Sclerotia brahmina ( Bourgeois, 1890 ) Bourgeois, 1890

Ballantyne, Lesley A., Lambkin, Christine L., Luan, Xin, Boontop, Yuvarin, Nak-Eiam, Sorasak, Pimpasalee, Suttisan, Silalom, Sommyot & Thancharoen, Anchana, 2016, Further studies on south eastern Asian Luciolinae: 1. Sclerotia Ballantyne, a new genus of fireflies with back swimming larvae 2. Triangulara Pimpasalee, a new genus from Thailand (Coleoptera: Lampyridae), Zootaxa 4170 (2), pp. 201-249 : 224

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4170.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5914C51A-5113-4254-80AE-152D9B811874

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5620129

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/872B87C9-F811-FF8F-6BFB-97D61D8EFF35

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sclerotia brahmina ( Bourgeois, 1890 )
status

comb. nov.

Sclerotia brahmina ( Bourgeois, 1890) View in CoL comb. nov.

( Figs 21, 22 View FIGURES 17 − 28 , 32−38 View FIGURES 32 − 38 , 63−73 View FIGURES 63 − 73 )

Luciola brahmina Bourgeois, 1890: 169 View in CoL . Olivier, 1900: 236; 1902: 75; 1907a: 51. McDermott, 1966: 100. Luciola brahmina Bourgeois var vitalisi Pic, 1923: 27 View in CoL (LB examination of type in 2013 at MNHN).

Holotype. Male. VIETNAM: Mỹ Tho labelled as follows: 1. “ Luciola Brahmina ♂♀ Bourg” (handwritten in black ink); 2. “Mytho Perraudière” (handwritten in black ink); 3. ♂ (MHNH). It is unclear from the ♂♀ written on the type label whether Bourgeois actually had both sexes before him when he described the species, or was unsure of the sex.

Other specimens examined. (*= V4, 5 dark brown); THAILAND . Suphan Buri Province: 17.xi.2000, 4 males (3*) ( CUMZ) ; 27.vi.2001, 6 males (CUMZ); Ruae Yai Subdistrict 18.vi.1998, 8 males (2 *) ( CUMZ) ; train station 30.iv.2007, 2 males (CUMZ); Muang District 14–19. iv.2000, 2 males ( CUMZ) . Bang Pha Subdistrict , Chon Buri Province: 1.ix.2002, 3 males ( CUMZ) ; 22.v.1995, male (CUMZ). Nakon Sawan Province, Bueng Boraphet 11.vi.1997 S Divasiri, 2 males, female ( ANIC) . Bangkok Province, Bangkhen District 23.viii.1981 Chaiyasit, male ( ANIC) .

Diagnosis. One of the smaller species in this genus (6.9–9.0 mm long). Dorsal surface very pale brown, often very pale greyish in more recently collected specimens; dark marking at elytral apex if present may be difficult to discern from above ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 17 − 28 ); with either one (as in type; Fig. 22 View FIGURES 17 − 28 ) or two dark coloured abdominal ventrites anterior to light organs; apex of sheath sternite emarginated on right side, and the prolonged median anterior margin of the sheath tergite relatively short and apically narrowed ( Figs 32−35 View FIGURES 32 − 38 ).

Male. Redescription. 6.9–9.0 mm long; 2.5 X as long as wide. Colour ( Figs 21, 22 View FIGURES 17 − 28 , 63 View FIGURES 63 − 73 ): dorsal surface very pale brown (appearing almost greyish in recently collected specimens), with suture narrowly slightly paler than rest of elytron, and minute brown area at tip of elytron (scarcely visible from above); one Suphan Buri male with V4, 5 dark has no dark tip to elytral apices; 3 Suphan Buri males with only V5 dark have no dark tip to elytral apices; head between eyes dark brown, antennae with scape light brown, remainder dark brown; ventral surface of thorax mid brown (colour partly due to dehydrated underlying muscles); legs pale yellowish brown with dark brown apical half of tibiae and dark brown tarsi; basal ventrites yellowish, V5 largely dark brown with median anterior area narrowly yellowish (V4, 5 dark brown in 5 Suphan Buri males); LO in V6, 7 creamy white, median emargination of LO semitransparent, yellowish; dorsal abdomen yellowish brown.

Pronotum: width subequal humeral width; W/L 1.7–2.1; L/BL 0.14–0.19; W/GHW 1.3–1.4. Elytron: 0.8 as long as total body length. Head: SIW/GHW 0.15–0.17. Abdomen: emargination of LO in V7 moderately deep and wide ( Figs 22 View FIGURES 17 − 28 , 63 View FIGURES 63 − 73 ).

Aedeagal sheath sclerites ( Figs 65−72 View FIGURES 63 − 73 ): ventral sclerite approximately circular in outline, dorsal surface bearing irregularly elevated margins ( Fig. 69 View FIGURES 63 − 73 ); right sclerite ( Fig. 68 View FIGURES 63 − 73 “3”) with apically rounded transverse projection reaching a little beyond the mid line of T8; right sclerite with four projections to the right; most anterior projection round with hollow centre ( Figs 70−72 View FIGURES 63 − 73 “6”); remaining outer margin of right sclerite with three projections which from above appear short broad, and apically acute, and from below more elongate and apically rounded with most posterior projection shorter than rest ( Figs 68, 70−71 View FIGURES 63 − 73 “7”); left ventral sclerite ( Figs 65−68, 72 View FIGURES 63 − 73 ) with a fairly flattened roughly triangular base, with thickened margins along two longest sides, and two curved projections on the posterior (ventral) surface, one apically pointed and slightly serrate along its dorsal margin, the second shorter with rounded apex ( Figs 65−67 View FIGURES 63 − 73 “8, 9”, 72); lateral margin with two apically rounded projections ( Fig. 68 View FIGURES 63 − 73 “10, 11”).

Aedeagal sheath ( Figs 32−35 View FIGURES 32 − 38 ):without oblique ridge in posterior half of sheath sternite; posterior margin of sheath sternite emarginated on right side ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 32 − 38 “C”); median anterior margin of sheath tergite with a short narrowed projection ( Figs 33−35 View FIGURES 32 − 38 “D”).

Aedeagus ( Figs 36−38 View FIGURES 32 − 38 ): L/ W 2.3 –3.0; length basal piece/total length 0.46; apices of LL obliquely truncate (inner margin longer); left LL sometimes appearing shorter than right; anterior dorsal margin of LL truncate ( Fig. 38 View FIGURES 32 − 38 “G”).

Remarks. Specimens were recorded originally from ‘Cochinchine’ (Cambodia); the type locality is presently in Vietnam. Bourgeois’s type specimen has most of V5 black ( Figs 22 View FIGURES 17 − 28 , 63 View FIGURES 63 − 73 ). He noted the elytral punctation in lines, and the emargination of the LO in V7. Olivier (1900) recorded an entirely yellow species from Sumatra, and Olivier (1902) and Pic (1923) both recorded brahmina from “Indochine” but it is not possible to corroborate these records. The type of Luciola brahmina var. vitalisi has light brown elytra which are considerably darker than the other specimens assigned here.

CUMZ

Chulalongkorn University Museum of Natural History

ANIC

Australian National Insect Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Lampyridae

Genus

Sclerotia

Loc

Sclerotia brahmina ( Bourgeois, 1890 )

Ballantyne, Lesley A., Lambkin, Christine L., Luan, Xin, Boontop, Yuvarin, Nak-Eiam, Sorasak, Pimpasalee, Suttisan, Silalom, Sommyot & Thancharoen, Anchana 2016
2016
Loc

Luciola brahmina

McDermott 1966: 100
Pic 1923: 27
Olivier 1900: 236
Bourgeois 1890: 169
1890
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