Bembidion elescarabajo, Maddison, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.11067242 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12627931 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C82573-441E-A56A-88FE-1EAE0C76FB07 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Bembidion elescarabajo |
status |
sp. nov. |
Bembidion elescarabajo , sp. nov.
( Figures 1C View FIGURE , 5C, 5D View FIGURE , 6B View FIGURE )
Holotype male, in UASM, labeled “ MEX. Oaxaca Rte. 175. 28 mi. s. Valle Nacional. 2040 m. Aug. 25, 1974 ” [handwritten], “MIDDLE AMER. EXP. 1974, H. Frania & G.E. Ball collectors”, “David R. Maddison V101490 Voucher Specimen”, “HOLOTYPE Bembidion elescarabajo David R. Maddison [partly handwritten, on red paper]”, “ UASM# 410000 ” [printed on white paper]. Genitalia mounted in Euparal in between coverslips pinned with specimen.
Paratypes (6 males, 6 females). “ Mexico: Oaxaca. 27.5 mi s. Valle Nacional. 5600’ VIII.15 - 16.65”, “ George E. Ball and D.R. Whitehead collectors” (2: UASM, CTVR) . “ MEXICO: Oaxaca. 27.5 mi s. Valle Nacional. 5600’ V.4 -5.1966”, “ George E. Ball and D.R. Whitehead collectors” (5: UASM, UNAM, OSAC, NHMUK, NMNH) . “ MEXICO Oaxaca 36.2 km s. Valle Nacional, Rte. 175 cloud forest ca. 2010 m., April 27, 1977 ”, “MEXICAN EXP. 1977 J.S. Ashe, H.E. Frania, D. Shpeley coll.” (1: UASM) . “ MEX. Oaxaca Rte. 175. 28 mi. s. Valle Nacional. 2040 m. Aug. 28, 1974 ”, “MIDDLE AMER. EXP. 1974, H. Frania & G.E. Ball collectors” (1: UASM) . “ MEX. Oaxaca 35.1 mi. n. Istlan de Juarez, Rte. 175. 2050m, 22.07.1975 ”, “MEX. EXP. 1975, H. Frania & G.E. Ball collectors” (3: UASM, UNAM, OSAC) .
Type locality. México: Oaxaca: 28 miles (45 km) south of Valle Nacional (San Juan Bautista Valle Nacional) along route 175; this is approximately 17.594°N 96.427°W GoogleMaps .
Derivation of specific epithet. This species is named in honor of George Ball’s three El Escarabajo campers. George and his colleagues used those trusty vehicles to explore the regions of México inhabited by Geocosmius , and on these journeys most known specimens of the subgenus were collected, including the type series of this species. The name is to be treated as a noun in apposition.
Description. Body length 3.25–3.90 mm. Body brown, with head and pronotum slightly darker than elytra. Legs uniform in color, testaceous or slightly infuscated; antennomere 1 testaceous, antennomeres 2 and 3 with distal half slightly infuscated, remaining antennomeres slightly infuscated; penultimate maxillary palpomere infuscated, antepenultimate testaceous. Mentum with anterior lateral regions large, triangular; medial tooth triangular with rounded tip; frontal furrows weakly defined, somewhat rugose; eyes not prominent; prothorax with greatest width in front of middle; sides sinuate, with sides in front of hind angle straight; hind angle approximately right; posterolateral carina evident, moderately long, and straight; posterior region of pronotum slightly rugose with poorly defined punctures. Elytra with lateral bead not prolonged medially at shoulder; inner three striae well-defined around ed3; striae 4 and 5 faint, even anteriorly, with striae 6 and 7 extremely faint; only first stria evident to apex, with other striae more or less absent from apical fourth. Microsculpture absent from dorsal surface of head at center and from pronotal disc; evident in both sexes over entire surface of elytra, nearly isodiametric (Fig. 6B). Pronotum with two lateral setae on each side; elytron with two setae in third stria. Aedeagus (Fig. 5C, D) similar to members of the nahuala group (Fig. 5A, B, E, F, G), but with ventral margin of the large central sclerite less abruptly bent.
Additional characteristics. All thirteen specimens examined lack hind wings.
Geographic distribution. Known only from four closely proximate localities in Oaxaca along route 175 between San Juan Bautista Valle Nacional and Ixtlán de Juárez, between about 17.604°N 96.381°W and 17.594°N 96.460°W (Fig. 2, star). These localities are at most 9 km apart.
Geographic relationships with other species. One specimen of a nahuala -group species (perhaps Bembidion “Chiapas”) was collected at the same place and time as five of the paratypes of B. elescarabajo: “Mexico: Oaxaca. 27.5 mi s. Valle Nacional. 5600’ VIII.15-16.65”.
Habitat. Based upon imagery in Google Earth, and the annotation “cloud forest” on the label of the 1977 specimen, the known localities are all in cloud forest.
UASM |
Canada, Alberta, Edmonton, University of Alberta, E.H. Strickland Entomological Museum |
UNAM |
Mexico, Mexico D.F., Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico |
OSAC |
USA, Oregon, Corvallis, Oregon State University |
NMNH |
USA, Washington D.C., National Museum of Natural History, [formerly, United States National Museum] |
UASM |
University of Alberta, E.H. Strickland Entomological Museum |
UNAM |
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico |
OSAC |
Oregon State Arthropod Collection |
NHMUK |
Natural History Museum, London |
NMNH |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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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