Loeblitoides latus Jałoszyński & Szawaryn, 2024

Jałoszyński, Paweł & Szawaryn, Karol, 2024, Characters of a new species of the Cretaceous genus † Loeblitoides affirm affinities to the extant ‘ Syndicus group’ of Stenichnini (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Scydmaeninae), Zootaxa 5497 (1), pp. 123-132 : 126-129

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5497.1.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8F0CBBEF-DA94-4A6D-B7A0-3250F31D3A87

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13685976

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DD22F04C-CE42-A519-F08D-41A2FB17FE8F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Loeblitoides latus Jałoszyński & Szawaryn
status

sp. nov.

Loeblitoides latus Jałoszyński & Szawaryn sp. nov.

( Figs 1–19 View FIGURES 1–7 View FIGURES 8–11 View FIGURES 12–13 View FIGURES 14–19 )

Type material. Holotype: ( MYANMAR): sex unknown, label: “ Myanmar amber / GPIH no. 5076 / (coll. Carsten Gröhn, CCHH 11930 ) / LOEBLITOIDES / latus Jałoszyński & Szawaryn, 2024 / HOLOTYPUS ” [red, printed] ( GPIH).

Diagnosis. Body stout, with pronotal length / width clearly below 1.5 and the elytral length / width below 1.7; antennomere 3 about 3 times as long as broad in lateral view; antennomeres 8‒10 each about as long as broad.

Description. Body ( Figs 1 View FIGURES 1–7 , 8–10 View FIGURES 8–11 , 12–13 View FIGURES 12–13 ; Supplementary animation 1) moderately slender, strongly convex, dark brown, length 2.33 mm, constriction between head and pronotum deep, between pronotum and elytra shallow but distinct.

Head ( Figs 3 View FIGURES 1–7 , 14–19 View FIGURES 14–19 ) flattened; length 0.50 mm, width 0.35 mm; vertex strongly transverse and weakly, evenly convex; tempora weakly rounded, strongly convergent posteriorly, about as long as eye (best visible in Fig. 13 View FIGURES 12–13 ); frons posteriorly confluent with vertex, transverse, its anterior margin with broad and short anteromedian expansion over frontoclypeal groove; supra-antennal tubercles weakly elevated; clypeus subtrapezoidal, distinctly transverse, weakly convex, weakly narrowing anterad, on entire width demarcated posteriorly by deep and sharply marked frontoclypeal groove; compound eyes large, strongly convex, moderately finely faceted. Punctures on vertex and frons poorly visible, setae on dorsal surface of head sparse and short, suberect. Maxillary palps ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 1–7 ) with strongly elongate, slender palpomere 3 and with strongly elongate subconical and pointed palpomere 4.

Antennae ( Figs 2–4 View FIGURES 1–7 , 8 View FIGURES 8–11 ) slender, weakly and gradually broadening from antennomere 1 to 10, length 1.23 mm. Antennomeres 3–5 each with conspicuous mesal spine inserted on distinct projection or papilla, also antennomere 6 with similar seta; antennomeres 1–6 each distinctly elongate, with antennomere 3 longest, about 3 times as long as broad in lateral view (not counting mesal tubercle), antennomere 7 indistinctly elongate, 8–10 each about as long as broad, 11 minute, tightly sitting on apex of 10.

Pronotum ( Figs 2 View FIGURES 1–7 , 9 View FIGURES 8–11 ) distinctly but not strongly elongate, broadest near anterior 1/4, length 0.58 mm, width 0.40 mm, pronotal index (length/width) 1.44. Anterior margin and sides in anterior fourth strongly, evenly rounded, lateral margins broadly and very shallowly concave behind middle; posterior corners well-marked, nearly rightangled, blunt; posterior margin nearly straight. Basal pronotal cavity poorly visible, presumably filled with dirt, about as long as half-length of pronotum and as wide as about 1/3 of pronotal width. Lateral impressions on pronotal disc strongly elongate and sharply demarcated. Punctures on pronotal disc indiscernible, setae short and sparse, suberect.

Elytra ( Figs 1, 2 View FIGURES 1–7 , 8–10 View FIGURES 8–11 , 12 View FIGURES 12–13 ) together oval, broadest slightly in front of middle; length 1.25 mm, width 0.75 mm, elytral index (length/width) 1.67; elytral apices rounded together; humeral calli poorly developed, basal elytral impressions shallow, each elytron with two deep and asetose basal foveae connected by inversely U-shaped deep groove convex anteriorly ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 8–11 ). Punctures fine and inconspicuous; elytra covered with long, dense suberect setae.

Mesoscutellar shield ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 8–11 ) elongate subtriangular, only its very tip projecting posteriorly beyond step-wise border between elytral articulating lobe and elytral disc.

Legs slender and lacking peculiar characters except for protibiae ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 8–11 ; best visible in right tibia) slightly curved inwards (i.e., mesally) in distal regions; all tarsi with tarsomeres distally reducing in length ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 1–7 ) and with long claws ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 1–7 ).

Etymology. The Latin adjective latus , broad, refers to the much stouter body of this species than in the previously known † Loeblites separatus .

Distribution. Hukawng Valley near Tanai village, Kachin State, northern Myanmar; late Albian-early Cenomanian, mid-Cretaceous.

Remarks. † Loeblitoides latus can be easily distinguished from † L. separatus by its stouter pronotum and elytra, and different proportions of antennomeres. In † L. latus , the pronotal ratio length/width is merely 1.44 (vs. 2.00 in † L. separatus ), and the elytral ratio equals 1.67 (vs. 2.08 in † L. separatus ). The antennomere 3 in the new species is clearly more elongate, while antennomeres 7‒10 are much stouter, each almost as long as broad (each clearly elongate in † L. separatus ). The differences in proportions of the pronotum and elytra cannot be attributed to a different sex of the same species, as such profound differences are not known to characterize sexes in any known extant Stenichnini species. Also, the shapes of antennomeres in otherwise unmodified antennae are too different to represent sexual dimorphism (which in extant Stenichnini is either not expressed in antennal features or evident by some conspicuously modified antennomeres in males). † Loeblitoides latus has also a distinctly broader neck region than that in the slenderer † L. separatus . Still, the neck is slightly narrower than half width of the head (including eyes), and therefore the generic diagnosis does not need to be modified to include this variation.

GPIH

Geologisch-Palaeontologiches Institut der Universitt Haemburg

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