Rhipidocyrtus muiri Falin & Engel
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.424.7853 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:04459A94-84A6-42D4-A44F-ED5C3B69A0BC |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FCE0859D-3AF2-42DC-BCBC-1D915779FD9D |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:FCE0859D-3AF2-42DC-BCBC-1D915779FD9D |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Rhipidocyrtus muiri Falin & Engel |
status |
sp. n. |
Taxon classification Animalia Coleoptera Ripiphoridae
Rhipidocyrtus muiri Falin & Engel sp. n. Figs 1-15
Holotype.
♂, USNM Type No. 41869, Department of Entomology, US National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC, USA; partially disarticulated, specimen preparation and labels distributed on two pins and three microscope slides as follows: first pin has only the original specimen labels; second pin contains the complete head, thorax, and poorly preserved portions of abdominal segments I–III mounted on a modified minuten (Fig. 1), the right elytron is glued to the minuten; first slide has the right antenna and left middle and hind legs; second slide has the left elytron, hind wing, and foreleg; third slide has the splayed abdomen and genitalia. Specimen labels read as follows [each preparation starts as a distinct paragraph, different lines of those labels separated by a slash (/) and separate labels by double slashes (//)]:
Pin 1: No specimen parts: "Borneo / 383" // "Rhipideus [sic]" // "This was left with Pierce / and after his leaving / Muir visited USNM / and got Schwarz to find / it. Then in 1928 Muir again / contacted us & called attention / of H.S.B. but declined to take it back." [underside of last label reads] "Found by / F. Muir / on flowers / P.T.O." // "HOLOTYPE / Rhipidocyrtus / muiri / Z.H. Falin & M.S. Engel".
Pin 2: Head, thorax, + basal abdominal segments, right elytron glued to minuten: "F. Muir #383 / on flowers / Aug 1907 / Mowong / Borneo" // "Ripidius / muiri Bar. / U.S.N.M. / Type no. / 41869" // "SEMC1158329 / KUNHM-ENT" // "HOLOTYPE / Rhipidocyrtus / muiri / Z.H. Falin & M.S. Engel".
Slide 1: "muiri / Barber / antenna, middle & hind leg / F. Muir #383 on flowers / Aug 1907 / Mowong Borneo. / Holotype No. 41869 U.S.N.M.".
Slide 2: "Rhipidocyrtus / muiri / Barber / left wing elytron / & front leg / F. Muir #383 on flowers / Aug 1907 Mwong Borneo / Type No. 41869 U.S.N.M.".
Slide 3: "Rhipidocyrtus / muiri / Barber / ♂ genitalia / & abd. seg. / spiracles nos. 3 (front) / 4, 5, & 6. - Mwong Borneo / F. Muir / Type No. 41869 U.S.N.M.".
Diagnosis.
As per the generic diagnosis above.
Description.
Male. Large, though difficult to measure given the longitudinally arched facies and the partial disarticulation; approximately 2.8 mm long in dorsal view from anterior margin of pronotum to posterior margin of metascutellum, approximately 2.2 mm wide at base of pronotum (although a gross approximation given the disarticulation involved, total length in life might approximate 6 mm); elytron length 2.4 mm; hind wing length 6.5 mm. Body nearly unicolorous brown (Figs 1-6); antennomere I similar in color to body, antennomeres II–XI lighter brown (Figs 1, 2) as are various subregions of the notum (e.g., posterolateral mesonotal angles). Elytra coriaceous, more or less translucent brown, darker along margins and with short, suberect setae (Fig. 7). Hind wing typical, very lightly pigmented at most (Fig. 8), but covered with microsetae giving an infuscate appearance and a reflective sheen.
Head subspherical (Figs 2, 4), slightly compressed dorso-ventrally (Fig. 3). Vertex weakly convex (Fig. 4), sloping uniformly to occiput, integument shining with indistinct punctation and weak, irregular, sculpturing. Dorsal and ventral aspects of head with suberect to erect setae. Compound eyes large (Figs 3, 4), coarsely faceted, with erect setae dorsally; weakly convergent dorsally, strongly convergent ventrally, occupying nearly the entire ventral surface of the head (Fig. 3); two large post-ocular ommatidia present at posterolateral margins of compound eyes (Fig. 4). Frons obsolete between antennal bases and maxillary palpi, these structures dorsoventrally contiguous (Fig. 3). Maxillary palpi two-segmented, basal segments free, obliquely toroidal, apical segments approximately 3.5 to 4 × length of basal segments (Figs 3, 4), fusiform, broadest near base, with subapical, obliquely-depressed sensory pits.
