Cryptophagus coombsi, Esser, 2018

Esser, Jens, 2018, New Cryptophagus H, 1792 (Coleoptera: Cryptophagidae) from Arizona (United States of America), Linzer biologische Beiträge 50 (2), pp. 1067-1071 : 1067-1068

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.3776442

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3796492

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8B1FE50B-D427-FFC0-C4DC-45D25444FC30

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Cryptophagus coombsi
status

sp. nov.

Cryptophagus coombsi nov.sp. ( fig. 1 View Fig )

T y p e m a t e r i a l: Holotype ♂: " Arizona, St. Catalina Mts., Molino Basin , March 7 1970 " [ FSCA] . Paratype: 1♂ " Arizona, St. Catalina Mts., Hollin Cyn. , April 4 1970 / wash-up, K. Stephan leg." [cES] ; 1♀ " Arizona, Santa Rita Mts., Madera Cyn. , Sept. 21, 1968 " [ FSCA] ; 1♂ " Arizona, Cochise Co., Chiricahua Mts. , elev. 5500 ft, Oct. 1968 " [ FSCA] ; 1♀ " Arizona, Pima Co., tucson, March 8 1969, K. Stephan leg." [ FSCA] ; 1♀ " Arizona, Santa Rita Mts., Madera Cyn, Nov. 17 1968 " [cES], 1♂ "J. W. Green , Tucson , Ariz. , III-14-46" [ CAS] .

E t y m o l o g y: Named to the honour of C. W. Coombs, who stated together with G. E. Woodroffe the identity of this species.

D e s c r i p t i o n: Male, 2.1 mm, hind wings absent, humeral callus present, hardly developed. Reddish-brown with legs and antennae slightly paler, eyes of normal size. Punctation of head and pronotum strong and dense, of the elytra less dense (basal third). Covered with yellowish pubescence, on elytra with shorter and decumbent hairs and longer hairs more erected and forming indistinct rows. Pronotum transverse, nearly 1,5 times wide as long. Anterior callosity more short but prominent, forming a hook. Lateral tooth just before the middle, broadest part of pronotum behind the lateral tooth. Margin straight between anterior callosity and lateral tooth, rounded behind lateral tooth and concave before the posterior angles. Elytra hardly rounded. Legs slender, antennae without any features, segment XI and X strongly transverse.

C o m m e n t: WOODROFFE & COOMBS (1961) knew one specimen from Tuscon (AZ) and named it "example 1". They were not sure about the identity and discussed the specimen could be conspecific with C. latens WOODROFFE & COOMBS, 1961 ( fig. 2 View Fig ). Indeed, C. coombsi nov.sp. is very similar with C. latens but well distinguishable by the shape of the pronotum. The longer hairs on elytra are standing in rows (not in latens). The body is less convex and more flattened as in latens. So far known latens has hind wings fully developed. C. discendens CASEY, 1900 ( fig. 3 View Fig ) and C. fumidulus CASEY, 1900 ( fig. 4 View Fig ) differ by their different shape of pronotum and anterior callosity.

Cryptophagus coombsi also resembles to Cryptophagus discendens CASEY, 1900 and C. fumidulus CASEY, 1900. Discendens was described from Arizona, too, C. fumidulus from California.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

FSCA

Florida State Collection of Arthropods, The Museum of Entomology

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

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