Namba Rifkind, 2017

Rifkind, Jacques, 2017, New genera and species of mimetic Cleridae from Mexico and Central America (Coleoptera: Cleroidea), Insecta Mundi 2017 (591), pp. 1-18 : 2-3

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5169515

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7F2A2366-B4E4-4F37-A5A5-45CB51D4D859

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F1E067-CC05-FFFD-10CF-FC38FC30FD26

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Namba Rifkind
status

gen. nov.

Namba Rifkind , new genus

( Fig. 1–3 View Figures 1–4 )

Type species. Namba testacea Rifkind (by monotypy)

Diagnosis. Within New World members of the clerid subfamily Clerinae , the new genus uniquely combines the following characters: pronotum and elytra broad ( Fig. 1 View Figures 1–4 ), color orange-testaceous; elytral surface not lucent, with integument densely, deeply, and regularly set with moderately small punctations that extend from base to apices without diminution; elytral setation rather dense, concolorous with integument; antenna ( Fig. 2 View Figures 1–4 ) without a distinct capitulum, rather robust in aspect, with antennomeres increasingly serrate distally, antennomere 11 broad, acuminate at apex. Namba is somewhat similar to the genera Blaxima Gorham and Phonius Chevrolat , but Blaxima has the antenna terminating in a distinct club, while Phonius has a black pronotum, elytra with shallow punctation, and infuscate vestiture that contrasts against its reddish integument.

Description. Clerinae . Form: robust, subflattened dorsoventrally. Length 10 mm. Vestiture: orangetestaceous, moderately short, moderately densely arranged, composed of both erect and suberect setae, some erect setae longer; vestiture on venter finer, paler, longer. Head: surface shining, rather finely, densely, and shallowly punctate; frons rather wide, shallowly bi-impressed; maxillary palpus with terminal palpomere digitiform, apex subtruncate; labial palpus with terminal palpomere securiform; eyes moderately large, protuberant, finely facetted, ocular notch large, triangular, broad at base; an- tennae ( Fig. 2 View Figures 1–4 ) robust, without distinct club; antennomeres gradually enlarged beyond pedicel; pedicel subspheroid, short; antennomere 3 subcylindrical, nearly 2× as long as pedicel; antennomeres 4–10 transverse, serrate, gradually increasing in size distally; antennomere 11 elongate (more than 2× as long as antennomere 10), subfalciform, robust basally, aciculate at terminus. Pronotum: broader than long (ratio of maximum width to length 35:31); anterior margin very feebly, broadly arcuate / emarginate at middle; sides at anterior 1/5 subparallel, inflected where they intersect transverse impression; sides at posterior 4/5 rounded; disk subflattened posterior to rather deeply incised, broadly U-shaped, transverse impression; surface shining, punctations dense, moderate in diameter, rather shallow; foveae distinct; basal collar rather narrow longitudinally. Scutellum: small, triangulate. Elytra: moderately elongate (ratio of length to maximum width approximately 2:1), subflattened dorsally; subbasal tumescences absent; humeri subquadrate; sides subsinuate at anterior 1/2, then arcuately expanded to widest point just posterior to middle, thence very gradually, arcuately convergent to separately rounded, slightly dehiscent apices; surface rather dull, densely, uniformly, subconfluently set with moderately deep but moderately small punctures, these not arranged in striae, and not diminished posteriorly. Legs: tibial spur formula 1-2-2; tarsal pulvillae well developed. Mesosternum: posterior process rather deeply notched at apex, not elevated posteriorly. Metasternum: convex; anterior process not elevated at apex; integument shallowly granulate-subpunctate. Abdomen: consisting of 6 visible ventrites; ventrite 5 with posterior angles subacute, hind margin shallowly subsinuate laterally, shallowly, arcuately emarginate at middle; ventrite 6 rather small, sides slightly arcuate, posterior margin slightly, triangularly emarginate; tergite 6 with sides obliquely convergent, hind margin rather broadly subtruncate or feebly, arcuately rounded, surpassing hind margin of ventrite 6. Aedeagus: tegmen as in Fig. 3 View Figures 1–4 , not sagittate posteriorly. Female: abdomen with hind margin of ventrite 5 subtruncate; hind margins of ventrite 6 and tergite 6 feebly, broadly rounded, and coterminous.

Distribution. Known only from the Mexican state of Nuevo León.

Etymology. The generic name honors Ken Namba , one of North America’s most accomplished sushi chefs. It is treated here as feminine for the sake of euphony.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Melyridae

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