Antennae consisting of 11 antennomeres; antennomere I stout (Fig. 3), asymmetrically cup-like, apical opening produced laterally; antennomere II irregularly toroidal, longest at midline, subequal to III; antennomere III similar in shape to II except strongly produced mesally (Fig. 2); antennomeres IV–X with mesally facing rami (Figs 2, 9), bases of IV–VI longitudinally compressed, subequal, base of antennomere VII approximately 2 × length of antennomere VI; antennomere XI expanded, similar in shape to rami of previous segments (Fig. 9); antennae constructed such that rami VIII and IX nearly equal in apparent length, rami decreasing subequally in apparent length to either side, rami V shortest in apparent length; antennomeres I and II with moderately dense suberect setae similar to those of head, similar setae present on bases of antennomeres III–X but diminish in length apically; rami of antennomeres with specialized sensory trichia beginning with mesal projection of antennomere III.
Pronotum with suberect to erect setae, integument shining, weakly, irregularly punctate; pronotum broadly bell-shaped in dorsal view (Fig. 2); anterior margin broadly excavate; anterolateral angles rounded, nearly obsolete, strongly deflected ventrally; posterior margin gently arcuate with a small medial projection, deflected dorsally (Fig. 1); posterolateral angles broadly rounded, projecting, slightly concave on surface and deflected dorsally; lateral margins evenly arcuate, converging anteriorly, strongly dorso-ventrally compressed, proplurae reduced, hidden in dorsal view. Pronotal disc with a raised medial tubercle at anterior margin and a weakly rounded medial carina extending posteriorly approximately ¼ length of pronotum, gradually becoming obsolete, otherwise disc gently but irregularly convex laterally with two large but weak convexities near lateral margins, apparently demarcating internal articulation points of procoxae.
Mesonotum with suberect, posteriorly-facing setae, integument shining, very weakly punctate, appearing nearly glabrous; posterior margin weakly bisinuate with medial projection (Fig. 5), forming a broad but narrow mesoscutellum; posterolateral angles obtusely rounded, deflected dorsally; lateral and anterior margins obscured. Mesonotal disc gently but irregularly convex laterally (Fig. 2), with a large convexity on either side of midline near anterior margin.
Metanotum with scattered recumbent to suberect setae (many appear abraded on holotype specimen), integument shining, punctation variably weak and scattered to nearly obsolete with exception of metapostscutellum described below. Metascutum apparently divided into three regions - anteromedial box, anterolateral lobes, and posterolateral lobes (Figs 5, 6). Anteromedial box partially obscured medially by mesocutellum but appears to form a contiguous, narrow band separated posteriorly from posterolateral lobes by an arcuate impressed sulcus and laterally from anterolateral lobes by indistinctly impressed longitudinal constrictions. Anterolateral lobes obliquely convex and themselves separated from obliquely convex posterolateral lobes by wide, deep and relatively setose impressions (Fig. 5). Metascutellum clearly delineated by a pair of oblique, deeply impressed sulci curved basally (Figs 5, 6), nearly linear anteriorly, converging to a single impressed medial sulcus terminating at apparent anterior metanotal margin (Fig. 5). Posterior margin of metascutellum straight in dorsal view (Fig. 5), gently convex dorsoventrally; metascutellar disc gently convex (Fig. 6) with a weak, rounded carina originating at apex, continuing approximately 1/3 length of metascutellum (Fig. 5), gradually becoming obsolete. Metapostscutellum a relatively narrow band positioned more or less dorso-ventrally, ventral and slightly anterior to posterior margin of metascutellum (Fig. 6), posterior margin of metapostscutellum strongly deflected dorsally (Figs 1, 6). Surface of metapostscutellum glabrous, impunctate except posterior-facing aspect of posterior marginal flange appearing setose due to superimposed abdominal tergite I.
