Pinodytes delnorte Peck & Cook, 2011

Peck, Stewart B. & Cook, Joyce, 2011, Systematics, distributions and bionomics of the Catopocerini (eyeless soil fungivore beetles) of North America (Coleoptera: Leiodidae: Catopocerinae) 3077, Zootaxa 3077 (1), pp. 1-118 : 44-45

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3077.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5243859

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B37553-3D5F-A15E-9DC0-FC3EFEA30D36

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pinodytes delnorte Peck & Cook
status

sp. nov.

Pinodytes delnorte Peck & Cook View in CoL , new species

( Figs. 36 View FIGURES 28–36 , 310 View FIGURE 310 , 327–334 View FIGURES 327–334 )

Type material. Holotype: male ( SBPC). UNITED STATES. California: Del Norte Co., Jed Smith Redw. St. Pk., 10 km E Crescent City, N41°46’ W124°05’, mixed forest litter Ber., 40m, 30.V.03, S. Peck, 03-87 GoogleMaps . Paratypes (76). UNITED STATES. California, same data as holotype, 5 ( SBPC) GoogleMaps ; Del Norte Co., Jed Smith Redw. St. Pk. , N41°48’ W124°07’, 4.Vi.2003, 65m, S. Peck, 03-92, redwood for. litter Ber., 1 ( SBPC) GoogleMaps ; Del Norte Co., Myrtle Ck. Botanical Res., 18kmNE Crescent City , N41°48’ W124°03’, 31.V.2003, 30m, S. Peck, 03-88, mixed for. litter, 9 ( SBPC) GoogleMaps ; Del Norte Co., Del Norte Redw. St. Pk., 10kmS Crescent City , N41°42’ W124°08’, 2.VI. 2003, 300m, S. Peck, 03-91, redwood for. litter Ber., 2 ( SBPC) GoogleMaps ; Del Norte Co., nr. Fort Dick , 21.V.1957, redwood floor, 1 ( SBPC) ; Del Norte Co., Crescent City , 19.IX.1978, T.R. Haig, Ber. redwood duff, 25 ( CSCA) ; Del Norte Co., Jeddiah Smith State Pk., 25.XI.1981, F. W. Merickel, Sequoia leaf litter Ber., 25 ( WFBM) ; Del Norte Co., 2miN Fort Dick , 21.XI.1953, V.D. Roth, 4 ( EMEC) ; Del Norte Co., Fort Dick , 2.XII.1966, C.W. O’Brien, Ber. shore debris, 4 ( FSCA) .

Additional material examined. We examined an additional 137 specimens (see Appendix) for a total of 214 specimens.

Distribution. Specimens ( Fig. 310 View FIGURE 310 ) are known only from Del Norte and Humboldt counties, in northwestern California.

Diagnostic description. Total length 1.58–1.84 mm; total width 0.80–0.90 mm. Dark reddish brown; elongateoval in shape ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 28–36 ). Head. Finely punctate, shining, with reticulate microsculpture. Eyes absent. Antenna ( Fig. 327 View FIGURES 327–334 ) with antennomere 2 slightly longer than 3; antennomere 5 larger than 4 and 6; antennomere 7 clearly larger than 8; antennomeres 9 and 10 lack visible sensory vesicles. Pronotum. Finely punctate, punctures separated by 2– 4 diameters; with a few larger punctures bearing short setae; with reticulate microsculpture. Widest at posterior one-third; slightly narrower than elytra; sides weakly rounded, narrowing in apical two-thirds; apical margin weakly emarginate, basal margin nearly straight; anterior angles broadly rounded, basal angles weakly obtuse, narrowly rounded. Elytra. Moderately densely, coarsely punctate; punctures finer near apex; punctures joined by fine strioles forming an imbricate pattern; subbasally with impressed transverse striole joining a row of punctures. Slightly wider than pronotum; sides about parallel in basal one-third, then narrowing to apex. Legs. Protibia ( Fig. 328 View FIGURES 327–334 ) narrow at base, broad apically in both sexes; 2 curved spines near apex of outer margin; apical one-half of inner margin with fine, dense spines. Mesotibia ( Fig. 329 View FIGURES 327–334 ) narrower than protibia in both sexes; with strong spines on outer margin, apical two-fifths of inner margin, and apically. Metatibia ( Fig. 330 View FIGURES 327–334 ) slender, with swollen apex in male, unmodified in female; with slender spines in apical one-half, spinose apically. Metafemur ( Fig. 330 View FIGURES 327–334 ) slender. Male protarsomeres ( Fig. 328 View FIGURES 327–334 ) not or weakly expanded; protarsomere 1 as long as 2 and 3 combined; bearing elongate setae laterally and thin, broad, colorless phanerae ventrally. Mesotarsomeres without phanerae. Venter. Mesoventrite ( Fig. 334 View FIGURES 327–334 ) carinate; longitudinal carina with median tooth; broad and smooth anterior to tooth; excavated behind transverse carina; patches of dense, white setae lateral to longitudinal carina. Male genitalia. Median lobe of aedeagus ( Figs. 331, 332 View FIGURES 327–334 ) elongate, moderately slender, dorsoventrally curved, with elongate, narrow apex. Inverted internal sac ( Fig. 332 View FIGURES 327–334 ) with a small sclerotized structure and numerous short, broad spines. Parameres ( Figs. 331, 332 View FIGURES 327–334 ) slender, shorter than median lobe, each with two apical setae. Spermatheca. Elongate ( Fig. 333 View FIGURES 327–334 ), curved, tubular.

Etymology. The name delnorte , a noun in apposition, refers to the occurrence of this species in Del Norte Co., California.

CSCA

California State Collection of Arthropods

WFBM

W.F. Barr Entomological Collection

EMEC

Essig Museum of Entomology

FSCA

Florida State Collection of Arthropods, The Museum of Entomology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Leiodidae

Genus

Pinodytes

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