Metopiellus guanano, Fiorentino & Tocora & Ramirez, 2022

Fiorentino, Gianpiero, Tocora, Maria C. & Ramirez, Sebastian, 2022, A new species of Metopiellus (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Pselaphinae) from the northern Colombian Amazon, ZooKeys 1108, pp. 1-9 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1108.76077

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D3F071A0-395E-4F01-A7F6-D09A29891E8F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/579DD444-A6E7-47A5-9394-5648733B4EAB

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:579DD444-A6E7-47A5-9394-5648733B4EAB

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Metopiellus guanano
status

sp. nov.

Metopiellus guanano View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 , 3 View Figure 3

Type material

(1 ♂, 1 ♀). Holotype: Colombia: 1 ♂: Vaupés department, Mitú, kilómetro 16 carretera vía Mitú-Monfort, Cucura. 1°08'41.6"N, 70°08'06.6"W. 10 Aug. 2019, Winkler 48 h. Col. Fernandez Lab. ICN 099808.

Paratype: Colombia: 1♀: Vaupés department, Villa Fatima, Pie de Cerro Tipiaca, 1°01'30.0"N, 69°58'37.2"W. 19 March. 2020, Winkler 40 h. Lote VW01. Col. Fernandez Lab. ICN 099807. Both the holotype and the paratype are deposited in ICN.

Diagnosis.

Metopiellus guanano sp. nov. is most similar to M. painensis Asenjo et. al., 2017. Yet, it can be distinguished by the presence of a significant number of autapomorphic character states, such as: the presence of a prominent, horn-like spine on the vertexal region of the head (Figs 1A,F View Figure 1 , 4A,B View Figure 4 ), the presence of 4 distinct pronotal spines and 2 deep elytral sulci, as well as the shape of the aedeagus (Fig. 2D-F View Figure 2 ) and thick pilosity covering the entire body (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ).

Description.

Holotype male. Body, mouthparts, antennae, and tarsi reddish light brown (Figs 1 View Figure 1 - 2 View Figure 2 ).

Measurements: BL (2.54 mm), BW (0.7 mm), EL (0.66 mm), EW (0.35 mm), HL (0.4 mm), HW (0.38 mm), NW (0.18 mm), PL (0.35 mm), PW (0.44 mm).

Head (Figs 1E-F View Figure 1 , 4A, B View Figure 4 ): pyriform (HL: 0.4 mm; HW: 0.38), anterior region distinctly narrower, raised at antennal tubercle. Antennal tubercule foveated and coarse. Posterior margin of head abruptly narrowed and with posterior-lateral angles rounded. Neck almost 2/3 width of head, lateral margins slightly obtuse (Fig. 1E View Figure 1 ). Head with two vertexal foveae [VF] (Fig. 1E View Figure 1 ) near posterior margin. Medial spine protruding from vertex between the vertexal foveae, similar to spines on pronotum. Vertex longitudinally impressed with sulcus running from anterior margin of antennal tubercle to vertexal fovea, branching out at level of eyes; sulcus narrow. Ventral surface of head with long, thin gular sulcus, interrupted at posterior third by two large gular foveae [GF]. Head covered in thick curved setae. Compound eyes small and slightly protruding laterally, composed of 12 ommatidia (Fig. 1F View Figure 1 ). Antennae (Fig. 1C View Figure 1 ) about 3/4 body length, scape almost half antennal length, last three antennomeres abruptly widened, scape length (all lengths without peduncle) 1.2 mm, width 0.15 mm, pedicel shorter than scape (length 0.59 mm: width 0.07), antennomeres 3-4 and 6-7 about as long as wide, antennomere 5 much longer than wide: 3 (length 0.07 mm: width 0.07 mm), 4 (length 0.06 mm: width 0.07 mm), 5 (length 0.11 mm: width 0.06 mm), 6 (length 0.08 mm: width 0.07 mm), 7 (length 0.08 mm: width 0.07 mm); antennomere 8 wider than long (length 0.04 mm: width 0.08 mm), antennomere 9 subcircular (length 0.08 mm: width 0.10 mm), antennomere 10 almost subquadrate (length 0.09 mm: width 0.11 mm), antennomere 11 longitudinally oval, with pointed apex (length 0.19 mm: width 0.13); all antennomeres with coarse integument and covered by long setae as well as thick, suberect pilosity.

Thorax (Fig. 1B, D-F View Figure 1 ): pronotum trapezoidal in dorsal view (PL: 0.35; PW: 0.44) widest anteriorly, stair-shaped in profile. Two rounded protuberances on medial region of anterior half, acuminated with two spines. Two smaller spines produced laterally on each side of two rounded protuberances of medial region of anterior half of pronotum. Posterior half well below height of anterior half, demarcated by a deep sulcus connected to two deep, lateral antebasal foveae. Pronotum coarse, covered in thick, curved setae. Pronotum anterior margin slightly convex, basal margin straight. Prosternum with lateral procoxal fovea. Mesoventrite with prepectal fovea and lateral mesosternal fovea. Metaventrite with lateral mesocoxal foveae, a lateral metasternal fovea and a median metasternal fovea. Region of metaventrite in articulation with metacoxae forming a triangular protuberance, inwardly convex. “Waist” between pronotum and elytra strongly produced, with dark, coarsely reticulated integument.

