Cymatodera cicatricula Rifkind

Rifkind, Jacques, 2015, New species of Cymatodera Gray (Coleoptera: Cleridae: Tillinae) from México and Central America, with notes on others, Zootaxa 3946 (4), pp. 519-552 : 525-526

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3946.4.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7A5F142A-EEDE-453A-9CB5-241917A83921

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6110735

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0151C53E-FFB5-FFB1-9DDC-FD14457389C5

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cymatodera cicatricula Rifkind
status

sp. nov.

Cymatodera cicatricula Rifkind , n. sp.

( Figs. 11–14 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 )

Type specimens. Holotype male: México, Chiapas, 2.5 km W Cinco Cerros, at lite, 15 Oct. 1988, R. Turnbow. Holotype deposited in CASC. Paratypes: MEXICO, CHIAPAS: 1, [label reads “Oaxaca”– doubtless a misprint] MX 190. 2 km W Chiapas Hotel Paty, 20-X-2001, F. Skillman & J. Davidson, at light; 1, Hwy. 190, 7 km E Rizo de Oro, Hotel Paty, June 21, 1991, oak / pine forest, at UV light, J. & E. Beierl, colls.; 1, Hotel Paty, nr. Riso de Oro, X-26-1990, at light, F. Hovore; 1, Município de Cintalapa La Mina, 914 m, 14-IX-1981, D. E. & P. M. Breedlove and C. G. Whitefield; 1, 2 mi. SW La Cruces, VIII-8 -[19]54, A. A. Alcorn; OAXACA: 1, Tequisistlán, IV-5-1962, F. D. Parker, L. A. Stange, collectors; 1, Tequisistlán, 4 Jan. 1956. Paratypes are deposited in JNRC, RFTB, SEMC, UCRC, and WFBM.

Diagnosis. No other Cymatodera species possesses the following combination of characteristics: a subtly unique variegated elytral patterning as in Fig. 11 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ; the presence of elongate whitish setae on the pronotum and elytra; coarse, cribrate elytral punctures arranged in series; sinuate elytral apices. The male is further distinguished by the shape of its pygidium ( Figs. 12–13 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ), and its scabrous metaventrite ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ), which bears an elongate pair of shallow carinae. The new species’ affinities are unclear, but it probably belongs to a group (including C. bellamyi , for example) wherein the male metaventrite has become rather flattened and asperate or scabrous — presumably a modification for grasping the female during copulation.

Description. (Holotype). Length: 14.90 mm. Form: elongate; cylindrical. Color: integument reddish brown; mouthparts, antennae, and tarsi paler; elytral anterior 3/4 decorated with dark brown and pale testaceous, transverse, sinuate fasciae of variable breadth, definition and completeness ( Fig. 11 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ); posterior 1/4 uniformly reddish brown. Head: measured across eyes, wider than pronotum; surface finely, densely punctulate; frons conspicuously, if rather thinly, set with anteriorly directed, wavy, reclinate and suberect whitish setae of moderate length, forming a leaflike pattern with its apex toward the cranium; antennae of moderate length, overall rather subflattened; antennomere 2 subconical, shorter than 3; antennomeres 3–5 subserrate, subequal in length, each longer than antennomeres 6–10, which are slightly serrate; antennomere 11 rather short (not longer than antennomere 10), and slightly tapered apically. Pronotum: elongate (ratio of length to width 7:4); disk subflattened; surface closely, rather fine punctate and rugulose, moderately densely and conspicuously clothed with short, subrecumbent, white setae, interspersed with fewer longer, erect, white setae. Scutellum: densely setose. Elytra: subparallel, elongate (ratio of length to width 33:14), widest at approximately posterior 1/3; anterior margin transverse; sides slightly, gradually inflexed medially, broadly rounded posteriorly; apices individually sinuate, dehiscent; surface rather coarsely, cribrately and serially punctate, punctures growing smaller posterior to middle, obsolete on posterior 1/4 which is instead shallowly and finely roughened; vestiture on anterior 3/4 rather sparse, consisting of short, reclinate, pale setae, interspersed with fewer longer, erect pale setae; posterior 1/4 more densely set with fine, pale, reclinate setae, intermingled with fewer elongate, pale setae. Metaventrite: rather broadly subflattened; surface densely covered with fine, pale, suberect setae of moderate length; integument finely but distinctly asperate–rugulose, with a pair of shallow, elongate, longitudinal, scarlike carinae ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ). Abdomen: ventrites 1–4 with surface finely granulate–punctate, hind margins broadly truncate, rather deeply, arcuately membranous; ventrite 5 ( Fig. 13 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ) with sides oblique, hind angles acute, posterior margin deeply, arcuately emarginate; ventrite 6 ( Fig. 13 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ) elongate, rectangulate, surface distinctly granulate–rugulose; each side with a slightly arcuate carina extending from base to posterior margin; disk with an indistinct, wishbone–shaped ridge; hind angles extended into short projections; posterior margin otherwise transverse; tergite 5 with hind margin bisinuate laterally, and a broad V–shaped inflection at middle; tergite 6 ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 11 – 14. 11 ) narrower and shorter than ventrite 6, sides slightly, arcuately tapering posteriorly; hind margin subtruncate. Aedeagus: phallus slightly upcurved posteriorly, with apex bearing a slightly pointed knob; lateral lobes feebly incurved at apex.

Variation. Females have the metaventrite shining, moderately setose and finely punctate, and without carinae. Ventrite 5 has the sides obliquely convergent, and the posterior margin shallowly, arcuately emarginate at middle. Ventrite 6 and tergite 6 are oblique laterally and rounded at the posterior margin, either conjointly or with the tergite slightly surpassing the ventrite. Specimens range from 11.0 mm — 14.9 mm in length. Some individuals are paler overall than the holotype.

Etymology. The specific name makes reference to the scarlike metasternal carinae of the male.

Distribution. Known from western Chiapas state and eastern Oaxaca state, México.

Biology. Beetles were attracted to light in oak / pine forest.

SEMC

University of Kansas - Biodiversity Institute

UCRC

University of California, Riverside

WFBM

W.F. Barr Entomological Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cleridae

Genus

Cymatodera

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF