Lycocerus hubeiensis Y. Yang & X. Yang

Yang, Yuxia, Su, Junyan & Yang, Xingke, 2014, Description of six new species of Lycocerus Gorham (Coleoptera, Cantharidae), with taxonomic note and new distribution data of some other species, ZooKeys 456, pp. 85-107 : 91-93

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.456.8465

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:71EC0955-E0A6-48A8-88AE-9C4F1E3BD53D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1DB00DF3-2E20-45D5-B126-BA23BD1E80AB

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:1DB00DF3-2E20-45D5-B126-BA23BD1E80AB

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Lycocerus hubeiensis Y. Yang & X. Yang
status

sp. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Coleoptera Cantharidae

Lycocerus hubeiensis Y. Yang & X. Yang sp. n. Figs 4, 11-12, 25-27, 36, 40

Type material.

Holotype ♂ (MHBU): CHINA, Hubei, Dalaoling Nat. Res., 1200m, 9.VII.2011, leg. Xue-Song Guan. Paratypes: CHINA, Hubei: 1♀ (MHBU): Dalaoling Nat. Res., 1200m, 9.VII.2011, leg. Xiao-Long Yang; 1♀ (MHBU): same data, 10.VII.2011; 1♂ (MHBU): Badong, Lvcongpo, 1700m, 18.VII.2006, leg. Jun-Hua Wan; 1♀ (MHBU): Badong, Tiansanping, 1500m, 14.VII.2006, leg. Ping Hu; 1♀ (MHBU): Shennongjia, Bajiaomiao, 900-1300m, 17.VII.2003, leg. Yuan He; 1♀ (MHBU): same locality, 19.VII.2003, leg. Jun Ma; 1♂ (MHBU): Shennongjia, Wenshui Forestry, 1700-2000m, 20.VII.2003, leg. Hua He; 1♀ (MHBU): Wufeng, Houhe, 21.VII.2002, leg. Ying Shi; 1♀ (IZAS): Xingshan, Longmenhe, 1300m, 15.VI.1993, leg. Jian Yao; 1♀ (IZAS): same locality, 1350m, 18.VII.1993, leg. Xiao-Lin Chen; 1♀ (IZAS): same locality, 1400m, 22.VII.1993, leg. Shi-Mei Song; 1♀ (IZAS): same locality, 1670m, 23.VII.1993, leg. Xing-Ke Yang. [All are transliterated from Chinese labels].

Distribution.

China (Hubei).

Description.

Male (Fig. 4). Body black, mandibles dark brown, pronotum red, with a large dark brown marking, which almost extending to all margins of disc, elytra red, nearly black at the whole length of the first and second elytral interstices, more or less darkened at the third and fourth elytral interstices.

Head evenly narrowed behind eyes, surface densely and finely punctate, semilustrous, covered with dense, fine, yellowish brown decumbent pubescence; eyes strongly protruding, head width across eyes distinctly wider than anterior margin of pronotum; terminal maxillary palpomere long-triangular, nearly truncate and sharp at apical one-third length of inner margin; antennae (Fig. 12) extending to apical one-third length of elytra, antennomeres II nearly as long as wide at apices, III–XI flattened, III–IX obliquely widened apically, nearly long-triangular, III about twice as long as wide at apices, IV slightly longer than III, X–XI nearly parallel-sided, XI slightly longer than X and pointed at apices, IV–XI each with an oval to round smooth impression at apical part of outer margin.

Pronotum distinctly longer than wide, widest near posterior margin, anterior margin rounded, anterior angles rounded, lateral margins moderately diverging posteriorly, slightly sinuate at anterior portion, posterior angles rectangular, posterior margin slightly arcuate and narrowly bordered, disc moderately convex at posterolateral parts, surface punctate and pubescent like that of head, semilustrous.

Elytra about 5.3 times longer than pronotum, 3.7 times longer than humeral width, which about one-third wider than posterior margin of pronotum, lateral margins nearly parallel, elytral venations moderately developed, slightly costate.

Pro- and meso-outer tarsal claws each with a basal projection.

Abdominal sternite IX long-triangular. Aedeagus (Figs 25-27): ventral process of each paramere normal and rounded at apex, distinctly narrowed at base and slightly bent dorsally in lateral view; dorsal fig distinctly shorter than ventral process, evenly narrowed at inner apical portion and slightly widened at inner angle, with inner angle acute-angled, outer angle obtuse-angled, inner margin bisinuate, apical margin rounded; laterophyse with apex pointed laterodorsally to outer angle of dorsal fig.

Female. Similar to male, but eyes less protruding; antennae (Fig. 11) shorter, extending to elytral midlength, antennomeres III–XI distinctly widened, III about 1.6 times longer than wide at apices, IV–XI without impressions; pronotum nearly as long as wide, disc slightly convex on posterolateral parts; elytra with lateral margins slightly diverging posteriorly; abdominal sternite VIII (Fig. 36) largely and roundly emarginated in middle and both sides of posterior margin, the portion between middle and lateral emarginations rounded at apex; internal reproductive organ of genitalia see Fig. 40.

Body length (both sexes): 7.5-11.0 mm; width: 1.5-2.3 mm.

Etymology.

This specific name is derived from its locality, Hubei Province, China.

Diagnosis.

This species is similar to Lycocerus sichuanus sp. n. in the aedeagus, but differs from the latter by the antennae of female much wider, antennomeres III about 1.6 times longer than wide at apices; aedeagus: ventral process of each paramere narrowed at base and slightly bent dorsally in lateral view; abdominal sternite VIII of female with the portion between middle and lateral emarginations of posterior margin rounded at apex.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cantharidae

Genus

Lycocerus