Oxytelus acriculiclypeatus, Lü, 2024
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5415.4.9 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DFD45E44-A4BA-4F42-B859-3C1F35BF4695 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10711383 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FBCB12-FFA6-3155-FF47-F803FB4A6B00 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Oxytelus acriculiclypeatus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Oxytelus acriculiclypeatus sp. nov.
( Figs. 1–2 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 )
Type material. Holotype: ♁, MALAYSIA, Borneo Sabah, Danum Valley , 4°58′N 117°47′E, Flight Intercept Trap, June 1999 // BMNH (E), 2005-177, H. Mendel // Oxytelus acriculiclypeatus GoogleMaps ♁ HOLOTYPE det. LÜ Liang, 2024 ( BMNH) . Paratypes: 2♁♁, Borneo Sabah, Danum Valley , 4°58′N 117°47′E, Flight Intercept Trap, June 1999 // BMNH (E), 2005-177, H. Mendel // Oxytelus acriculiclypeatus GoogleMaps ♁ PARATYPE det. LÜ Liang, 2024 ( BMNH).
Description. Body ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ) medium-sized, glossy, dark brown to blackish. First two antennomeres, maxillary palpi, and legs yellowish brown and elytra brown and vaguely translucent. Body length about 4.5 mm.
Male. Head ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 & 2A View FIGURE 2 ) sub-pentagonal, widest at eyes or temples (accurately at temples). Disc bearing scarce setae and covered with large punctures. Clypeus elongated triangularly, protruding beyond anterior margin of supra-antennal ridges, as long as 1/4–1/3 head length, slightly depressed in central part, surface glabrous and occasionally and slightly coriaceous; anterior margin narrow and pointed in middle. Epistomal suture with lateral portions lightly incurved and running posteriorly to level of anterior margin of eyes. Vertex slightly convex but flat and feebly coriaceous near clypeus, posterior part limited (holotype) or not (paratypes) in median portion; midlongitudinal suture indistinct (holotype) or missing (paratypes); paralateral sutures vague. Eyes with fine facets, convex, and shorter than temples. Temples slightly rugose, posterolaterally dilated. Occipital suture with middle portion distinct (in holotype), punctately connected (in one paratype), or completely missing (in the other paratype); nuchal ridge interrupted in middle, dorsobasal ridge present.
Mandible stout, falciform, strongly incurved; apex sharply pointed. Antenna (type II) as long as or slightly longer than head and pronotum together, with apical antennomere slightly shorter than two preceding together, antennomeres 4–11 with basal dish ( Fig. 1A–C View FIGURE 1 ).
Pronotum ( Figs. 1D–F View FIGURE 1 , 2A View FIGURE 2 ) transverse, broadest at near anterior 1/4, as wide as head or slightly broader. Disc 3-sulcate, median sulcus and two curved paramedial sulci deep and punctate, two paralateral depressions punctate; lateral margin even in front and indistinctly crenulate behind, posterolateral angles rounded. Elytra ( Fig. 1D–F View FIGURE 1 ) punctate and sparsely pubescent, but not rugose, without lateral longitudinal ridge.
Abdomen barely coriaceous and sparsely pubescent, broadest at segment VI. Sternite VII ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ) with posterior margin straight and with densely haired patch in middle. Sternite VIII ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ) with subbasal ridge continuous and straight; posterior margin shallowly and narrowly bi-emarginate near middle; central plate short, broadly and shortly protruding in middle, with apical margin weakly emarginate and carinate.
Aedeagus ( Fig. 2D–H View FIGURE 2 ). Median lobe elongate and slightly broader basally, ventral edge of apical orifice with two pointed processes near middle, with sclerite-like or membranous structures in apical part of median lobe; apico-medial hook with apical tip pointed and downcurved and with transverse carina behind tip, basal process short; dorsal membranous area covering most of apical part of dorsum and nearly across length of median lobe. Parameres arm-like, with apex flattened, a little broadened and rounded, with ridge on ventral and lateral surface of each piece and screw-tracked at elbow bend, at near 1/2 of apical arm situated with long seta.
Female. Unknown.
Distribution (type locality). Malaysia (Borneo: Sabah).
Etymology. The specific epithet is derived from two Latin adjectives acriculus and clypeatus , referring to the sharp clypeal tip.
Remarks. This species closely resembles O. megaceros and was found in overlapping areas ( Lü & Zhou 2015). However, it can be distinguished from the latter by several male morphological features (cf. Fig. 11 in Lü & Zhou 2012, Fig. 34 in 2015): the anterior clypeal margin with a sharper tip than that of O. megaceros , the posterior margin of sternite VIII with a broader central plate and a carina lying across the whole width of the posterior margin of central plate, the sharper and more slender processes on the apical orifice, and the apico-medial hook with a smaller apical tip but without the connecting scape that attaches it to the body of aedeagal median lobe.
LÜ |
St. Petersburg University |
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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