Notopilo brevistriatus, Bartlett & Lambkin, 2022
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5220.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A49322AD-8E50-412D-84E3-E7C2D07EDBEC |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7459479 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87B8-295B-8B0C-FF5B-FF5A696AFF3A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Notopilo brevistriatus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Notopilo brevistriatus sp. nov.
ZooBank registration: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:764B7F7D-3EF7-4FB2-AB9F-FC3120248F28
( Figs 54 View FIGURES 48–65 , 91 View FIGURES 66–101 , 126 View FIGURES 102–137 , 169 View FIGURES 162–173 ; Map 3)
HOLOTYPE ♁: Western Australia: WA: Diamond Tree State Forest (near Manjimup) 34°19′12″S 116°07′15″E 22 February 1995 M.J. Payne // under karri bark ( WAM E88406 View Materials ) GoogleMaps . PARATYPES (18): Western Australia: Karridale, W. Austr., ll.1959 leg. H.Demarz (2, RGCM); K. G. Sound // K 304534 (1 ♀, AM); the “Gloucester Tree”, 4km SE Pemberton, WA, 3 jan 1986, C. Reid, under Eucalyptus bark (1, ANIC); Australia, WA06/181, 10km s. York , 31.97310S, 116.80792E, 190m GoogleMaps , 7.3.2006, M.Baehr (1 ♁, WAM E113542 About WAM , ex RGCM); Australia, WA06/194, 10km wsw. Walpole, 34.99679S, 116.65066E, 66m GoogleMaps , 11.3.2006, M.Baehr (1, RGCM); SWA // H. J. Carter Coll. P. 20.4.22 // COL-65654 (1, on card with COL-65655, NMV); GoogleMaps same data as previous except COL-65655 (1 on card with COL-65654, NMV); S WA, HIC, 12.13 // Agriculture (Dept) GoogleMaps Western Australia 49866 (1, WADA); WA: Quinninup 34°26′S 116°15′E GoogleMaps 29 December 1994 M.J. Payne // karri–marri–jarrah forest/ under karri bark (1, WAM E88405 View Materials ); WA: Quinninup 34°26′S 116°15′E GoogleMaps 22 December 1995 M.J. Payne // under karri bark (1, WAM E88409 View Materials ); WA: Quinninup 34°26′S 116°15′E GoogleMaps 12 December 1995 M.J. Payne (1, WAM E88408 View Materials ); WA: Quinninup 34°26′S 116°15′E GoogleMaps 28 November 1995 M.J. Payne // under karri bark regen (1, WAM E88407 View Materials ); Denmark 34.57 S 117.21 E GoogleMaps Western Australia 30 jan. 1988 R.P. McMillan (1, WAM E88350 View Materials ); Denmark 34°57′S 117°21E GoogleMaps Western Australia December 1998 M.L. & S. Jones (1, WAM E88352 View Materials ); WA: Denmark 34°57′S 117°21′E GoogleMaps , 10 January 1997 R.P. McMillan, at MV light at night (1, WAM E88351 View Materials ) .
Diagnosis. Pronotum rounded laterally, disc smooth with minimal punctation; elytra dark with orange fasciate and apical maculations, humeral maculae absent, punctation without obvious nodules, 8 th stria complete, striae terminating within fascia; femora yellow basally, brown apically, tarsi with three ventral tarsal pads.
Notopilo brevistriatus sp. nov. is easily separated from the superficially similar N. variipes comb. nov. by the lack of obvious nodules within elytral punctation, the absence of elytral punctation posterior to fascia, the wider separation of the eyes and by its Western Australian distribution.
Description. Habitus: Fig. 169 View FIGURES 162–173 . Total length: 12–16.62 mm (holotype 14.9 mm). Head: Vertex, frons, genae and submentum blackish, clypeus and supra-antennal elevations reddish-black, anteclypeus transparent yellow/ orange, antennae, labrum and palpi orange; eyes separated by 0.85–1.1 eye widths (holotype 0.85); vertex and frons mostly smooth with only occasional small seta-associated punctations, frons slightly raised above clypeus; genae and submentum wrinkled; exterior margins of terminal palpomeres about 2–2.2 times (maxillae) and 2.3–3 times (labium) the length of inside edges; antennae quite long, reaching beyond base of pronotum; eyes and most of cranium vested with erect pale setae, frons with slightly shorter medially-directed setae. Prothorax: Blackishbrown, venter, pronotal collar and arch sometimes paler; pronotum 1.2–1.3 times longer than wide (holotype 1.24), sides round, widest at middle; subapical depression deeply v-shaped, disc centrally sulcate (sulcus smooth, more open than linear) and with obscure lateral sulci, surface smooth, almost impunctate; moderately distributed with long erect setae and shorter finer multi-directional setae. Pterothorax: Ventrites reddish-brown, vested with short pale and occasional longer setae; elytra dark reddish-brown with orange markings (each elytron with a large apical macula and a transverse fascia), length to width ratio 2.95–3.12:1 (holotype 3.06); 8 th stria beginning near base, all striae terminating at or within fascia, punctation large, circular, apparently without nodules (vestigial nodules visible in some specimens as darker pigmented spots on lateral inside edges of punctures), interstices smooth, epipleurae extending into apical curve, interstriae with very fine short semi-reclinate setae (>1 per puncture) and longer thicker erect setae (<1 per puncture), intrafoveal setae very short; hindwing with CuA 3+4 cross-vein complete, CuA 1 crossvein absent. Legs: Mostly yellow, tip of femora, base of tibiae and tarsi brown, ventral tarsal pads paler; femora slender (profemora thicker but not particularly swollen). Abdomen: Ventrites orange. Male genitalia: Tegmen ( Fig. 54 View FIGURES 48–65 ) broadest apically, slightly narrowed between parameroid lobes and tegminal arms, dorsal sinus broad and opening apically, just less than one-third tegmen length, ventral very short, about two-thirds as long, apodeme about one-quarter tegmen length; median lobe as in ( Fig. 91 View FIGURES 66–101 ); pygidium as in Fig. 126 View FIGURES 102–137 .
Etymology. The specific epithet brevistriatus (from Latin ‘brevis’ meaning short, and Latin ‘stria’ meaning line) refers to the shortened elytral puncture rows of this species which are not extended beyond the posterior margin of the transverse fascia.
Variation. The dark area posterior of the elytral fascia is almost as dark as the pronotum in some specimens and about as light as the area anterior to the elytral fascia in other specimens.
Biology. The specimens from Wilson Inlet were collected at light while the “Gloucester Tree” specimen was found under bark of Eucalyptus . Specimens have been collected during the period December to March.
Distribution (Map 3). Notopilo brevistriatus sp. nov. is known only from southwest Western Australia.
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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