Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia ( Mařan, 1942 )

Moravec, Jiří & Trýzna, Miloš, 2021, New or rare Madagascar tiger beetles- 23. Physodeutera (Toxoma) lokobensis sp nov., a new species close to Ph. (T.) conturbata Moravec, Ph. (T.) sulcoprothoracica (W. Horn) and Ph. (T.) dubia (Mařan), with revised type designation of the latter (Coleoptera: Cicindelidae), Zootaxa 5060 (2), pp. 151-182 : 160-164

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5060.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F6BFFABC-7F88-473C-9517-D031485140DD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5633547

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B47722-1135-FFE7-DCF8-D83C2BF6FB0B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia ( Mařan, 1942 )
status

 

Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia ( Mařan, 1942) View in CoL

( Figs 24–45 View FIGURES 24–32 View FIGURES 33–43 View FIGURES 44–45 , 106 View FIGURE 106 )

Prothyma (Megalomma) dubia Mařan, 1942: 70 View in CoL .

Physodeutera (Toxoma) sikorai dubia: Moravec 1998: 169 View in CoL .

Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia: Moravec 2002a: 115 View in CoL , figs 303–308, 723.

Type locality. “Ampanefena” (about 70 km south of Vohémar , Northeastern Madagascar) .

Type material. Holotype ♂ in NMPC, labelled: “ Madagascar, Ampanefena, Mus. Praha” [printed]; “Typus” [red, printed]; “ Prothyma dubia m. Dr. Mařan det.” [handwritten]; “ Holotype, Prothyma (Megalomma) dubia Mařan, 1942 , J. Moravec 1998 design.” [red, printed]. Paratype 1 ♂ in NMPC “Vohemar, III, 1938” [printed]; “CoTypus” [red, printed, the “Co” handwritten]; “ Paratype, Prothyma (Megalomma) dubia Mařan, 1942 , J. Moravec 1998 design.” [red, printed]. The two type specimens provided with labels “ Physodeutera (Toxoma) sikorai dubia ( Mařan, 1942) , J. Moravec 1998 det.” and “ Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia ( Mařan, 1942) det. J. Moravec, 2001” [printed].

Note to the typification. Mařan (1942) based the original description of this species on two males, each from a different locality, both deposited in NMPC. He stated it as: “ Habitat: Madagascar, Ampanefena ♂ typus; Vohémar, III 1934, Lamberton leg. 1 ♂ — ♀ ignota ”. It means that the male from Ampanefena was designated by Mařan as type and in accordance labelled by him with the red label “Typus” (see Fig. 44 View FIGURES 44–45 here), while the male from Vohémar bears the same red printed label but rewritten by hand as “CoType” (see Fig. 45 View FIGURES 44–45 here). This statement was previously misinterpreted by the first author ( Moravec 1998) who examined the male from Vohémar and erroneously designated and illustrated it as holotype. This error was later rectified in the monograph of the genus ( Moravec 2002a: 115) where the male from Ampanefena was correctly designated as the holotype according to the original type designation by Mařan (1942). Nonetheless, the illustrations remained in error the same, thus the picture of the paratype from Vohémar was presented as holotype ( Moravec 2002a, figs 304–308, 723). The true holotype from Ampanefena is illustrated here in Figs 24, 26, 28, 31 View FIGURES 24–32 , 33, 35, 37, 40–41 View FIGURES 33–43 .

Differential diagnosis. Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia shares similar, rather uniformly bright green-blue elytra with only lateral areas violaceous ( Figs 24–25 View FIGURES 24–32 , 40–43 View FIGURES 33–43 ) with Ph. (T.) lokobensis sp. nov. Diagnostic for both species are also the ivory to ochre-testaceous two basal thirds of the antennomere 4 in male ( Figs 26–27 View FIGURES 24–32 ), but Ph. (T.) dubia differs from the new species in having shorter antennae, more arcuate-curved labial palpus in male ( Fig. 30 View FIGURES 24–32 ), coarser, sharpened rugae on whole surface of the pronotal disc ( Figs 31–32 View FIGURES 24–32 ), larger elytral punctures also on posterior elytral half ( Figs 40–43 View FIGURES 33–43 ), shorter antennae, slightly longer aedeagus apex, which is more rounded, particularly ventrally and on its top ( Figs 37–39 View FIGURES 33–43 ), and somewhat different sclerites within the internal sac ( Figs 38–39 View FIGURES 33–43 ).