Elytra: subquadrate (EL: 0.66; EW: 0.35), sides gradually broadening apically (Fig. 1A, B View Figure 1 ). Posterior margins convex, humeri without small longitudinal carina. Elytron uniformly rounded. No conspicuous basal elytral foveae (possibly replaced by sulci). Apicolateral margin of elytra slightly notched.

Legs (Fig. 1A, D View Figure 1 ): long and robust. Femora thickened in apical half. Tibiae slightly curved and slightly shorter than femora, all tibiae thickened at apex. Protibiae carinate on inner surface and without microsetae on posterior and mesial regions, carinae lined with thick, curved setae. Tarsi 3-segmented, first tarsomeres very short, last 2 tarsomeres longer, tarsomere 2 longer than segment 3; all tarsi with single claw and thick accessory seta. Procoxae conical and prominent, mesocoxae globular-conical, less prominent than procoxae, metacoxae transverse, region that articulates with meta-trochanter conical. Procoxae, mesocoxae and metacoxae contiguous.

Abdomen (Fig. 2A-C View Figure 2 ): slightly margined, with five visible tergites (morphological tergites IV-VIII), tergite VIII with rounded apex. Tergites and sternites IV-VII fused and bordered by a prominent carina. Sternite III visible as a small transverse plate between metacoxae, with long, transversal sulcus (Fig. 1D View Figure 1 ). Sternum IX divided longitudinally (Figs 1D View Figure 1 , 2B View Figure 2 ).

Aedeagus: (Fig. 2D-F View Figure 2 ). Asymmetrical, with median lobe slightly bulbous at base, elongate and narrow, curved at apex. Apical lobe straight in dorsal view (Fig. 2E View Figure 2 ).

Female with characters of head, pronotum, and elytra as are described for male. Abdominal sternum VIII with posterior margin rounded and without a small prolongation (Fig. 3A, B View Figure 3 ).

Habitat and ecological notes.

The specimens were collected through Winkler sampling in primary forest in the northern Colombian Amazon. The sampled localities correspond to areas with a relative humidity of 84% and an average temperature of 28 °C; at both locations the vegetation was characteristic of a humid tropical forest. The processes that determine the diversity and floristic composition of the forests are not well known ( Cano and Stevenson 2008). The sampling in Cucúra was carried out at no more than 20 m from a body of water; the area had been slightly disturbed by the elimination of plants from the understory and the terrain was humid due to recent rains.

Sampling at Villa Fátima was carried out in a submontane primary forest. The collection area was mostly pristine, with predominantly arboreal vegetation with little understory vegetation. This may be due to the superficial first granite layer of the hill (Tepui) ( Gröger 2000). Specimens of the Apterostigma pilosum ant complex ( Lattke 1997) were abundant in the same samples as the holotype and paratype of the new species. It is important to highlight this morphological similarity to Apterostigma species, but further studies are required to indicate any type of relationship between the new beetle and these ants.

Etymology.

The new species is named after the indigenous communities located at the type locality. The Guanano people inhabit the Vaupés River region of Colombia, from the Santa Cruz area below Mitú to Ibacaba in the lower Vaupés, near the border with Brazil ( Stenzel 2007).

Distribution.

Metopiellus guanano sp. nov. is known from two localities: the counties of Mitu and Villa Fatima, Department of Vaupes, Colombia (Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ).

Comments.

The new species belongs to the genus Metopiellus based on the shape of the third antennal segment, which is much shorter than the second (Fig. 1C View Figure 1 ), the posterior coxae contiguous or nearly so, and the mesial face of the protibia carinate and open at its base and apex (Fig. 1D View Figure 1 ) ( Comellini 1983; Asenjo et al. 2017). However, the new species appears to be unique derived, presenting a horn-like spine on the vertexal margin of the head and spinose protrusions on the pronotum, as well as a medial protrusion on the dorsum of the pronotum (Figs 1F View Figure 1 , 3B View Figure 3 , 4A, B View Figure 4 ).

Newton et al. (2005) recorded the genus Metopiellus for the first time in Colombia, and Sissa and Navarrete (2016) also documented the genus in a study of the composition and structure of rove beetles in the department of Boyacá. However, neither of these studies identified species and we here provide the first species-level record of Metopiellus , and indeed of the tribe Metopiasini , from Colombia.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

SubFamily

Pselaphinae

Genus

Metopiellus