Orizabus thomasi Ratcliffe and Cave, 2010

Ratcliffe, Brett C. & Cave, Ronald D., 2010, New species of Orizabus Fairmaire (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae: Pentodontini) from Mexico and Guatemala, with a revised key and checklist of the species in the genus, Insecta Mundi 2010 (127), pp. 1-16 : 7-9

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5164423

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5167919

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038387E2-C26A-FFD2-FF64-F9E05F66B6E2

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Orizabus thomasi Ratcliffe and Cave
status

sp. nov.

Orizabus thomasi Ratcliffe and Cave , new species

( Fig. 14-16 View Figure 14-16 , 26 View Figure 26 , 29-30 View Figure 27-30 )

Type Material. Holotype male labeled: “ MEXICO: Veracruz / Excola , el. 9310'/ 19 o 06.46'N, 97 o 12.77'W / 23-IV-09, D. B. Thomas ” GoogleMaps . Allotype female and one female paratype labeled “ MEXICO: Veracruz, 5 Km W/ Excola, El 9026 ft, 7 May 2008 / 19 o 06.60'N; 97 o 12.77'W / 19 o 06.46'N, 97 o 12.77´W / D. Thomas & D. Robacker ”. Two male pratypes labeled “ MEXICO / Veracruz / Cofre de Perote /Mateu-leg./ Coll. Martínez /Sept.974” GoogleMaps . Holotype and allotype deposited at the University of Nebraska State Museum (Lincoln, NE). Two paratypes deposited in the Canadian Museum of Nature (Ottawa, Canada) and one paratype in the B. C. Ratcliffe collection (Lincoln, NE).

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Etymology. This species is named in honor of its collector, Donald Thomas (USDA, Weslaco, TX), and in recognition of Don’s generous donations of specimens over the years for our projects.

Distribution. Orizabus thomasi is known only from the vicinity of the high elevation (2,751 -2,838 m) pueblo of Excola in the Municipio de Calcahualco in Veracruz, Mexico ( Fig. 26 View Figure 26 , 29-30 View Figure 27-30 ) and from Cofre de Perote (possibly Parque Nacional Cofre de Perote), another high elevation locale in the same municipio.

Temporal Distribution. April (1), May (2), September (2).

Diagnosis. The male of O. thomasi is distinctive because of its small size (16-18 mm), vaguely punctate pronotal surface that lacks a fovea and tubercle, tridentate protibia, and completely punctate pygidium. The parameres of O. thomasi , O. cuernavacensis , and O. teamscaraborum Ratcliffe and Cave are somewhat similar ( Fig. 15-16 View Figure 14-16 , 20 View Figure 17-25 , and 24-25, respectively). Orizabus thomasi has a tooth on the lateral edge at about the midpoint of the paramere, whereas O. cuernavacensis does not. Orizabus teamscaraborum has edentate protibiae and a large body size (23-30 mm), but O. thomasi has tridentate protibiae and a small body size (17- 17 mm). The females of O. thomasi key out closest to O. cuernavacensis and O. fairmairei (Bates) ; O. thomasi has moderately dense punctures on the pygidium (except at the center apex), whereas the pygidium in O. cuernavacensis and O. fairmairei are both relatively smooth everywhere except at the base and angles.

Biology. Nothing is known of the life history of this species. The specimens were collected at lights from elevations of 2,751 and 2,838 m in pine/oak forest ( Fig. 29-30 View Figure 27-30 ). The female paratype had 18 developed eggs within her abdomen. The specimen was collected in May, suggesting that oviposition was imminent.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dynastidae

Genus

Orizabus

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