Epimetopus mendeli, Fikáček & Barclay & Perkins & Sw, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5328783 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038687B2-FFFC-063A-C4CC-853BFBADFB6D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Epimetopus mendeli |
status |
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Epimetopus mendeli View in CoL species group
All three members of this species group can be easily distinguished from all other described species of Epimetopus by the combination of the following characters:
1. eyes incompletely divided into dorsal and ventral portion: anterior ocular canthus present, posterior canthus absent [both anterior and posterior canthi are developed and meet each other in many other Epimetopus species , hence their eyes are completely divided into dorsal and ventral halves; both canthi are reduced in an unidentified species from KSEM examined during this study];
2. median lobe of the aedeagus complex, bearing lateral projections ( Figs. 3–5 View Figs , lap) in the basal portion, and two pairs on the apex – longer ventral ones ( Figs. 26–29 View Figs , vl) and shorter dorsal ones ( Figs. 26–29 View Figs , dl) [in contrast, the median lobe is simple in all other described Epimetopus species , lacking lateral projections at the base and not apically subdivided into two pairs of lobes];
3. elytra with alternating ridge-like and flat intervals, flat intervals without series of elongate tubercles [elytral intervals between elytral ridges bear serially arranged elongate tubercles in several other Epimetopus species ];
4. body large, more than 2.2 mm long, and general body coloration dark brown [this distinguishes the species treated here from the species of the E. costatus group which also have eyes incompletely divided by a canthus, but are characterized by a small, rufescent body].
Based on the combination of these characters, it seems probable that the three species treated in this paper form a monophyletic group. Although this requires testing by a phylogenetic analysis in the future, we here formally define the group as the ‘ Epimetopus mendeli species group’ in order to facilitate orientation within the genus prior to a complete taxonomic and phylogenetic revision.
All three species included in the E. mendeli species group are very similar in external characters, and can only be reliably distinguished by the morphology of the aedeagus.
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