Montesinus tatula, Grossi, Paschoal Coelho, 2016

Grossi, Paschoal Coelho, 2016, A new brachypterous genus of Brazilian stag beetle (Coleoptera: Lucanidae: Lucaninae) with description of three new species, Zootaxa 4078 (1), pp. 218-229 : 227-228

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4078.1.20

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:836FA2B8-7871-4DED-9646-BD39A4BAA031

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6073656

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0395E107-FF9C-680D-FF60-FC6F368CFE4E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Montesinus tatula
status

sp. nov.

Montesinus tatula View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figures 4 View FIGURES 1 – 5 , 20 View FIGURES 18 – 21 , 23 View FIGURES 22 – 27 )

Material examined. Holotype female labeled as follows: White label, a) “ BRASIL, MG/ Corinto, I.1998 / Alt: 900 m / E. Antunes leg.”; Red label, b) “ Montesinus tatula n. sp. ♀/ HOLOTYPE / P. C. Grossi det. 2015”. Holotype deposited at CERPE.

Description of female holotype. Total length including mandibles 17.0 mm. Greatest pronotal width 6.5 mm. Color surface piceous, somewhat shiny, pronotum with some darkish-red marks, especially near anterior and posterior margins; ventrally with femora, coxae, mandibles, gula, gena and some parts of meso- and metasternum reddish. Mouthparts: Mandibles symmetrical, explanate, gradually incurved, apex acute; internally with a forwards triangularly shaped tooth; just below superior margin slightly concave; dorsally with an obsolete longitudinal depression; base sparsely punctate, punctures small; ventrally flat and sparsely punctate. Labrum trapezoidal, anterior margin with 2 transverse setose depressions; lateral borders with some scattered setae. Mentum suboval in shape, ventral surface very finely reticulate among punctures, densely punctate, punctures large to coarse, sometimes coalescent, and covered by long dark yellowish setae, more setae on lateral and anterior margins. Maxillae with lacinia almost as long as galea, with hooked and broad apex; hooklets absent; 3th palpomere very short and curved ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ). Head: Shape transverse, wider than 1 elytron width, surface totally punctate, punctures small near anterior margin to coarse near vertex; vertex weakly convex. Ocular canthi roundly expanded. Gena slightly convex, sparsely punctate, punctures shallow; integument microreticulate. Gula convex and smooth on disc and posteriorly; anteriorly microreticulate and sparsely punctate, punctures semicircular and setose; anterior angles acute, projected forward and along the base of the mentum; near posterior lateral sides with a longitudinal sinuous suture. Prothorax: Pronotum transverse, narrow than elytra, surface finely grooved and finely punctate, punctures fine, larger near margins; border incomplete at anterior middle. Anterior angles obtuse; posterior ones rounded, but obsolete. Scutellum: Shape trapezoidal; integument microreticulate and sparsely punctate. Elytra: Longer than pronotum and head together; surface shiny and scratched and irregularly punctate; punctures fine to medium. Each elytron with 10 irregular subparallel grooves, 5 dorsal and 5 somewhat transverse at lateral sides, these ones smaller. Humeri truncate and setose. Legs: Protibia flattened, with 4 external well-developed teeth and 1 basal smaller, distal tooth forwardly projected and stronger than the others; second and third teeth subequal in size and shape ( Fig. 23 View FIGURES 22 – 27 ); basal tooth of right tibia almost vestigial. Mesotibiae with 2 external teeth with the distal much larger, apex with 4 projected teeth, three ventral and one lateral. Metatibiae with 1 external tooth, apex sinuous, or with 4 rounded teeth. All tibiae setose. Tarsi setose and arolium with 2 bristles. Venter: Abdomen with all ventrites bordered; ventrites 1–4 finely punctate, ventrite 5 moderately punctate and setose distally.

Etymology. The specific name is an homage to my father Everardo J. Grossi, a medical doctor with a fondness of beetles and collector, and specialist on the subfamily Dynastinae (Scarabaeoidea) , who encouraged me all my life to work with Coleoptera . “ Tatula ”, gender masculine, means ‘daddy’ in Latin.

Remarks. The only known female, which is described here, was collected in a place far from Serra do Caparaó, within the Serra do Espinhaço complex. It is clearly distinct from the other two species in being shinier, having the maxillae with no hooklets, palpomeres of distinct shape, and elytral punctation of a different pattern.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Lucanidae

Genus

Montesinus

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