Cephennomicrus endroedyi, Jałoszyński, Paweł, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3683.4.5 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:30BD249D-0F84-4FD5-8091-A0AC80262526 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6155820 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F887A9-FFBD-FFA9-FF7A-630AFC1DFBFB |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Cephennomicrus endroedyi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Cephennomicrus endroedyi View in CoL sp. n.
( Figs. 14 View FIGURES 13 – 15 , 18–19 View FIGURES 16 – 21 , 24–25, 29)
Type material. Holotype: REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA (Eastern Cape Prov.): 3, three labels: "Transkei: coast / Dwesa for. res. / 32.17S - 28.50E " [white, printed]; " 26.2.1985; E-Y: 2168 / grassnetting, dusk / leg. Endrödy-Younga" [white, printed]; " CEPHENNOMICRUS / endroedyi m. / det. P. Jałoszyński, '13 / HOLOTYPUS' [red, printed] ( TMSA).
Diagnosis. Elytral apices modified, each with large and shallow pit located in subapical region and a tiny tubercle located almost on elytral sutural margin anterior to pit; aedeagus with rapidly narrowing short apical region; internal armature composed of long median tubular structure surrounded at each side by elongate sclerite; parameres with several non-modified setae.
Description. Body of male ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 13 – 15 ) moderately strongly convex, elongate, distinctly constricted between pronotum and elytra, brown with slightly lighter appendages, covered with yellowish vestiture. BL 1.05 mm.
Head broadest at large, strongly convex and coarsely faceted eyes, HL 0.13 mm, HW 0.26 mm; vertex and frons confluent, non-modified, in median part only slightly convex; frontoclypeal region anterior to eyes subtrapezoid; supraantennal tubercles only slightly raised but distinct; punctures on head dorsum moderately deep but large, dense and with sharply marked margins, separated by spaces subequal to puncture diameters; setae extremely short and sparse, barely discernible. Antennae long and slender, AnL 0.48, with three distal antennomeres distinctly enlarged and forming slender club; all antennomeres distinctly elongate except for IX which is nearly as long as broad; XI 2.2x as long as broad, distinctly broader than X.
Pronotum subtrapezoid, broadest near anterior fourth; PL 0.28 mm, PW 0.35 mm. Anterior margin nearly straight; anterior corners rounded but distinct; lateral margins strongly rounded in anterior third and nearly straight in posterior half, strongly converging towards obtuse and blunt hind pronotal corners; posterior margin nearly straight, barely noticeably emarginate in middle; base of pronotum with fine, shallow and relatively diffused antebasal transverse groove connected to small but deep pit at each end and with one pair of shallow and small lateral ante-basal impressions located at posterior pronotal corners. Punctures and setae on pronotal disc similar to those on frons and vertex.
Elytra more convex than pronotum, oval, broadest near anterior third; EL 0.65 mm, EW 0.48 mm, EI 1.37; humeral calli well-marked, each delimited from adsutural region by shallow and small basal impression in which basal elytral fovea is well-visible; apical region of each elytron modified, in subapical part with large but shallow pit located closer to suture than to elytral apex, accompanied anteriorly by tiny tubercle located almost on elytral sutural margin. Vestiture uniform, composed of similar setae as those on pronotum; punctures similarly dense as those on pronotum but much shallower. Hind wings well developed.
Legs moderately long and slender; all tibiae slightly curved in distal third.
Aedeagus ( Figs. 18–19 View FIGURES 16 – 21 , 24–25) stout; AeL 0.35 mm; median lobe in ventral view with short, gradually narrowed subtrapezoid apical part, apex broadly rounded; internal armature simple, with a pair of darkly sclerotized lateral elongate structures embracing lightly sclerotized median tube; parameres slender, each with four setae.
Female. Unknown.
Distribution. Eastern RSA, Eastern Cape Prov. ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 28 – 29 ).
Etymology. Cephennomicrus endroedyi is named in honor of the late Sebastian Endrödy-Younga, the collector of this species.
Remarks. The shape and structures of the aedeagus of Cm. endroedyi are unique and sufficient to identify this interesting species. This is the only known Cephennomicrus with the membranous area on the ventral wall of median lobe divided into lateral halves. Moreover, the unusually modified elytral apices make this species easy to identify. Similar modifications can be found only in Cm. transkeianus , a species known from the same Dwesa Forest where also Cm. endroedyi was collected. However, these two species have not only clearly different aedeagi, but they also markedly differ in the body shape and cannot be confused.
TMSA |
Transvaal Museum |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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