Coryphomimus, Yin, 2022

Yin, Zi-Wei, 2022, The Batrisini of Tibet: unveiling an enigmatic ant-loving beetle diversity at Earth’s “ Third Pole ” (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Pselaphinae), Zootaxa 5111 (1), pp. 1-211 : 94-98

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5111.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:836B0F69-037C-4D0F-80DB-94FE454F48E3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6964313

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C822F213-FF96-2416-CB88-A5BE712724F6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Coryphomimus
status

gen. nov.

Coryphomimus View in CoL gen. nov.

( Figs 40–42 View FIGURE 40 View FIGURE 41 View FIGURE 42 )

Chinese common name: ṈỀȁà甲¤

Type species. Coryphomimus levigatus View in CoL sp. nov. (by present designation).

Diagnosis. Head roundly-triangular; lacking sulcus connecting vertexal foveae, lacking distinct frontal rostrum. Pronotum moderately expanded laterally, broad median longitudinal impression with carinate margins, with discal and lateral longitudinal carinae, disc lacking spines or denticles, with large, setose lateral antebasal, anterolateral and antero-hypomeral foveae, both inner and outer pair of small basolateral foveae present. Elytra with three basal foveae, inner two close, with long discal stria, subhumeral fovea and marginal stria present. Abdomen with tergite 1 (IV) longer than 2–3 (V–VI) combined, constricted near base, with complete inner and outer marginal carinae. Aedeagus stout, with long basoventral projection.

Description. Body length 1.9–2.2 mm; habitus ( Fig. 42A View FIGURE 42 ) elongate; dorsal surface with scattered exceptionally long setae and normal pubescence; antenna relatively elongate, extending to more than half elytral length when extended posteriorly.

Head ( Fig. 40A–C View FIGURE 40 ) roundly-triangular; lacking distinct frontal rostrum, antennal tubercles strongly raised; vertexal foveae ( Fig. 40A View FIGURE 40 ; vf) relatively small, asetose, lacking sulcus connecting them, mediobasal and lateral carinae present; eyes small, ocular-mandibular carina ( Fig. 40B View FIGURE 40 ; omc) complete, carina branched below eye, extended ventrally and then anteriorly to posteroventral articulation of mandible. Venter with small gular foveae ( Fig. 40C View FIGURE 40 ; gf) originating from shared round opening, gular carina thin; antenna 11-segmented, club formed by three apical antennomeres; maxillary palpus with small palpomere 1, 2 pedunculate basally and broad at apex, 3 triangular, 4 sub-fusiform, with small apical cone.

Pronotum ( Fig. 40D–F View FIGURE 40 ) transverse, lateral margins roundly expanded anterior to middle, convergent apically and constricted at basal 1/2, strongly incised posterior to lateral expansion, anterior margin slightly emarginate, posterior margin slightly curved; lateral antebasal foveae ( Fig. 40D View FIGURE 40 ; laf) large, covered by dense setae, median antebasal fovea reduced to oval impression, with additional pairs of distinct, setose anterolateral and antero-hypomeral foveae ( Fig. 40E View FIGURE 40 ; alf, ahf), two pairs of basolateral foveae present, lacking marginal, discal or antebasal spines/tubercles, median longitudinal ( Fig. 40D View FIGURE 40 ; mls) sulcus broad, with carinate margins, with long discal and short lateral longitudinal carina ( Fig. 40D View FIGURE 40 ; dlc, llc), lacking transverse antebasal sulcus; hypomeral ridge ( Fig. 40E View FIGURE 40 ; hr) complete; prosternum with small lateral procoxal foveae ( Fig. 40F View FIGURE 40 ; lpf).

Elytra truncate at bases, each elytron with three basal foveae ( Fig. 40G View FIGURE 40 ; bef), inner two close, lacking subbasal fovea, with long discal stria ( Fig. 40G View FIGURE 40 ; ds) and complete sutural stria, with subhumeral fovea and carinate marginal sulcus ( Fig. 40G, H View FIGURE 40 ; shf, ms).

Mesoventrite with median foveae ( Fig. 41A View FIGURE 41 ; mmsf) narrowly separated, in transverse opening, with large lateral mesoventral foveae not forked (straight) internally ( Fig. 41A View FIGURE 41 ; lmsf); metaventrite with large, setose lateral coxal foveae ( Fig. 41A View FIGURE 41 ; lmcf), lateral metaventral foveae ( Fig. 41A View FIGURE 41 ; lmtf) in broad, shared opening, posterior margin with small, narrow split at middle; coxae broadly separated.

Abdomen constricted near base; tergite 1 (IV) slightly longer than 2–3 (V–VI) combined, with mediobasal and one pair of basolateral foveae ( Fig. 41B View FIGURE 41 ; mbf, blf )), lacking discal carinae, tergites 2–4 (V–VII) ( Fig. 41C View FIGURE 41 ) each with one pair of small basolateral foveae and thin lateral carinae; sternite 2 (IV) with one pair of mediobasal ( Fig. 41D View FIGURE 41 ; mbf) and two to three pairs of basolateral foveae ( Fig. 41C, D View FIGURE 41 ; blf), sternites 3–5 (V–VII) each with two pairs of basolateral foveae.

Legs moderately elongate, tarsomeres 2 and 3 subequal in length, with one major and one setiform claw.

Males have relatively longer antenna than females, antennomeres 10 and 11 modified; trochanters and mesofemur with spines or projections on ventral margins; sternite 2 (IV) with three pairs of basolateral foveae; aedeagus ( Fig. 42H, I View FIGURE 42 ) asymmetric, stout, with long basoventral projection, median lobe with large basal capsule, dorsal lobe embracing median lobe and with elongate sclerite, parameres reduced to single membranous structure. Female with two pairs of basolateral foveae on sternite 2 (IV); genitalia ( Fig. 42J View FIGURE 42 ) weakly sclerotized.

Comparative notes. Coryphomimus shares with a few species of Coryphomodes Jeannel the lack of marginal spines on the pronotum, and close inner two pairs of basal foveae of the elytra. The new genus differs from Coryphomodes and all other similar genera centered on Tribasodites Jeannel primarily by the presence of large, setose anterolateral and antero-hypomeral foveae of the prothorax; other characters that may bear generic importance are: moderately expanded lateral margins and presence of lateral longitudinal carinae (instead of sulci) of the pronotum, long discal striae of the elytra, and the abdomen is constricted near the base, with tergite 1 (IV) longer than 2 and 3 (V and VI) combined.

Etymology. The generic name is a combination of Greek ‘ koryphç (head, top)’ and ‘ mîmos (imitator, actor)’, indicating the morphological similarity to Coryphomodes . The gender is masculine.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

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