Mecyclothorax sedlaceki Darlington, 1971

Liebherr, James K., 2017, Review of Mecyclothorax Sharp (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Moriomorphini) from Papua New Guinea, with Descriptions of Five New Species, The Coleopterists Bulletin 71 (4), pp. 679-703 : 697

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1649/0010-065X-71.4.679

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:379A516C-9DC2-41A8-9B60-B8AD506A968B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5465046

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F787BF-FF93-FF89-49DB-F9847D4CFA65

treatment provided by

Diego

scientific name

Mecyclothorax sedlaceki Darlington, 1971
status

 

10. Mecyclothorax sedlaceki Darlington, 1971 View in CoL ( Figs. 7 View Figs , 28 View Figs , 32 View Fig )

Mecyclothorax sedlaceki Darlington 1971: 265 View in CoL ; Baehr 1995: 4–5, 2002: 702, 2008: 137, 2014: 126.

Diagnosis. This dark-bodied species with quadrisetose pronotum is the only Papua New Guinea species to lack the parascutellar seta in all individuals. The fuscous character of the beetles is compounded by the well-developed isodiametric microsculpture on the elytra enhancing the somber coloration. The third antennomere is apically setose as in the glossy M. kavanaughi and M. kubor , although M. sedlaceki differs also in the presence of two dorsal elytral setae in the third interval, as opposed to the elevated number of 3–5 in the other two species. The very different male aedeagal configurations of the three species ( Liebherr 2008, fig. 4; Baehr 2008, figs. 1–2) suggest that the shared antennal setation is not a synapomorphy. Standardized body length is 4.4–4.8 mm (three females including holotype).

Female Reproductive Tract. Bursa copulatrix columnar ( Fig. 28 View Figs ), length slightly over 2X maximal breadth (compressed under microslide cover slip); spermathecal duct entering bursa dorsobasally, anatomically opposite ventrobasal juncture of common oviduct and bursal base (sometimes differentiated as the vagina); spermathecal duct elongate, narrow, over 4X length of fusiform spermathecal reservoir; spermathecal gland duct entering at base of spermathecal reservoir; basal gonocoxite 1 with 2 apical fringe setae, several small setae along the medial surface; apical gonocoxite 2 broad basally due to laterally extended apodeme (as in Fig. 31 View Figs ), with 2 gracile lateral ensiform setae, 1 similarly shaped dorsal ensiform seta, 2 apical nematiform setae in fossa, situated 0.20–0.25X gonocoxite length from the apex.

Distribution and Habitat. This species is known from elevations ranging 3,200 –4,500 m on Mt. Wilhelm ( Fig. 32 View Fig ). Previously reported elevations include 3,200 m, 3,750 m, 3,900 m, and 4,250 m (type locality in Darlington 1971 and Baehr 2008). To these can be added collections from Lake Piundi at 3,480 m (25.x.1975, P. Beron, NMNHS) and the summit at 4,500 m (6.viii.1969, J. L. Gressitt, BPBM). All collections of this species comprise singleton specimens. This transect includes the main hiking trail that approaches the summit from the southeast, passing the acclimatization hut at 3,600 m ( Google Earth 2017). Above 3,800 m, all M. sedlaceki localities are in open alpine to aeolian habitat.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Mecyclothorax

Loc

Mecyclothorax sedlaceki Darlington, 1971

Liebherr, James K. 2017
2017
Loc

Mecyclothorax sedlaceki

Baehr, M. 2014: 126
Baehr, M. 2008: 137
Baehr, M. 2002: 702
Baehr, M. 1995: 4
Darlington, P. J. Jr. 1971: 265
1971
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