Luispenaia Martínez, 1972

Mondaca, José, Pizarro-Araya, Jaime & Alfaro, Fermín M., 2019, Revision of the genus Luispenaia Martínez (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae: Tanyproctini), with description of three new species from the Atacama Desert, Chile, Zootaxa 4615 (3), pp. 549-562 : 550-551

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4615.3.8

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2AA8C6E7-11D5-4443-8E0E-9FB19856B0CB

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E6ED6D-A671-BF64-FF50-B47EEFD89BB2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Luispenaia Martínez, 1972
status

 

Genus Luispenaia Martínez, 1972

( Figs. 1–7 View FIGURE 1–7 , 9–29 View FIGURE 9 View FIGURES 10–13 View FIGURES 14–17 View FIGURES 18–29 )

Luispenaia Martínez, 1972: 86 . (original description); Martínez 1975: 247 (catalog); Evans 2003: 219. (checklist); Lacroix 2007: 380. (catalog); Evans & Smith 2009: 187 (checklist).

Type species. Luispenaia paradoxa Martínez, 1972 , by original designation.

Diagnosis. Length 4.8–8.0 mm; body subcylindrical elongate; color light brown to black; dorsal, lateral, and ventral surface abundantly setose ( Figs. 9 View FIGURE 9 , 18, 21, 24, 27 View FIGURES 18–29 ). Labrum and mandibles reduced ( Figs. 2–3 View FIGURE 1–7 ). Labium long and narrow, anteriorly projected in an apophysis densely setose ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 1–7 ), variable in length and wide, subacute, rounded or truncate distally, with labial palpus reduced. Maxillary palpus large; palpus 1 short, palpus 2 longer than 3. Maxillary palpus 4 large, fusiform, shorter or subequal than 1–3 combined, distally attenuate and finished in a sensory pore. Clypeus well developed, subquadrate or rounded, with margins reflexed upturned, concave in spoon- like fashion ( Figs. 10–13 View FIGURES 10–13 ). Frontoclypeal suture distinctly impressed. Eyes small to large, spheroidal, with eyes canthus subcuneiform or linguiform; basolaterally covered by the posterior prolongation of the clypeal margin ( Figs. 10–13 View FIGURES 10–13 ). Antennae large, with 8 or 9 antennomeres, antennal club with 3–6 lamellate antennomeres short or considerably long ( Figs. 14–17 View FIGURES 14–17 ). Pronotum wider than long, convex, approximately subovate, subtrapezoidal or subhexagonal, widest medially and strait in the anterior half, laterally surrounded with abundant long setae; anterior margin concave, with membrane; anterior angles not protruding, anterolateral margins straight or slightly rounded; lateral margins arched, posterior margin straight or slightly rounded; posterior angles obtuse; surface coarsely, almost regularly punctate ( Figs. 10–13 View FIGURES 10–13 ). Elytra slightly convex or flattened, subparallel, with striae distinctly impressed, slightly widened in the posterior third, with apex rounded; humeral tubercle prominent. Hind wing fully developed, functional ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 1–7 ). Venter with 3 ventrites exposed medially, penultimate ventrite membranous on posterior margin ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 1–7 ). Pygidium with apex rounded, margins slightly reflexed, recumbent toward metacoxae. Protibiae long, tridentate, protibial spur slightly curved. Mesotibiae and metatibiae slender, widened medial and apically, with one oblique spinose carina externally, apical edge of the mesotibiae with row of long equal macrosetae, metatibiae with row of very small equal macrosetae barely perceptible; mesotibia with 2 spurs subcontiguous; metatibia with 2 spurs, one located adjacent to tarsal articulation and the other set on a different plane within apical tibial notch. Metatibia with two notable processes at the base of the foramen of the tarsal insertion. Mesotarsus and metatarsus thin, longer than metatibia. Protarsomeres, mesotarsomeres, and metatarsomeres 1–3 subequal in length; tarsomere 4 slightly shorter than the previous tarsomeres; tarsomere 5 longer than 1–4 individually; all tarsi with long, apical setae. All tarsal claws symmetrical, straight, and thin, medially and ventrally cleft, slightly curved and acute at apex ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 1–7 ). Aedeagus with parameres symmetrical, long, and slender.

Distribution and habitat. This genus actually is endemic to the Atacama Desert ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ). Species of Luispenaia inhabit arid and semiarid environments of northern Chile ( Figs. 30 View FIGURES 30 A–D), from near sea level (43 m) in the coast of the Paposo Norte Natural Monument (Antofagasta Region) to middle elevation (1000 m) in the mountains located to south of Copiapó (Atacama Region) and near of Coquimbo and Lagunillas (Coquimbo Region). Species occur in the Paramo Punan subregion (Atacama Province) and Central Chilean subregion (Coquimbo Province) as defined by Morrone (2014).

Natural history. Little is so far known of the ecology and natural history of Luispenaia species. Adults are diurnal, crepuscular, or nocturnal. Specimens of these small scarabs have been collected in large numbers at lights at night during the spring of a year that had a very rainy winter (ENSO event), also in pitfall traps, on foliage of Adesmia sp. ( Fabaceae ) and buried under stones. Species of this genus occur in xerophytic habitats in northern Chile ( Figs. 30 View FIGURES 30 A–D).

Females are unknown, probably no flight, underground, brachypterous or apterous as many Tanyproctini taxa, consequently rarely observed and are very different to the habitus from males.

Tribal placement. Luispenaia were placed in Tanyproctini (at the time, Pachydemini ) by previous authors ( Martínez 1972, 1975; Evans 2003; Lacroix 2007; Evans & Smith 2009), and this tribal-level classification has been maintained since the last Pachydemini (now Tanyproctini ) world catalog prepared by Lacroix (2007). Luispenaia species were placed in Tanyproctini because the labrum is reduced, not visible in dorsal view of head ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 1–7 ); pygidium large, subtriangular, covered by elytral apex; tarsal claws cleft ventrally at proximal half ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 1–7 ); metatibia with 2 spurs, one located adjacent to tarsal articulation and the other set on a different plane within apical tibial notch ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 1–7 ); sternites distinctly defined (not fused), basal sternites compressed lengthwise; apex of abdomen recumbent toward metacoxae ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 1–7 ). Based on this morphological characters mentioned earlier, we think that Luispenaia genus it must be maintained in this tribe until morphological and molecular studies are carried out that support or disprove the tribal position that currently occupies.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Melolonthidae

SubFamily

Melolonthinae

Loc

Luispenaia Martínez, 1972

Mondaca, José, Pizarro-Araya, Jaime & Alfaro, Fermín M. 2019
2019
Loc

Luispenaia Martínez, 1972: 86

Evans, A. V. & Smith, A. B. T. 2009: 187
Lacroix, M. 2007: 380
Evans, A. V. 2003: 219
Martinez, A. 1975: 247
Martinez, A. 1972: 86
1972
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