Tsounkranaglenea hefferni, Lin & Ge, 2021

Lin, Mei-Ying & Ge, Si-Qin, 2021, Tsounkranaglenea hefferni gen. et sp. nov. from Sabah, Malaysia (Coleoptera Cerambycidae, Lamiinae: Saperdini), Zootaxa 5048 (2), pp. 289-297 : 291-296

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5048.2.9

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8ADB59A4-8B5D-4789-AF90-59C4DCA1A31C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5552116

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8356F61E-FF93-5C08-41BD-FA1DFE424158

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tsounkranaglenea hefferni
status

sp. nov.

Tsounkranaglenea hefferni View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs. 1-14 View FIGURES 1-5 View FIGURES 6–10 View FIGURES 11–14 )

Type material. Holotype, male ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1-5 ), Malaysia, Sabah, Crocker Range , 2003-II-16, leg. local coll. ( IZCAS) . Paratypes: 1 male, Malaysia, Sabah, Mt. Trus Madi , 1500-2000m, 1998-III-11, leg. Affenddy ( DHCO) ; 1 female, Malaysia, Sabah, Mt. Trus Madi , 1500-2000m, 1998-III /V, leg. local coll. ( IZCAS) ; 1 female, Malaysia, Sabah, Crocker Range , 2010-III-18, local coll. ( DHCO) ; 1 female, same data but 1998-III-19 ( DHCO) .

Other material (examined only by photographs). 1 male with length 11.5 mm, no. S11.9-151. Nobuo Ohbayashi showed the first author a specimen from Malaysia with dorsal view and lateral view pictures in 2011, which was surely this species. It may be from Trus Madi, however, the owner Mr. Minoru Sawai could not be contacted during this research .

Description (based on two males and three females): Male: length: 11.0– 11.5 mm, humeral width: 3.0– 3.2 mm. Female: length: 11.0–14.0 mm, humeral width: 3.4–4.2 mm. Body black. Head black, with frons covered with dense grayish white to yellow pubescence ( Figs. 2e View FIGURES 1-5 , 11d View FIGURES 11–14 ), which extends as two short vittae to occiput; antennae black. Prothorax covered with dense brownish pubescence in dorsal view except a whitish pubescent spot at base for both sexes and a whitish spot in middle of apical part for female only ( Figs. 11a, 12 View FIGURES 11–14 ); with a longitudinal grayish white to yellow pubescence in lateral view ( Figs. 1b View FIGURES 1-5 , 11b View FIGURES 11–14 ). Scutellum black, covered by brownish (basal part) and whitish (apical part) pubescence. Elytra black, covered by rather dense brownish pubescence, at basal fourth and along suture with some silver erect setae, basal setae much longer than others ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 11–14 ), and with grayish white to yellow pubescence markings on each elytron as following: (for both sexes) a transverse vitta at base; a apical vitta; (for only female) a long line along second row of punctures (counting from lateral carina) from nearly base to apical tenth, normally with a subapical interruption; a lateral line along the puncture row near lateral carina from nearly base to middle ( Fig. 11b View FIGURES 11–14 ); a short longitudinal vitta along suture just behind scutellum ( Fig. 11a View FIGURES 11–14 , sometimes missing, Fig. 12 View FIGURES 11–14 ). Ventral surface black with grayish white pubescence except a long stouter line with interruptions caused by lacking pubescence ( Figs. 1b View FIGURES 1-5 , 11b View FIGURES 11–14 ). Legs reddish brown to dark brown, covered with grayish pubescence. Frons longer than broad, width less than (male) or subequal to (female) two eyes’s combined width. Antennomere ratio: male, 25:5:36:28:27:26:25:24:22:20:21; female, 25:5:36:26:25:24:23:21:19:18:19. Prothorax longer than (male) to as long as (female) broad. Elytron truncated apically, with a short tooth at inner angle and a sharp and long tooth at outer angle. Hind femur reaching base of (female) or the bent part of (male) fifth abdominal segment, first hind tarsal segment longer than the following two segments combined. The sternite VII in male ( Figs. 2b, 2c, 3b–d View FIGURES 1-5 ) strongly bent at base, the apical half reduced and transformed into two slender knife-shaped teeth ( Figs. 3b–d View FIGURES 1-5 ), with long brown brush hairs on the outer side.

