Aphelocerus bufustis, OPITZ, 2005
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1206/0003-0090(2005)293<0001:CNHAEO>2.0.CO;2 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E787FE-994C-1130-FD40-FA16FE61FC0D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aphelocerus bufustis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Aphelocerus bufustis , new species Figures 32 View Figs , 80 View Figs , 151 View Figs , 180 View Figs , 273 View Figs ; map 22
HOLOTYPE: Male. Venezuela, Caracas , Valey, 11VI1992, L. R. Reynolds ( FMNH). (Specimen point mounted; pygidium, sixth visible sternum, and hand printed sex label affixed to paper point; support card, white; locality label, white, machine and hand print ed; collector label, white, machine printed; FMNH repository label, white, machine printed; holotype label, red, machine printed; holotype label, red, machine printed; plastic vial with aedeagus.)
PARATYPES: None.
DIAGNOSIS: In comparison to other members of the batesi group, the elytra of this beetle are atypically shallow (fig. 32), the elytral middiscal setal tuft (fig. 180) is comprised of two very small patches, and the antennal club is unusually large.
DESCRIPTION: Size: Length 6 mm; width 2 mm. Integument: Cranium and pronotum piceous, with a cyanescent hue, remainder castaneus. Vestiture: Head, prothorax, elytron, and protibia vested predominantly with dark setae, pterothorax, femora, and mesometatibiae vested predominantly with pale setae; tarsi vested with dark setae; elytral discal setal tuft, bipartite, setal patches particularly small. Head: Width across eyes about equal to width across pronotum (36:37), finely punctated, interocular depression and frontal umbo shallow; eyes subspherical, moderately convex; antenna as in figure 80. Thorax: Pronotum (fig. 273) subequal in width and length (37:40), coarsely punctate, subapical depression faintly indented, side margins feebly arcuate; elytra conspicuously shallow, depth at humerus 18, greatest depth in posterior half 18. Abdomen: Pygidium with posterior margin evenly arcuate. Male genitalia: As in figure 151.
NATURAL HISTORY: The only available specimen was collected in June.
DISTRIBUTION (map 22): Known only from the type locality.
ETYMOLOGY: The trivial name is a compound name from the Latin prefix bu (large) and the Latin masculine fustis (club). I refer to the extraordinarily large antennal club characteristic of this species.
FMNH |
Field Museum of Natural History |
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.