Medusapyga alsea LaBonte, 2023

LaBonte, James R. & Maddison, David R., 2023, Medusapyga LaBonte and Maddison, a New Genus of Anillini (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Trechinae) from the Pacific Northwest of the United States, Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 67 (18), pp. 401-432 : 415-417

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.11067222

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/51533818-FFE3-4765-FF85-BF1FFB22FBE5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Medusapyga alsea LaBonte
status

sp. nov.

Medusapyga alsea LaBonte , new species

Holotype. Male, deposited in the California Academy of Sciences , labeled: “ OREGON, Benton Co., Prairie Peak , 11 km S Alsea, J. R. LaBonte , 9 V 1993, elev. 810 m, 44.2844°N 123.5858°W, under stones”, “ HOLOTYPE, Medusapyga alsea LaBonte sp. nov., designated 2022 [red paper]”. GoogleMaps

Paratypes. 329 (258 females, 71 males), residing in the following collections and institutions: CAS (32) , CMNH (2) , CNC (2), EMEC (1), GLPC (84), JRLC (155), MCZ (2), MNHN (2), NHMUK (2), NMNH (2), ODAC (17), OSAC (22) , SDSU (4), WSU (2). USA, Oregon, Benton Co., Prairie Peak, 11 km south of Alsea , 44.2844°N 123.5858°W, 810 m elevation [Type locality] (296). 9 V 1993 GoogleMaps , G.L. Peters (63), J. R. LaBonte (57). 14 V 1993, J. R. LaBonte (10). 19 VI 1993, G.L. Peters (18), J. R. LaBonte (19). 26 VI 1993, G.L. Peters (1). 31 VII 1993, J. R . LaBonte, (10). 7 V 1994, G.L. Peters (2), J. R. LaBonte (7). 15 V 1995, J. R. LaBonte (6). 6 V 1998, J. R. LaBonte (6), R. L. Westcott (6). 29 IV 2002, D.H. Kavanaugh (21), J. R . LaBonte (13). 1 V 2003, J. R.

LaBonte and B. Smith (12), R.L. Westcott (9). 20 III 2010, D. R . Maddison & J. R . LaBonte (1). 29 IV 2014, D. H. Kavanaugh and J. R . LaBonte (1), J. R . LaBonte (1). 29 IV – 9 XI 2014, soil trap, J. R . LaBonte (27). 2 IV 2022, D. R . Maddison & P. R . Triplett (1). 15 V 2022, D. R. Maddison (5). USA, Oregon, Benton Co., Prairie Peak, 11 km south of Alsea , 0.6 km west of the type locality, 44.2848°N 123.5933°W, 750 m elevation (32) GoogleMaps . 6 V 1998, R.L. Westcott (2). 29 IV 2002, D.H. Kavanaugh (7), J. R . LaBonte (4). 1 VI 2004, J. R. LaBonte (9). 20 III 2010, D. R . Maddison & J. R . LaBonte (1). 30 V 2010, D. R. Maddison (4). 29 IV – 9 XI 2014, soil trap, J. R . LaBonte (2). 2 IV 2022, D. R . Maddison & P. R . Triplett (1). 15 V 2022, D. R. Maddison (1). 19 VI 2022, K.W. Will (1). USA, Oregon, Benton Co., Prairie Peak, 10 km south of Alsea , 1.1 km WNW of the type locality, 44.2881°N 123.5982°W, 715 m elevation (1) GoogleMaps . 15 V 2022, L.A. Martin (1).

Depending upon the GPS system used, and the precise spot the measurements were taken within each locality, the exact geographic coordinates and elevations may slightly differ among the labels of the different collectors and institutions.

Type Locality. USA, Oregon, Benton Co., Prairie Peak, 11 km south of Alsea , 44.2844°N 123.5858°W, 810 m elevation GoogleMaps .

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the Oregon Coast Range river drainage of this name and the community nearest the type locality. The name is to be treated as a noun in apposition.