Male terminalia ( Figs. 6–10 View FIGURES 6–10 ): Tegmen about 3.0 mm in length; lateral lobes slender ( Figs. 8a, 8c View FIGURES 6–10 ), each about 1.2 mm long and 0.3 mm wide, provided with a thin setae, strongly protruding lobe at ventral base ( Fig. 8b View FIGURES 6–10 ), apical half with medium long setae; ringed part elbowed in widest portion, converging; basal piece bifurcated apically ( Figs. 8c View FIGURES 6–10 ); median lobe plus median struts strongly curved ( Figs. 9b, 9d View FIGURES 6–10 ), shorter than tegmen; median struts more than one third and less than half of whole median lobe in length; dorsal plate slightly shorter than ventral plate; apex of ventral plate strongly emarginated, forming two lateral apical lobes ( Figs. 9a, 9b View FIGURES 6–10 ); median foramen slightly elongated; internal sac about triple length of median lobe, with two pairs of basal plate-like sclerites (located behind apex of median struts), one band of distinct supporting armature, some barely separated plate-like sclerites between them, and three rod-like sclerites at the end ( Figs. 10a–10c View FIGURES 6–10 ), rod-like sclerites about 1.0 mm, much shorter than median lobe or tegmen. Tergite VIII ( Figs. 6a–6c View FIGURES 6–10 ) longer than broad, strongly narrowed before apex ( Fig. 6b View FIGURES 6–10 ), apex emarginated with two short ear-shaped lateral lobes, with dense and long brown setae along the narrowed part ( Figs. 6a, 6b View FIGURES 6–10 ). Sternite VIII with spiculum relictum as Fig. 7b View FIGURES 6–10 , sternite IX (spiculum gastrale) as Fig. 7a View FIGURES 6–10 . Female genitalia ( Figs. 13–14 View FIGURES 11–14 ): spermathecal capsule composed of an apical orb and a long and strongly curved stalk, the stalk more than triple the length of the apical orb, curved twice at basal part ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 11–14 ). Spiculum ventrale longer than abdomen. In our observation, spiculum ventrale measured 7.7 mm for an adult compared with abdomen which measured 5.7 mm in ventral view.

Etymology. The species is named after Mr. Daniel Heffern (Texas, USA), who offered the interesting material for this study and provided the first author some wonderful saperdine specimens from Malaysia for research.

Diagnosis. This species resembles Glenea subaurata Breuning, 1950 at first glance by the similar shape and colour. The specific differences are easily defined by the male sternite VII. Without specimens for dissection, we can not conclude whether Glenea subaurata Breuning, 1950 should be moved to the new genus Tsounkranaglenea or not.

Remarks. Glenea subaurata Breuning, 1950 ( Figs. 15–18 View FIGURES 15–18 ) was described based on “Type un male de Sumatra: Si-Rambé, XII-1890 - III-1891, leg. E. Modigliani”, with “Longuer 10 mm, Largeur 2mm. 1/3”. The holotype male ( Figs. 15–16 View FIGURES 15–18 ) is deposited in MSNG and had been examined by the first author in June, 2008. Another male specimen ( Figs. 17–18 View FIGURES 15–18 ) is deposited in NHMB, with a label written “ PARATYPE ”. Though it has a Breuning’s handwriting label “glenea / subaurata / mihi. P. T. / Breuning det.”, it is not a paratype because the locality “Madam / Sumatra ” and the individual specimen were not mentioned in the original paper ( Breuning, 1950b). Here we confirmed that the identification is correct and it is a useful additional material for the specific definition of Glenea subaurata Breuning, 1950 .

IZCAS

Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences

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