Moreover, the elytral apex in male is rounded in Ph. (T.) dubia ( Figs 40–42 View FIGURES 33–43 ), while subacute in Ph. (T.) lokobensis sp. nov.

Nevertheless, one of the characters considered diagnostic for Ph. (T.) dubia previously ( Moravec 2002a), the anteriad-prolonged, triangular median tooth in the anteromedian lobe of the labrum ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 33–43 ), proved to be present only in the paratype (which was misinterpreted previously as the holotype). In contrast, the true holotype of Ph. (T.) dubia has the anterior margin of its labrum almost subtruncate ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 33–43 ), thus somewhat similar to that in Ph. (T.) lokobensis sp. nov. Despite the significant biodiversity in Madagascar, we consider here these differences in the shape of the male labrum to be exceptional variability, also due to the fact that the two only known males come very probably from the same locality (see “Distribution” below). Notwithstanding, as also the body of the paratype is notably wider, particularly across the elytra ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 24–32 ), a possibility that the paratype may in fact represent another undescribed species cannot be excluded. Unfortunately, female of Ph. (T.) dubia remains unknown.

Redescription (male). Body ( Figs 24–25 View FIGURES 24–32 ) medium-sized, length 8.80–9.00 (HT 8.80) mm, width 2.70–2.90 (HT 2.70) mm.

Head ( Figs 33–34 View FIGURES 33–43 ) with large eyes, only slightly narrower than body, width 2.60–2.70 mm.

Frons deep metallic blue, convex in middle, nearly smooth on anteromedian area, laterally parallel-wrinkled; supraantennal plates uneven, flat; frons-vertex fold rounded merging fluently with vertex, finely vermicular-wrinkled.

Vertex bright blue in middle, with bronze and cupreous lustre in lateral and posterior areas, with deep transverse anterior impression crossing juxtaorbital areas, which are striate-rugose, but rugae interrupted by two shallower impressions; median area longitudinally vermicular to wavy-rugose, posterior area vermicular-rugose; divergent sublateral rugae coarser, wavy, passing onto temples; posterior and occipital areas bronze-green, vermicular-rugulose.

Genae metallic green-blue, finely striate-wrinkled.

Labrum (male) 0.90–1.05 mm long, 1.10 mm wide, basically shaped and coloured as in preceding species except for the shape of the anteromedian lobe, which differs in the two known males: while the holotype has the anteromedian lobe notably shorter, subtruncate and with rounded lateral margins ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 33–43 ), the anteromedian lobe of the paratype possesses two right-angled, indistinctly pointed teeth in either side of notably protruding, right-angled median tooth ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 33–43 ).

Clypeus metallic-blue with greenish lustre, smooth.

Mandibles ( Figs 33–34 View FIGURES 33–43 ) subsymmetrical, normally shaped with four teeth and basal molar, brown with mahogany tinge and blackened margins, inner teeth gradually smaller towards basal molar, fourth tooth markedly distant from third tooth.

Palpi (male) ivory testaceous, maxillary palpi with terminal palpomeres brownish-testaceous with darkened subapical area ( Figs 28–29 View FIGURES 24–32 ); labial palpi with dark brown terminal palpomeres, outer margin of penultimate (longest) palpomeres arcuate, inner margin straight or slightly emarginated, ochre-testaceous ( Fig. 30 View FIGURES 24–32 ).

Antennae ( Figs 26–27 View FIGURES 24–32 ) rather long, passing elytral half; scape ivory or testaceous with only apical seta; antennomeres 2–3 metallic black, antennomere 4 black-brown with two basal thirds ivory-testaceous to yellowish, antennomeres 5–9 light brownish testaceous, 10–11 moderately darkened.