Description. Habitus ( Fig. 2A View FIGURE ). SBL 2.20-2.65 mm. Color translucent dark testaceous to reddish brown to dark brown. Convex in lateral view.

Head ( Figs 1A View FIGURE , 7A View FIGURE ). The medial convexity formed by the frontolateral furrows ends in an abrupt declivous prominence near the anterior margin of the clypeus. In dorsal view, it is roughly triangular, pointed at the anterior extreme and broadening posteriorly. In lateral view, it ends at the anterior in a steep precipice. Tempora shallowly convex, rounded.

Pronotum ( Fig. 8A View FIGURE ). PWm/ PL ~1.15, PWa and PWp approximately equal. Widest at about anterior third. Anterior angles strongly protuberant. Anterior margin truncate. Lateral margins distinctly sinuate, approximately parallel from posterior angles to well anterior of posteromedian impression, obliquely arcuate to PWm, then convergently arcuate to anterior angles. Lateral explanations distinct and reflexed, widest at anterior and posterior angles, narrowing from medial posterior impression anteriorly to just posterior of anterior angles, the point at which the explanations are narrowest. Lateral margins with fine, distinct denticles where margins are parallel anterior of hind angles but not extending to posterior margins of hind angles. Posterior angles right to slightly acute, sharp. Disc strongly convex. One long fixed stout seta just anterior of each posterior angle and a longer fixed seta located laterally at approximately the anterior quarter of each side.

Elytra ( Figs 2A View FIGURE , 9). Greatest width just anterior of middle. Convex in lateral view, rather steeply ascending from anterior to just before middle, more gradually descending to apex, more or less evenly convex in cross section. Each elytron with lateral margin coarsely denticulate from humerus to about anterior one-fourth, thereafter finely denticulate to plical crossing. Humeri truncate anteriorly, distinctly and obtusely angulate. Lateral margins slightly obliquely divergent in anterior third, thereafter evenly convergently arcuate to the plical crossing, shallowly indented there, and then obliquely or obliquely-arcuate to the separately rounded apices. Intervals slightly convex.

Legs. Profemoral spine of males near basal one-quarter of ventral face, with its length about three times its greatest diameter ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE ). Females lack any evidence of the profemoral spine found in males or the carina that in males extends from the profemoral base to the male profemoral spine; the base of the ventral face of the female profemur is thus evenly rounded ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE ). Mesotrochanter with large, blunt, triangular tooth projecting from posteromedial margin (Fig. 13A).

Abdominal ventrites. Apex of intercoxal process of second visible abdomnal ventrite acute. A small fovea is present on the second visible abdominal ventrite just posterior of the intercoxal process between the metacoxae. It is the shape of an elongate oval, narrowest anteriorly and broadest near the posterior

FIGURE 13. Male mesotrochanter, ventral view. (A) Medusapyga alsea , left margin; it is thus tear-drop trochanter. (B) M. chehalis , right trochanter, digitally reversed to make the shaped. The surface of the fovea image more comparable to (A). Scale bars 25 µm. is smooth except for microsculpture. Male genitalia ( Fig. 11A,B). Aedeagus arcuate, apex angled downward; internal sac when viewed from left side with Cshaped structure. Sexual dimorphism. In addition to the differences in protarsomeres and profemora, females are larger than males. Female SBL ranged from 2.40– 2.65 mm and averaged 2.50 mm. Male SBL ranged from 2.20– 2.48 mm and averaged 2.38 mm. FIGURE 14. Abdominal keel of a Medusapyga chehalis male. (A) Ventral A two-tailed Student’s T-test view second visible abdominal ventrite; arrow points toward abdominal keel.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

CMNH

The Cleveland Museum of Natural History

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

EMEC

Essig Museum of Entomology

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

ODAC

Oregon Department of Agriculture

OSAC

Oregon State Arthropod Collection

SDSU

Severin-McDaniel Insect Collection

WSU

Weber State University, Bird and Mammal Collection

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

VI

Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute

PL

Západoceské muzeum v Plzni

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Medusapyga

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