Scopaeus cuspilobatus Frisch, 2022

Frisch, Johannes & Narakusumo, Raden Pramesa, 2022, Revision of Scopaeus Erichson, 1839 (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Paederinae) of Indonesia, with description of 19 new species, Soil Organisms 95 (1), pp. 23-73 : 48

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.25674/so95iss1id311

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10724313

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B7C77A-FFD9-FFED-BC8F-FBDE0861004D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Scopaeus cuspilobatus Frisch
status

sp. nov.

Scopaeus cuspilobatus Frisch , spec. nov.

( Figs 16 View Figures 14–16 , 38 View Figures 35–41 , 92 – 94 View Figures 92–97 , 134, 167, 168)

Type specimens: Indonesia: Holotype ♂, Jawa Barat, Sukabumi: Sirnarasa ( Cimaja River ), (06°51’32’’S, 106°31’06’’E), 670 m, 21.9.2015, leg. Frisch ( MZB) GoogleMaps . Paratype: 1 ♀, same data as holotype ( MFNB) GoogleMaps .

Description: Habitus and coloring as in Fig. 16 View Figures 14–16 . Head subquadrate. Penultimate antennal segment quadrate. Mesotibia moderately thickened. Setose punctation of body surface fine, dense on subnitid head, rugulose on matt elytra, more spacious on shiny pronotum; microreticulation absent. Pubescence of body surface short, decumbent, without conspicuous macrosetae. Body dark brown except for narrow, light brown posterior margin of elytra and tip of abdomen; antennae medium brown with darker segments 2 – 6; maxillary palpi light brown with darker penultimate segment; legs light brown with medium brown femora. Total body length 3.6 mm; forebody length 2.0 – 2.1 mm.

Male: Abdominal sternite VII with unmodified posterior margin. Abdominal sternite VIII with posterior margin with two very short, lateral emarginations and barely recognizably concave middle (Fig. 134). Aedeagus ( Figs 38 View Figures 35–41 , 92 – 94 View Figures 92–97 ) about 0.8 mm long with asymmetrical distal lobes; apical lobes curved ventrad with round ends ( Figs 38 View Figures 35–41 , 92 View Figures 92–97 ), in ventral and dorsal view stout with broad, subtruncate apices ( Figs 93, 94 View Figures 92–97 ); dextral apical lobe with little, ventroproximal tooth ( Fig. 92 View Figures 92–97 : arrow I), convexly widened dextrad distally ( Figs 93, 94 View Figures 92–97 ); sinistral apical lobe evenly convex distolaterally, somewhat overlapping dextral apical lobe ventrally ( Fig. 93 View Figures 92–97 ); dorsal lobe broad with convex apex ( Fig. 94 View Figures 92–97 ); flagellum winding dextrad ( Fig. 93 View Figures 92–97 ), strongly projecting from apical lobes ventrally ( Figs 38 View Figures 35–41 , 92 View Figures 92–97 ); lateral lobes reduced, marked by unequal groups of setae ( Figs 93, 94 View Figures 92–97 ); ventral lobe broad, subquadrate, with truncate apex ( Figs 38 View Figures 35–41 , 92 View Figures 92–97 ), in ventral view narrow, strongly shifted sinistrad ( Fig. 93 View Figures 92–97 ); transverse ridge of median foramen concave ( Fig. 93 View Figures 92–97 ), strongly projecting ventrally ( Figs 38 View Figures 35–41 , 92 View Figures 92–97 ).

Female: Sperm pump with chamber abruptly narrowed at transition point towards bursal duct ( Fig. 168 View Figures 163–172 ); bursal duct about three times as long as sperm pump; bursa membranous ( Fig. 167 View Figures 163–172 ).

Phylogeny: Scopaeus cuspilobatus is a member of the S. gracilis species group ( Frisch et al. 2002: 39).

Distribution: Scopaeus cuspilobatus is hitherto known only from the type locality in Jawa Barat.

Etymology: The epithet cuspilobatus [adjective, Latin, composed of the noun cuspis (sting, thorn, spine) and lobatus (indicating a characteristic/feature of the lobe)] refers to the distinct, ventral spine of the dextral apical lobe of the aedeagus of this new species ( Figs 38 View Figures 35–41 , 83 View Figures 80–85 ).

MZB

Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense

MFNB

Museo Friulano di Storia Naturale

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Scopaeus

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