Ocyolinus astenos Chatzimanolis & Ashe

Chatzimanolis, Stylianos & Ashe, James S., 2009, A revision of the neotropical genus Ocyolinus (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylinini), Zootaxa 2162, pp. 1-23 : 10-12

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.188992

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6214256

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E654AD5B-FFF1-FFD4-FF50-652153B2EF82

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Ocyolinus astenos Chatzimanolis & Ashe
status

sp. nov.

Ocyolinus astenos Chatzimanolis & Ashe View in CoL , new species

( Figs. 5 View FIGURES 4 – 9 , 11, 29–32, 49)

Type Material. Holotype: male, with labels: “ Panama: Chiriquí Prov. La Fortuna, ‘Cont. Divide Trail’, 8°46’N, 82°12’W, 1100 m, 23.v.–9.vi.1995, J. Ashe, R. Brooks, #157, ex: flight intercept trap” / barcode label SM0058242 / “ Holotype Ocyolinus astenos Chatzimanolis and Ashe , des. Chatzimanolis 2009” ( SEMC).

Diagnosis. Among Ocyolinus species with dark metallic purple coloration on head and pronotum, O. astenos can be distinguished by the shape of the mandibles (right mandible with a tooth that is not constricted at tip) and the shape of the aedeagus: paramere apically with a shallow emargination ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 29 – 32 ) and sensory spinules on ventral side of paramere not in two clear rows, appearing more towards the middle instead of the lateral margins ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 29 – 32 ).

Description. Body length 16 mm.

Coloration. Head and pronotum metallic bright purple with green and blue overtones. Posterior dorsal margin of head without metallic coloration, appearing dark brown to black. Ventral surface of head and pronotum dark brown. Antennomeres 1–3 dark brown, 4–11 yellowish brown. Mesoscutellum dark brown. Elytra similar to but sometimes brighter colored than head and pronotum. Abdomen dark brown, except posterior 1/5 of segment VII and VIII yellow. Legs brown.

Head slightly transverse, width: length ratio = 1.30. Surface of epicranium matt; with many micropunctures and with rounded microsculpture visible at> 70X; with medium umbilicate setose punctures irregularly arranged, distance between puncture varies. Eyes medium, length of eyes / length of head ratio = 0.46, distance between eyes as wide as twice length of eye. Postgena with medium, deep punctures (about 1–2 punctures / 0.5 mm), punctures not uniformly distributed. Mandibles ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 4 – 9 ) with broad triangular medial tooth, left mandible with convex triangular tooth, right mandible with similar tooth, not constricted at tip, distal part of mandible curved. Antennomeres with long macrosetae, antennomeres 1–11 longer than wide, antennomere 1 slightly curved, about 2.5 times as long as antennomere 2, antennomere 3 1.6 times as long as antennomere 2, antennomere 4 0.75 times as long as antennomere 3, antennomeres 6 slightly shorter than either antennomere 5 or 7, antennomere 7–10 gradually becoming shorter, antennomere 11 slightly longer than antennomere 10. Neck dorsally with micropunctures and rounded microsculpture, laterally with 3–4 small punctures.

Pronotum subquadrate, width: length ratio = 0.93; antero-lateral angles obtusely rounded, curved downwards. Lateral margins of pronotum concave in dorsal aspect, pronotum broadest in apical 1/4 and narrower at basal angles. Surface of pronotum flat; matt due to microsculpture and micropunctures. Medium sized punctures throughout the pronotum, irregularly arranged. Large setose punctures present around the margin of pronotum, with 4 punctures at the center of the pronotum, each one delimiting the corner of a square. Pronotum with few long black macrosetae along borders. Mesoscutellum prominent, anterior half with transverse, rounded microsculpture, posterior half with microsculpture and with brown microsetae and punctures, punctures confluent.

Elytra subequal in length to pronotum, with large setose uniform punctures (about 7 punctures / 0.5 mm), punctures confluent; with long yellow macrosetae along borders of elytra. Elytra appearing glossy, without microsculpture but with tiny micropunctures between larger punctures visible only at> 70X.

Legs. Protarsus moderately enlarged, with yellow setae; meso- and metatarsi not enlarged. Legs almost completely covered with long yellow and brown setae.

Abdominal terga III–VII with tergal basal and no subbasal (arch-like) carina. Terga III–VII with uniform punctation patterns, densely covered with punctures and yellowish brown setae, with rounded microsculpture on anterior part. Setae on abdominal terga and sterna appearing iridescent. Sterna III–VII moderately punctuated, with shallow punctures and with rounded microsculpture. Lateral tergal sclerites of the abdominal segment IX long and straight, covered with long brown macrosetae.

Secondary sexual structures. Male: distal margin of sternum VII with slight broad emargination medially; sternum VIII with shallow V-shaped emargination medially; sternum IX with deep V-shaped emargination medially. Female unknown.

Aedeagus as in Figs. 29–32 View FIGURES 29 – 32 ; paramere in dorsal view fairly wide, converging to slightly emarginated apex, shorter than median lobe; in lateral view paramere slightly concave, straight; with sensory spinules as shown in Fig. 32 View FIGURES 29 – 32 . Median lobe in dorsal view wide, converging to rounded apex, with a pair of dorsal teeth; in lateral view becoming narrower from middle to apex.

Distribution. Known only from the type locality in Panama, at elevations of 1100 m ( Fig. 49 View FIGURE 49 ).

Habitat. Unknown, collected in flight intercept trap.

Etymology. The specific epithet is derived from the Greek word στενός (narrow) and the prefix a-, and refers to the tooth of the right mandible that is not constricted. The epithet is an adjective.

SEMC

University of Kansas - Biodiversity Institute

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Ocyolinus

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