Thorax. Pronotum ( Figs 31–32 View FIGURES 24–32 ) elongate, length 1.85–1.90 mm, width 1.50–1.55 mm; metallic blue-green with indistinct bronze-cupreous and violet lustre on discal median area and intense violaceous lustre within well-pronounced anterior and posterior sulci; anterior lobe markedly narrower than posterior lobe and disc; lateral margins of disc almost parallel in middle, slightly constricted anteriad; notopleural sutures barely visible from above; discal surface distinctly transversely wavy-rugose, rugae coarser on median area; median line thin but running throughout; posterior lobe with distinct basal rim, dorsolateral bulges pulvinate-elevated, almost smooth, with strongly violaceous lustre, gradually passing to smooth or finely wrinkled median area with faint greenish lustre; prosternum and proepisterna metallic blue-green, finely wrinkled; mesepisterna black-blue with purple lustre; metasternum and metepisterna metallic green with bronze tinge.

Elytra ( Figs 40–43 View FIGURES 33–43 ), elongate, 5.30–5.35 mm long; juxtahumeral impressions deep, short and wide, basodiscal convexity and discal impression distinct, apical impressions moderate; lateral margins subparallel, anteapical angles arcuate, apices rounded, more distinctly so in female, with only faint emargination towards indistinct, blunt sutural spine; limited baso-humeral area smooth and shiny, other elytral surface rather coarsely punctate, punctures notably larger on anterior elytral third, largest within humeral impressions, occasionally arranged in chains but not entirely anastomosing, their mostly narrow intervals optically forming irregular reticulum; elytral coloration bright metallic blue-green, more cyaneous green-blue within humeral and discal impression, with faint bronze-greenish lustre on posterior declivity and deep violaceous on outer lateral areas and apices; whitish to ivory maculation consisting of only one, large humeral macula.

Abdomen. Abdominal ventrites dark metallic-blue with violaceous reflections, their surface smooth and glabrous (except for sensory seta on either side of posterior ventrite margins).

Legs of HT similarly coloured as in Ph. (T.) conturbata , but notably paler in PT.

Aedeagus short ( Figs 37–39 View FIGURES 33–43 ), length 2.20–2.25 mm, width 0.45 mm, ventral outline straight or slightly bent ventrad apically, dorsally conically attenuated towards narrow, rounded apex; sclerites within internal sac consisting of distinct arciform piece with dilates apex, thin satellite piece which appears more distinct in right lateral view, membranous plate and large, longitudinal membranous upper-ventral piece with obtuse apex.

Distribution ( Fig. 106 View FIGURE 106 ). Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia is known only from the two males caught in Northeastern Madagascar. Ampanefena lies about 70 km south of the city of Vohemar (also spelled Vohémar). However, the name on the label probably means the whole district, which is very large, and therefore we may suppose that the two males come from the same locality ( Moravec 2002a). Although no collector name is indicated on the labels, according to Mařan (1942), the two type specimens were caught by Lamberton.

Remarks. This taxon, originally described as Prothyma (Megalomma) dubia by Mařan (1942), was later ( Moravec 1998) treated as a subspecies of Ph. (T.) sikorai . However, as further examinations have confirmed the above-mentioned characters, this taxon was treated ( Moravec 2002a) as a natural member of the subgenus Toxoma . Only male specimens of Ph. (T.) dubia are known.

For the previous confusion of the type designation see “Note to the typification” above and the discussion in “Introduction” of this paper.

NMPC

National Museum Prague

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Physodeutera

Loc

Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia ( Mařan, 1942 )

Moravec, Jiří & Trýzna, Miloš 2021
2021
Loc

Physodeutera (Toxoma) dubia:

Moravec, J. 2002: 115
2002
Loc

Physodeutera (Toxoma) sikorai dubia:

Moravec, J. 1998: 169
1998
Loc

Prothyma (Megalomma) dubia Mařan, 1942: 70

Maran, J. 1942: 70
1942
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