Austrelatus setiphallus, Shaverdo & Hájek & Hendrich & Surbakti & Panjaitan & Balke, 2023

Shaverdo, Helena, Hajek, Jiri, Hendrich, Lars, Surbakti, Suriani, Panjaitan, Rawati & Balke, Michael, 2023, Austrelatus gen. nov., a new genus of Australasian diving beetles (Coleoptera, Dytiscidae, Copelatinae), with the discovery of 31 new species from New Guinea, ZooKeys 1170, pp. 1-164 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1170.103834

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:17F0C88A-2F0B-414A-AA7C-8B0AB89B6E6E

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/94837400-C661-466F-B41A-061C4462037D

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:94837400-C661-466F-B41A-061C4462037D

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Austrelatus setiphallus
status

sp. nov.

Austrelatus setiphallus sp. nov.

Figs 6 View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 , 13 View Figure 13 , 90 View Figures 89, 90

Type locality.

Indonesia: Papua Province: Puncak Regency, Iratoi, 3°14'25.1"S, 137°19'58.7"E, 160 m a.s.l.

Type material.

Holotype: male, Indonesia: Papua, Rouaffer, Iratoi, hill in forest, 160 m, 6.ix.2014, -3,2403 137,3329, Sumoked (PAP028), 6477 [green text] (MZB).

Paratypes: 1 male, 4 females with the same label as the holotype, one female with an additional green text label “6478” (KSP).

Description.

Body size and form: Beetle small, with narrow, elongate habitus, elytral sides almost parallel (Fig. 6D View Figure 6 ).

Measurements: TL 3.95-4.35 mm, TL-H 3.6-3.9 mm, MW 1.8-1.9 mm, TL/MW 2.19-2.35; PL 0.6-0.7 mm, PW 1.6-1.7 mm, PL/PW 0.38-0.39; DBE 0.8 mm, DBE/PW 0.46-0.5.

Holotype: TL 4.3 mm, TL-H 3.9 mm, MW 1.9 mm, TL/MW 2.25; PL 0.65 mm, PW 1.7 mm, PL/PW 0.38; DBE 0.8 mm, DBE/PW 0.47.

Colouration: Dorsally brown to piceous, with reddish yellow to yellowish brown head, pronotal sides, and brighter, broad basal band and large apical spot on elytron (Fig. 6D View Figure 6 ).

Head reddish yellow to yellowish brown, darker behind or around eyes, sometimes with two small, dark median spots. Pronotum brown, piceous in posterior part, with broad, reddish yellow to yellowish brown sides. Elytron dark brown to piceous, with broad, yellow to reddish yellow basal band reaching or not suture and lateral elytral margin; its anterior margin reaching elytron basally and its posterior margin wavy, not distinctly notched; elytron with very large, elongate, not reaching suture, yellow to reddish yellow apical spot. Scutellum reddish brown or piceous. Antennae and other head appendages yellow. Pro- and mesolegs yellowish brown proximally and darker distally, especially metalegs. Venter reddish brown, with paler prosternum.

Surface sculpture: With six distinct, complete elytral dorsal striae, submarginal stria present: 6+1 (Fig. 6D View Figure 6 ).

Head without strioles, with relatively dense punctation (spaces between punctures 1-3 × size of punctures); punctures relatively large (diameter of punctures equal to diameter of cells of microreticulation); head with row of coarse setigerous punctures along inner margin of each eye and sparse row of slightly weaker punctures at frontal angle of each eye connecting with puncture row that forms very shallow fronto-clypeal depression at each head side; head with strong microreticulation. Pronotum with few strioles at posterior angles (more numerous in female), with short, thin, rather inconspicuous longitudinal wrinkles at middle of posterior margin; pronotal punctation finer than on head; coarse setigerous punctures form a broad row along pronotal margins, absent in posterior middle; disc of pronotum with rather long longitudinal median scratch. Pronotal microreticulation similar to that on head. Elytron with six complete, strongly impressed dorsal striae and submarginal stria reaching to middle of elytron or slightly further; striae 2 and 5 slightly reduced basally; sometimes with few short strioles between striae. Elytron with fine, sparse punctation; microreticulation weak. Ventral part with extremely fine, scarce, inconspicuous punctation, invisible on metaventrite and metacoxae and more distinct on abdominal ventrites; prosternum smooth medially; metaventrite and metacoxae with distinct microreticulation; on abdominal ventrites microreticulation weaker; metacoxal plates with short almost longitudinal strioles, abdominal ventrites 1 and 2 with numerous, long, longitudinal strioles from margin to margin, on abdominal ventrites 3 and 4 strioles situated laterally and turn to middle, almost horizontal, abdominal ventrite 5 without strioles, abdominal ventrite 6 with few very inconspicuous, small strioles near row of setigerous punctures at each side and with rather distinct punctation that sparser medially and forms denser lateral area at each side.

Structures: Head large and broad. Pronotum large and long; lateral margins only slightly convergent anteriorly, subparallel, rounded towards anterior angles. Base of prosternum broadly rounded anteriorly, slightly convex medially; blade of prosternal process rather broad, evenly convex in middle.

Male: Protibia straight, not modified. Proclaws long, slender, equal in length; anterior claw with very weak incision subapically. Median lobe of aedeagus with dorsal and ventral sclerites not separated medially but not pressed very much to each other; dorsal sclerite sclerotised, divided into two rather narrow lobes in apical half; right lobe slightly longer than left one; in lateral view, their apexes rounded; left dorsal lobe with numerous, dense, thin, rather long spinulae distinctly visible in lateral view; right dorsal lobe with inconspicuous median impression in lateral right view. Ventral sclerite mostly membranous, indistinctly divided into right and left lobes. Paramere of narrow triangular form, evenly tapering to apex, with long, relatively dense, subequal in length setae, not divided into distal and proximal (Figs 6 View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 ).

Female: Pronotal strioles usually occupying entire lateral sides and elytral punctation stronger than in males.

Affinities.

Based on size, body form, colouration, and shape of the median lobe, the species is similar to some species of the A. papuensis group but distinctly differs from them by presence of numerous, dense seta-like spinulae on the left dorsal lobe of its median lobe.

Etymology.

The species name is a combination of the Latin words (seta and phallus) referring the seta-like, thin, long spinulae of the median lobe of aedeagus. The name is a noun in the nominative standing in apposition.

Distribution.

New Guinean endemic. Indonesia: Papua Province: Puncak Regency. The species is known only from the type locality (Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ).

Habitat.

At the type locality, the species was collected in a side pool of a larger forest stream (Fig. 90 View Figures 89, 90 ).