Anomala sarawakensis OHAUS, 1910
Anomala ovatula sarawakensis OHAUS, 1910b: 216 [description]; OHAUS 1916: 54 [[ Anomala sarawakensis]]
Syntypes: 1 “ Sarawak Mt. Penrissen 3300 ft. V. 1900 | Anomala sar- awakensis Ohs. Type ” (NMHB). 1 “Penrissen May 1899 | | Typus | A. ovatula Ohs. sbsp. sarawakensis Ohs. ” (NMHB). 1 “Penrissen May 1899 | | Typus! | A. ovatula Ohs. sbsp. sarawakensis Ohs. ” (NMHB).
Note: In the collection of the NMHB are additional specimens labeled as “Cotypen” which are not mentioned in the original description and belong in fact to A. manseri .
Fig. 20, Anomala snizeki; Fig. 21: Anomala manseri .
Additional material: 1 “Mt. Matang, W. Sarawak. G.E.Bryant.2.XII.13. | G. Bryant Coll. B.M.1926- 86.” (BMNH). 1 “Mt. Matang, W. Sarawak. G. E. Bryant. 12. 11. 14. | Anomala felicia Arrow [sic!]” (NHMB).
Diagnosis:
Length. 10.5-11.5 mm; width. 5.9-6.5 mm. Anomala sarawakensissarawakensis shares most morphological characters with A. feliciafelicia as described above. The inner limitation of the yellow lateral band of the pronotum is strongly narrowed towards the posterior angle, a character that is only shared with A. manseri (Fig. 21). Moreover, A. manserimanseri and A. sarawakensissarawakensis appear to be slightly larger in mean than the other species of this complex, but too few specimens are available for final conclusions. Anomala sarawakensisawakensis can only be distinguished from A. manserimanseri by the shape of the aedeagus. The parameres are distinctly shorter than in A. manseri . The apex is somewhat bulged and not pointed (Figs 17-18).
Distribution: Anomala sarawakensissarawakensis is only known from west Sarawak (Gunung Penrissen, Gunung Matang) (Fig. 22). One female from Mt. Lingga cannot be identified with certainty and belongs to A. sarawakensis, A. manseri or a yet unknown species.