Peltonotus favonius Jameson and Wada, 2009

Jameson, Mary Liz & Wada, Kaoru, 2009, Five new species of Peltonotus Burmeister (Scarabaeidae: Dynastinae: Cyclocephalini) from Southeast Asia, Insecta Mundi 2009 (102), pp. 1-16 : 8-11

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5167889

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6485124

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D4A1F-FFFE-FF90-90C6-F9E4FE21BA30

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Peltonotus favonius Jameson and Wada
status

sp. nov.

Peltonotus favonius Jameson and Wada , n. sp.

( Fig. 3 View Figure 1-7 , 10 View Figure 8-13 , 15 View Figure 14-18 a-b, 23, 25)

Type Material. Holotype male housed at NSMT (loaned from FUJI) with following label data and with maxilla and male parameres mounted beneath specimen: a) “nr. Dalat , VIETNAM JUN. 2006.” b) our holotype label.

Description. Holotype ( Fig. 3 View Figure 1-7 ). Length 14.6 mm. Widest width 7.3 mm. Color ( Fig. 3 View Figure 1-7 ): Head, pronotum, scutellum, propygidium, pygidium, and venter shining black; elytra black with iridescent blue bloom. Head: Surface of frons with base impunctate, middle frons to apex moderately densely punctate; punctures simple, not setigerous. Surface of clypeus moderately densely to confluently punctate; punctures simple, not setigerous. Clypeus laterally weakly bowed, apex truncate, corners square, beaded; bead weakly arcuate posteriorly. Labrum broadly emarginate at middle. Mandible obliquely quadrate, apex truncate, inner apex with 1 tooth. Mentum with apical half rounded, notched at middle; palpomere 2 simple, slightly wider than palpomere 1, lacking setae. Maxilla ( Fig. 10 View Figure 8-13 ): mala lacking lamellate setal brush; stipes with setae moderately dense, long, not flattened, not curled at apex; palpomere 2 without internomedial bump. Antennal club subequal in length to segments 2-7. Pronotum: Bead lacking at base; anterior bead complete. Surface moderately densely punctate, punctures simple, lacking setae. Lateral margin lacking long setae. Elytron: Sutural length about 4.2 times length of scutellum. Surface with 5 moderately developed, punctate, longitudinal striae between suture and humerus; punctures moderate in size, moderately dense, ocellate. Intervals with similar sculpturing. Propygidium: Surface shagreened and rugopunctate (base to mid-disc) to densely, confluently punctate (mid-disc to near apex); punctures simple. Pygidium: Surface shagreened and confluently punctate either side of mid-line; punctures simple, not setigerous. Venter: Prosternal keel elongate; apex projecting anteriorly at about 90 o with respect to ventral plane, produced to mid-height of protrochanter, truncate. Legs: Protibia (Fig. 23) of male bidentate; lateral margin lacking short, dense setae. Protarsomere 5 (Fig. 23) of male subequal in length to tarsomeres 1-4; protarsomere 3-4 with apices expanded, dorsal and ventral apices clothed with dense, short setae. Anterior claws of male with inner claw curved, about 3 times thicker than outer claw; outer claw simply arcuate, about 1/2 length of inner claw; empodium bulbous at base. Meso- and metatibial claws of male with 2 setae. Metatibia of male apical spurs weakly curved; ventral spur produced to middle of metatarsomere 1, dorsal spur produced to base of metatarsomere 2. Parameres: Fig. 15 View Figure 14-18 a-b.

Diagnosis. Peltonotus favonius is most similar to P. pruinosus Arrow , a species for which males are not known and which is distributed in the Assam Valley, India. Peltonotus favonius , however, differs from P. pruinosus based on the following characters: mandible with one tooth at inner apex (lacking teeth in P. pruinosus ); palpomere 2 simple, slightly wider than palpomere 1, and with sparse setae (palpomere 2 is subequal in width to palpomere 1 and lacking setae in P. pruinosus ); propygidium rugopunctate to densely, confluently punctate with simple punctures (propygidium is moderately densely punctate with ocellate punctures laterally in P. pruinosus ), and; pygidium confluently punctate either side of mid-line in P. favonius (moderately densely punctate in P. pruinosus ).

Etymology. The specific epithet comes from the Roman wind god, Favonius, who held dominion over plants and flowers. The name is in reference to the species’ hypothesized association with aroid flowers.

Distribution ( Fig. 25 View Figure 25 ). Vietnam.

Locality record (1 specimen) from loaned from FUJI and deposited at NSMT. VIETNAM (1). Da Lat.

Temporal Data. June (1)

Remarks. We considered that this specimen on which this species is based may be the unknown male of P. pruinosus (known only by one female), but the form of the mouthparts, propygidium, and pygidium (see “Diagnosis”) are not consistent with P. pruinosus .

In the male key to species by Jameson and Wada (2004), P. favonius keys to P. rubripennis Miyake and Yamaya. However , the difference in form of the male genitalia ( Fig. 15 View Figure 14-18 ) clearly indicates that these are two distinct species.

NSMT

National Science Museum (Natural History)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Dynastidae

Genus

Peltonotus

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