Mecyclothorax pusillus Sharp

Liebherr, James K., 2015, The Mecyclothorax beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Moriomorphini) of Haleakala-, Maui: Keystone of a hyperdiverse Hawaiian radiation, ZooKeys 544, pp. 1-407 : 149-150

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.544.6074

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C5978BD0-145B-40F8-ACDE-B27371B7B9A4

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F59A5A05-6D69-454D-62F8-72C36927E06B

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Mecyclothorax pusillus Sharp
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Coleoptera Carabidae

(060) Mecyclothorax pusillus Sharp View in CoL Figs 62L, 74E, 76 G–H, 78C, 80

Mecyclothorax pusillus Sharp 1903: 243; Britton 1948b: 147.

Diagnosis.

Of the four Mecyclothorax ovipennis group species from Haleakalā with setal formula 2 2 2 2- Mecyclothorax nubicola (Fig. 78A), Mecyclothorax krushelnyckyi (Fig. 78B), Mecyclothorax rusticus (Fig. 78D), and this species (Fig. 78C)- Mecyclothorax pusillus can be diagnosed by: 1, pronotal base moderately broad, MPW/BPW = 1.39-1.48; 2, pronotal hind angles projected, obtuse, the lateral margin subparallel for twice the distance of the basal articulatory socket; 3, elytra narrow relative to head, MEW/MHW = 1.85-1.93, with sides subparallel, MEW/HUW = 1.84-1.90, the humerus tightly rounded; 4, frons and vertex with evident shallow transverse-mesh microsculpture, sculpticell breadth 2 –3× length. Standardized body length 3.3-3.9 mm.

Identification

(n = 5). The head is broad with large eyes that cover much of the ocular lobe, ocular lobe ratio = 0.84-0.88, though the broad frons results in an ocular ratio lower than might be expected based on the eye size; ocular ratio = 1.45-1.48. Antennomeres 5-11 are stout, relatively short, of moniliform conformation similar to observed in Mecyclothorax nubicola . The pronotum is slightly transverse, MPW/PL = 1.19-1.29, with the base moderately constricted; MPW/BPW = 1.43-1.51. The pronotal median base is glossy due to the lack of microsculpture, but irregularly punctate with ~20 punctures each side, the punctures more elongate at juncture with disc. Elytral intervals 2-4 are nearly flat on the disc, though interval 2 is convex to the elytral apex, the sutural and 2nd striae of subequal depth. The discal striae 2-4 are discontinuous, with their punctures isolated for portions of the strial length. The pronotal and elytral microsculpture are extremely similar to that observed in Mecyclothorax rusticus : 1, pronotal disc with obsolete transverse mesh, glossy medially, with sculpticell breadth 2 –3× length laterally; 2, elytral disc with shallow isodiametric and transverse sculpticells in transverse rows, the elytral apex with an isodiametric mesh.

Male genitalia (n = 1). Aedeagal median lobe slender, distance between parameral articulation and tip 5.5 × depth at midlength (Fig. 76G), lobe angled basally with median shaft straight; apex distinctly downturned, tip rounded; median lobe distinctly curved rightward toward apex in ventral view (Fig. 76H), right and left margins slightly convergent to blunt tip in this view; internal sac with fine spicules only, flagellar plate (visible in ventral view, Fig. 76H) short, length 0.34 × parameral articulation-tip distance.

Female reproductive tract (n = 1). Bursa copulatrix columnar with rounded apex, length 0.46 mm, breadth 0.17 mm (Fig. 62L); bursal walls translucent with thin wrinkles, apex thinner, more diaphanous; gonocoxite 1 with 3 apical fringe setae, the middle seta larger, and 3-4 smaller setae along medial surface (Fig. 74E); gonocoxite 2 falcate with tightly rounded apex, base broadly extended laterally, 2 lateral ensiform setae with apical seta broader, apical nematiform setae on medial surface at 0.69 × gonocoxite length.

Lectotype.

Male (BMNH) hereby designated, labeled: Thriscothorax pusillus Type D.S. Haleakala Perkins 254 // Type // Hawaiian Is. Perkins 1904-336. //LECTOTYPE Thriscothorax pusillus Sharp J.K. Liebherr 1998 (black-margined red label).

Distribution and habitat.

Mecyclothorax pusillus is the second of Perkin’s 19th Century high-elevation Mecyclothorax triplet, with all of his records from his collecting activities made on his trips to the summit; 1830-3050 m elevation (Fig. 80). A single recent record (Kalahaku Overlook, 2870 m elevation, P.D. Krushelnycky, BPBM) places a lower-elevation population of this species in sympatry with Argentine Ant ( Liebherr and Krushelnycky 2007).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Mecyclothorax