Bidessonotus annae Miller

Miller, Kelly B., 2016, New species of Bidessonotus Regimbart, 1895 with a review of the South American species (Coleoptera, Adephaga, Dytiscidae, Hydroporinae, Bidessini), ZooKeys 622, pp. 95-127 : 98

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.622.9155

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E69EDCC4-5841-4284-93B9-AE8D866A8EB4

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9BEB8E25-1EE8-46F8-A78E-F7D7CC5A2ABD

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:9BEB8E25-1EE8-46F8-A78E-F7D7CC5A2ABD

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Bidessonotus annae Miller
status

sp. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Coleoptera Dytiscidae

Bidessonotus annae Miller View in CoL sp. n. Figs 5, 12, 30

Type locality.

Venezuela, Apure State, Communidad Caño Gato, on Rio Sipapo, 4°58.838'N, 67°44.341'W.

Diagnosis.

Specimens of this species are brown with irregular, indistinct paler regions. The prosternal process is laceolate, shallowly sulcate and apically pointed. The female elytron is unmodified. The apical blade of the male median lobe is slender and curved with an elongate, curved, apically narrowly rounded process at the apicoventral angle, and the dorsal margin narrowly truncate (Fig. 12a). The lateral lobes are nearly bilaterally symmetrical (Fig. 12b, c), though the left lateral lobe has the apex somewhat more broad with a more distinctive, angulate expansion on the ventral margin (Fig. 12c). Male genitalia are similar to those of Bidessonotus tibialis but the apical blade in Bidessonotus annae is more slender, more strongly curved, and more truncate along the dorsal margin, and the anteroventral process is very slender, strongly curved and directed ventrad whereas it is somewhat broader and directed apically in Bidessonotus tibialis .

Description.

Measurements. TL = 1.7-1.8 mm, GW = 0.8-0.9 mm, PW = 0.7-0.8 mm, HW = 0.5-0.6 mm, EW = 0.3 mm, TL/GW = 2.0-2.1, HW/EW = 1.9. Body shape elongate, lateral outline discontinuous between pronotum and elytron.

Coloration (Fig. 5). Head yellow orange. Pronotum yellow orange, darker along posterior margin. Elytron base color orange brown with pale diffuse areas anteriorly and medially, and a distinctive pale macula apically (Fig. 5); without purplish iridescence. Ventral surfaces orange on all surfaces, some sutures darker.

Sculpture and structure. Head with anterior clypeal margin evenly rounded; surface smooth and shiny, impuncate, slightly microreticulate; antennomeres III-X moderately broad, slightly asymmetrical. Pronotum widest near posterior angles, lateral margins evenly curved; basal striae moderately impressed, extending anteriorly more than halfway across surface; posterior margins distinctly undulate; surface overall shiny, slightly microreticulate, finely punctate. Elytron with lateral margins broadly curved; basal stria distinct, elongate, moderately impressed; surface of elytron covered with fine punctation, surface between punctures matte, microreticulate. Prosternal process elongate, lanceolate, apically pointed, surface broadly convex throughout length. Metaventrite with distinctive carinae extending from medial apex of metaventrite process posteriorly to near posterior margin at anterior terminus of metacoxal lines; anteriorly very closely approximated, divergent to posterior margin; surface of metaventrite shiny with few micropunctures. Metacoxae shiny with few micropunctures; metacoxal lines distinct, broad apically, broadly curved with external surface convex, convergent anteriorly. Basal abdominal ventrites punctate, other surfaces of abdominal ventrites smooth, relatively shiny.

Male genitalia. Apex of median lobe in lateral aspect with apical blade narrow, curved, with apicoventral elongate, curved process, ventral margin subtruncate, proximal margin curved (Fig. 12a). Right lateral lobe in lateral aspect with apical segment longer than proximal segment; apical segment expanded medially, apex rounded (Fig. 12b); left lateral lobe with apical segment similar to right, but broader and more distinctly and prominently angulate along ventral margin (Fig. 12c).

Variation. Only a single male specimen examined.

Sexual dimorphism. Only a single male specimen examined.

Etymology.

This species is named annae after the author’s daughter, Annie Miller.

Distribution.

This species is known from one locality in Apure State, Venezuela (Fig. 30).

Habitat.

The habitat where the type series was collected is a sandy forest stream with large deposits of leaf pack along the margins.

Type material.

Holotype in MIZA, male labeled, "VENEZUELA: Apure State 4°58.838'N, 67°44.341'W, 95m Communidad Caño Gato, on Rio Sipapo: 16.i.2009; leg. Short, Miller, Camacho, Joly, & García VZ09-0116-01X; along stream/ SM0842863 KUNHM-ENT [barcode label]/ HOLOTYPE Bidessonotus annae Miller, 2016 [red label with black line border]." No other specimens examined.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dytiscidae

Genus

Bidessonotus