Operclipygus elongatus, Caterino, Michael S. & Tishechkin, Alexey K., 2013

Caterino, Michael S. & Tishechkin, Alexey K., 2013, A systematic revision of Operclipygus Marseul (Coleoptera, Histeridae, Exosternini), ZooKeys 271, pp. 1-401 : 333-336

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.271.4062

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6B2DF5C3-5DCC-11FD-CC9D-EB875E5E3C92

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Operclipygus elongatus
status

sp. n.

Operclipygus elongatus View in CoL   ZBK sp. n. Figs 92 A–B93A–B, E, GMap 32

Type locality.

COSTA RICA: Alajuela: Peñas Blancas [10°04'N, 84°37'W].

Type material.

Holotype male: "COSTA RICA:Alajuela, Peñas Blancas, 1190m 20 May 1989, J. Ashe, R. Leschen, R. Brooks, ex. flight intercept trap" / "Snow Entomol. Mus. Costa Rica Exped. #273" / "Caterino/Tishechkin Exosternini Voucher EXO-00286" (SEMC).

Diagnostic description.

Length: 1.90 mm, width: 1.31 mm; body rufescent, elongate, nearly parallel-sided; frons weakly depressed in middle, with ground punc tation conspicuous; sides of frontal stria divergent between eyes, interrupted over antennal bases, sinuate across front; supraorbital stria connected to frontal stria at sides, but interrupted at middle, ends curved slightly forward; epistoma convex, with slightly denser punctation than frons; labrum about twice as wide as long, outer margin sinuate, weakly projecting at middle; left mandible with incisor bluntly produced, but not toothed, right mandible with acute basal tooth; pronotal disk with prescutellar puncture in middle of weak depression, with fine ground punctation, with numerous (>30) coarser punctures at sides; lateral marginal stria interrupted for width of head, central portion of anterior margin weakly produced; lateral submarginal stria complete, curved inward anteriorly nearly to anterior submarginal stria, which is weakly crenulate, narrowly obliquely recurved at sides; median pronotal gland openings situated between free ends of submarginal striae, about 4 puncture widths from anterior margin; elytron with single epipleural stria, outer subhumeral stria present in apical half, inner subhumeral absent, striae 1-4 complete, 5th stria present in apical two-thirds and with basal point, sutural stria nearly complete, barely abbreviated at base; prosternal keel weakly produced at base, carinal striae complete, subparallel, connected anteriorly and posteriorly; prosternal lobe narrow, marginal stria complete; mesoventrite shallowly emarginate in front, marginal stria complete; mesometaventral stria arched forward to middle of mesoventrite, sinuate near mesocoxa, continued by lateral metaventral stria posterolaterad toward middle of metacoxa; postmesocoxal stria recurved to mesepimeron; short fragment of secondary lateral metaventral stria present behind mesocoxa; 1st abdominal ventrite with inner lateral stria complete, outer obsolete in posterior half; propygidium uniformly covered with medium sized, shallow punctures, separated by about one-half their widths, ground punctation fine and sparse; pygidium with denser ground punctation, with slightly larger punctures sparsely interspersed; marginal pygidial sulcus complete, deep, faintly crenulate, slightly removed from margin, with flat marginal bead about one-eighth total pygidial length. Male genitalia (Figs 93 A–B, E, G): accessory sclerites present; T8 with sides evenly convergent, apical emargination narrow, basal emargination deep, broad, its apex tangential to basal membrane attachment line, ventrolateral apodemes most strongly developed basally, not meeting at midline; S8 with sides slightly divergent, with apical guides widening to apex, bluntly rounded apically with inner lobe, ventrally with halves weakly diverging to near apex; T9 with apices weakly convergent, subacute; T10 with halves separated; S9 with stem narrowest at middle, strongly widened to truncate base, apex with triangular median emargination, with apical flanges separate and weak; tegmen with sides straight, slightly widening from base to apex, then narrowed in apical fourth to subacute apex, with narrow ‘U’ -shaped medioventral process projecting beneath about one-third from base; tegmen weakly curved ventrad toward apex; basal piece nearly one-half tegmen length; median lobe about one-third tegmen length, with proximal apodemes separate.

Remarks.

The elongate body shape (Fig. 92A) and unusually interrupted supraorbital striae will help to identify Operclipygus elongatus . The departure of the pygidial sulcus from the margin (Fig. 92B) is somewhat similar to the condition in Operclipygus latipygus , and this may be indicative of a relationship between them. However, they are easily distinguished by other characters.

Etymology.

This species’ name refers to its body shape, which is more markedly elongate than most Operclipygus .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Histeridae

Tribe

Exosternini

Genus

Operclipygus