O. luminosus Benderitter in habitus, punctation, and slight metallic tint of the body but they can be separated from the latter by the shape of the parameres which are longer, more curved downward, and more acute apically (compare with Fig. 5 View FIGURES 1 – 7 in Frolov, 2008).

Distribution. The new species is known from two rather distant districts ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ). The specimens with the label "D. Ost-Africa Iringa" might have been collected near the town of Iringa, Tanzania. The specimens with the label “Mittel Uhehe” might have also been collected not far from Iringa. According to Redmayne (1968), “Uhehe” is the upland area between Great Ruaha and Little Ruaha rivers, southwest of Iringa. Both localities lie within Uzungwa, the largest block of the Eastern Arc Afromontane forest. One specimen was found in Oldoway Gorge, some 500 km north of Iringa. Although Oldoway Gorge is not a part of the Eastern Arc Mountains, it lies within the Ngorongoro escarpment mostly covered by the East African montane forests.

Etymology. From Latin longus, long, and cornu, horn, referring to the long clypeal horn in males.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Orphnidae

SubFamily

Orphninae

Genus

Orphnus

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