Lateral and ventral aspects of pterothorax typical of tribe, if slightly exaggerated in form; vestiture and texture similar to notum, setae more or less uniform, suberect; punctation variable, generally scattered and weak to nearly obsolete except as noted. Mesepisternum fused with mesosternum; mesepimeron a prominent, rounded flange separated from mesepisternum by a strong invagination. Metepisternum typical, dorsoanterior lobe present, nearly glabrous and impunctate (Fig. 1). Metepimeron separated from metepisternum by a strongly invaginated sulcus (Fig. 1), strongly dorsally arcuate in lateral view, widest near middle, tapering evenly to a point anteriorly, tapering posteriorly as well but then slightly thickening and recurving posteriorly.
Legs typical; coxae, trochanters, and femora smooth, shining with suberect setae and scattered punctation. Tibiae clothed in more stout, spine-like setae, punctation much closer, integument appearing nearly granular; tibiae more or less straight (Figs 10-12), cylindrical, broadening slightly apically; apical spurs absent. Tarsi 5-5-4 (Figs 10-12), setation and texture similar to tibiae; all tarsomeres more or less cylindrical, progressively subequal in diameter, and obliquely truncate apically; apical tarsomeres obliquely tapered basally; protarsomere I approximately 1.5 × length of protarsomere II, protarsomeres II and III subequal, protarsomere IV approximately 0.5 × length of protarsomere III, protarsomere V approximately equal to protarsomeres II and III combined; length of mesotarsi greater than that of protarsi, but relative ratios similar. Metatarsomere I approximately as long as metatarsomeres II–IV combined, metatarsomere II 2 × length of metatarsomere III, metatarsomere IV approximately equal to metatarsomeres II and III combined. Pretarsal claws small, simple, sickle-shaped.
Elytra as described above; widely separated, short, both disarticulated in holotype but approximately extending just past posterior margin of metanotum when closed. Deformed in preservation, lateral margin somewhat thickened (Fig. 7), both margins widening slightly in basal 1/3, roughly parallel in medial 1/3, then medial margin tapering unevenly laterally in apical 1/3, forming a blunt, rounded apex nearest lateral margin. Hind wing also as above, with vein R parallel to and more or less fused with C+Sc, terminating prior to wing apex (Fig. 8); vein Cu well defined, 2ndA3+3rdA1 less so, each reaching wing margin (Fig. 8).
Abdomen partially disarticulated in holotype specimen making in situ characterization difficult. Abdomen likely bluntly sub-conical, possibly dorso-ventrally compressed in life; with eight ( I–VIII) visible tergites and seven ( II–VIII) visible ventrites; well-sclerotized spiracles present in poorly-defined pleural region of segments I–VI (Fig. 13); tergites and ventrites fairly uniformly setose (Fig. 13), pleural regions slightly more densely. Tergites I–V and ventrites II–V weakly sclerotized; remaining visible abdominal segments ( VI–VIII) comparatively more so (Fig. 13), color similar to that of body, integument virtually impunctate. Abdominal segment IX with dorso-posterior margin evenly emarginate though sclerotization gives it a bilobed appearance (Fig. 13); dorso-ventrally convex, lobes fusing ventrally, forming a spine projecting anteriorly and asymmetrically to left in dorsal view (Fig. 13).
Tegmen appearing typical for tribe (Fig. 14); an approximately bilaterally symmetrical tube sclerotized dorsally, open ventrally, truncate but slightly flared basally, deeply emarginate apically. Gonoforceps similarly sclerotized, membranously articulated to apex of tegmen dorsally, lateral articulation difficult to discern, also more or less bilaterally symmetrical and consisting of paired, medio-obliquely truncate lobes dorsally and medio-obliquely oriented digitiform projections ventrally. Median lobe extremely simple, essentially appearing as a strongly beveled ovoid ring, the basal end with a dorsally sclerotized shelf and the apical end with a ventrally sclerotized shelf (Fig. 15).
Female. Unknown.
Immature stages.
Unknown.
Etymology.
The specific epithet is as proposed by H.S. Barber and meant to commemorate Dr. Frederick Muir, a remarkable and inspiring entomologist.
Comments.
Most ripidiine species, this one included, are described on the basis of very few, if not unique specimens, naturally making estimations of intra-specific variation in size and appearance difficult. In the few cases in which we have examined long series of a single species, such variability appears to be quite low. We expect, then, that additional specimens of Rhipidocyrtus muiri will hew quite closely to the above description.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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