Tituboea testaceiventris Pic, 1913
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4272771 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A431893C-11D8-4480-ABE1-BB65A823C734 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6483731 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0390E147-8F2F-A734-FE6F-F0A93D92FC87 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Tituboea testaceiventris Pic, 1913 |
status |
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Tituboea testaceiventris Pic, 1913
( Figs 63–65 View Figs 63–65 , 223–225 View Figs 223–228. 223–225 )
Titubaea testaceiventris Pic, 1913d: 186 (original description).
Type locality. ‘ Syrie: Alep’.
Type material examined. SYNTYPE: 1♂, ‘ Alep / ( Syrie) [w, h] // desiré plusi … [w, h] // Titubaea / ... [partly illegible, w, h] // type [w, h] // testaceiventris / Pic [w, h] // TYPE [r, p]’ ( MNHN – coll. Pic).
Additional material examined. IRAQ: Abu Ghraib area, vii. 1993, 1 ♂, Smatana leg. ( FKCC).
Redescription. Body length: ♂♂ 4.4–4.5 mm (syntype 4.5 mm).
Male ( Fig. 223 View Figs 223–228. 223–225 ). Body orange, apices of mandibles black, antennomeres VI–VIII with darkened apices, IX–XI completely darkened, elytra orange with 4 black spots (2, 2), anterior pair of spots smaller, posterior pair larger and narrowly connected, meso- and metaventrites darkened, claws black.
Head and mandibles not enlarged ( Fig. 224 View Figs 223–228. 223–225 ). Mandibles small, left mandible longer, sharp. Labrum with anterior margin emarginated, lateral margins slightly convergent, anterior angles widely rounded, surface with group of 5–6 setae on each side anterolaterally, additional short setae placed on anterior margin laterally to central emargination. Head covered with dense short setae and small ħne punctures, only clypeus nearly impunctate and glabrous. Clypeus widely concave. Eyes small. Frons very wide, 2.81 times as wide as diameter of eye, interocular space shallowly impressed in middle. Antennae short, 0.27 times as long as body, antennomere I club-shaped, II and III very small, IV small, triangular, antennae serrated from antennomere V, antennomeres V–X wider than long.
Pronotum glabrous, lustrous, strongly transverse, 1.81 times as wide as long, widest in basal quarter, moderately convex, sparsely covered with ħne punctures and very sparsely with larger punctures. Anterior margin straight, lateral margins moderately rounded, convergent anteriorly, posterior margin nearly straight but moderately bisinuate in scutellar area. Anterior angles nearly rectangular with tip rounded, posterior angles widely rounded. All angles with setigerous pore bearing long pale seta. Lateral and posterior margins bordered, anterior margin bordered only in lateral parts, in middle border almost invisible. Posterior angles not elevated above elytral base. Scutellum triangular with rounded tip, glabrous, microsculptured, scutellar apex elevated above elytral level.
Elytra subcylindrical, 0.66 times as long as body, 1.43 times as long as wide in humeral part, glabrous, lustrous, densely covered with small confused punctures. Basal margin with complete thin border forming narrow elevated keel. Epipleura impunctate, glabrous, wide in anterior quarter, suddenly narrowed and disappearing in 1/4 of elytral length. Lateral margin of elytra widely concave in lateral view.
Legs. Protibiae moderately prolonged. Protarsomere I elongate triangular, twice as long as broad, protarsomere II triangular, 1.33 times as long as broad, length ratios of protarsomeres I–IV equal to 100-57-57-100 ( Fig. 64 View Figs 63–65 ). Metatarsi short and slender, length ratios of metatarsomeres I–IV equal to 100-75-75-150. Claws simple.
Male genitalia. Aedeagus robust, apex subtriangular with widely rounded tip. In lateral view, apex hook-like ( Figs 63, 65 View Figs 63–65 ).
Female. Unknown.
Variability. Male from Iraq has scutellum basally dark and gradually paler apically, meso-and metaventrites black, abdomen with ventrites I–III black laterally and procoxae darkened anteriorly.
Distribution. Syria ( PIC 1913d). Newly recorded from Iraq.
Comments. Tituboea ornaticollis Medvedev, 1957 from Iran may represent a synonym of T. testaceiventris according to the drawing of aedeagus in the original description (MEDVEDEV 1957). However, we avoid proposing this synonymy without examination of the holotype which was not available for the present study.
In habitus, T. testaceiventris is also similar to T. carmelica Lopatin & Chikatunov, 2001 from Israel (paratype examined, TAU, see Figs 61–62 View Figs 57–62. 57–60 , 226–228 View Figs 223–228. 223–225 ) and T. saudica Medvedev, 2012 from Saudi Arabia, but it can be distiguished by the shape of aedeagus: T. testaceiventris has apex hook-like in lateral view and separated from the rest of aedeagus by a sharp keel in dorsal view, while T. carmelica and T. saudica have apex directed up and without a keel in dorsal view. It is also evident that the structure of aedeagus of T. testaceiventris is close to other Iranian Tituboea species, particularly to T. pusilla Lopatin, 2001 and T. zarudnyi Lopatin, 2001 . Unfortunately, LOPATIN (2001) created his identiħcation key mainly based on colour characters which are extremely variable. Also, his drawings seem to be inaccurate. Thus, comprehensive comparison of the Iranian Tituboea is left for future studies.
The aedeagus of the syntype of T. testaceiventris is weakly sclerotized and particularly in lateral view unnaturally Ħattened ( Fig. 63 View Figs 63–65 ). The correct drawings of aedeagus are based on the specimen from Iraq ( Fig. 65 View Figs 63–65 ).
MNHN |
Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle |
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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Tituboea testaceiventris Pic, 1913
Bezdċk, Jan & Regalin, Renato 2015 |
testaceiventris
PIC M. 1913: 186 |