Nothocyphon isolaeregis, Zwick, Peter, 2015

Zwick, Peter, 2015, Australian Marsh Beetles (Coleoptera: Scirtidae). 7. Genus Nothocyphon, new genus, Zootaxa 3981 (3), pp. 301-359 : 333

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3981.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:34F39733-E55C-4695-8749-E6811F675740

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6095388

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039F8D3E-FF9D-FFC6-9696-4513FC8CFB1F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nothocyphon isolaeregis
status

sp. nov.

Nothocyphon isolaeregis , n. sp.

( Figs. 82, 86 View FIGURES 82 – 86 , 91 View FIGURE 91 )

Type material: 1 ♂ holotype, 1 ♂ paratype: Helodes (Cyphon) ovensensis Blkb. King Island 10553 \ King I. TAS. Lea ( SAMA). Additional paratypes: 5♂, King Island, TAS. Lea \ Helodes ovensensis, Blackb. ( SAMA). 1♂ (genitalia naturally everted): King Isl. coll [illegible] 12.06 \ Helodes (Cyphon) ovensensis Bl. King Island [on reverse side:] A. M. Lea coll 12 0 6 \ Cyphon fenestratus Id. by J. Armstrong \ det fenestratus (MV, T-21999).

Habitus. BL 2.6−2.8mm, BL/BW ~1.7, slender. Light brown, head darkest, humeral area a little paler than rest. One specimen has a faint curved macula on the elytron like N. donnabuangi has. The head punctures are fine, dense, and rough, the integument appears scaly. Pronotal punctures little larger, granular, spaced, integument shiny. Elytral punctures normal, much larger. Semi-erect short yellowish pilosity.

Male ( Figs. 82, 86 View FIGURES 82 – 86 ). Pala truncate and parallel-sided. The parameroids are of equal width over their entire length. They curve around the trigonium, their apex is scooped out, spoon-like. The flat trigonium is longer than the parameroids, it resembles a bottle: base about three times wider than bottleneck, apex again wider, truncate or indistinctly concave, with a few rough scales along edge.

The separate flat parameres have a long basal rod and a short, caudally toothed plate. Left and right paramere of a given specimen often differ in details ( Fig. 91 View FIGURE 91 ).

Female. Unknown.

Etymology. Endemic to King Island. The name is a noun in apposition, an agglutination of two Latin nouns in the genitive case meaning “from the island of the king“.

SAMA

South Australia Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Scirtidae

Genus

Nothocyphon

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