Coccidotrophus cordiae Barber

Halstead, David G. H., 2020, New and little known Coleoptera (Silvanidae: Silvaninae) from Central and South America, Insecta Mundi 2020 (842), pp. 1-37 : 20-23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5354105

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:18BA3511-66C2-4EF9-AE74-040A88E15BC3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CDA223-1651-8148-FF39-CF70FD1419E5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Coccidotrophus cordiae Barber
status

 

Coccidotrophus cordiae Barber

( Fig. 70–79 View Figures 70–74 View Figures 75–79 )

Coccidotrophus cordiae Barber 1928: 167 .

Coccidotrophus huachianus Barber (unpublished name, see “Materials examined”).

Description. The following redescription is based on the 3 Bolivian types plus 2 additional female specimens from there, 2 males and 3 females from Colombia, and a series of 36 specimens, including both sexes, from Ecuador. Measurements and ratios are given for each of the 3 type specimens (male holotype first, the larger then smaller female paratype “ allotype ”) and as a range (including the types) for all of 10 specimens measured which included largest and smallest seen. Length, types: 4.7, 4.3, 4.2 mm, all specimens: 5.9– 4.2 mm; elongate, total length to maximum elytral breadth, types: 48.4, 45.6, 44.6:10.0, all specimens: 49.0–45.1:10.0; general appearance sub-cylindrical, very dark brown, shiny, glabrous.

Head. Transverse (breadth to length ratio, about 15:10); anterior margin moderately emarginate, lateral margins slightly raised in front of eyes, slight depression above antennal insertions; densely punctured, particularly towards eyes and back of head, becoming rough behind eyes, in front region of head punctures comparatively smaller and more widely separated, in general many punctures seem to be derived from pairs of punctures; surface between punctures shallowly microreticulate, less shining than rest of body; eyes in dorsal view small, dorsal separation variable, types 13x–11x, all specimens 11–17× maximum breadth of eye in dorsal view, facets fine; antennae robust, two or three basal antennomeres hidden from above, 9 and 10 transverse, more so in some specimens than in others (compare Fig. 71 and 74 View Figures 70–74 ); antennal grooves (beneath head) slightly convergent, most similar to those of C. wheeleri ( Fig. 63 View Figures 52–63 ).

Pronotum. Transversely convex; slightly longer than broad, length to breadth of types: male 11.5, females 12.1, 11.6:10.0, all specimens 12.1–13.3:10.0; margins with rim in all specimens; anterior angles slightly produced in front; shape of pronotum a little variable, some larger females with sides obviously more rounded before posterior angles ( Fig. 73 View Figures 70–74 ); surface medially with ill-defined, longitudinal, narrow impunctate region (indicated by broken line on Fig. 70 View Figures 70–74 ), rest of pronotum mainly with longitudinally arranged punctures apparently derived from pairs of punctures, far less dense than puncturation on head; surface between punctures strongly shining, surface sternites, all holotype from Bolivia except Figures 76–77. 75 View Figures 75–79 ) Genitalia without internal sac, holotype. 76–77) Dark sclerotized areas bordering ostium of two other specimens both from Colombia. 78) Internal sac. 79) Sternites 8–9. Scale lines = 0.5 mm .

microsculpture present but difficult to see. Slight depressions, apparently abnormal, are present on basal third of the disc of holotype, and allotype, which seems to be teneral, has a large abnormal discal depression.

Elytra. Elongate, 3× as long as broad, with slight rim along suture mainly on apical third and narrow marginal rim, latter mostly hidden in dorsal view; each elytron with 9 rows of punctures forming striae, eighth fine, ninth obsolete; a microscopic puncture bearing a minute seta in front of each strial puncture.

Legs. Male metafemora with or without extremely small prominence on inner proximal margin (as shown in Fig. 70 View Figures 70–74 ); all tibiae with a small spine on inner apex ( Fig. 70 View Figures 70–74 ). Female without these structures.

Metasternum. With a short longitudinal median carina just before forked apex ( Fig. 72 View Figures 70–74 ), not present in other species seen.

Abdomen. Femoral line, on first abdominal ventrite, joining marginal line of coxal cavity forming a triangular area. Last abdominal ventrite of male with an obvious broad, deep median depression ( Fig. 72 View Figures 70–74 ), that of female slightly depressed, not conspicuously so.

Male genitalia. ( Fig. 75–79 View Figures 75–79 ) Parameres with long setae at apex and along apical three fifths of outer margin, number variable, about 9–17 (Bolivian holotype about 16–17) rest of outer margin without setae, surface with many short setae, parameres may be slightly more tapered to a narrower apex than illustrated; median lobe broad, apex very slightly rounded, sides sub-parallel from apex to basal half then sinuate to base, band of short setae present towards base ( Fig. 75 View Figures 75–79 ); area towards ostium without conspicuous bordering rods, only darker sclerotized borders developed ( Fig. 75–77 View Figures 75–79 ); internal sac with pair of sclerites at apex near ejaculatory duct, two groups of fine spines (basal half of spines broad) below sclerites, followed medially by some transparent sickle shaped spines with an inner median tooth, these within similarly transparent fine spines that cover the basal half of the sac ( Fig. 78 View Figures 75–79 ); sternite 8 with a few long marginal setae, sternite 9 with some short marginal setae and a group of minute ones present at apex ( Fig. 79 View Figures 75–79 ).

Distribution and habitat. As far as the author is aware, this species has only been found in Bolivia, Colombia and Ecuador. According to Barber (1928) the types were collected in hollow swellings (myrmecodomatia) at the forking of twigs of an ant-sheltering tree, Cordia alliodora Ruitz and Pavon , where the beetles were attending coccids. The specimens from Colombia and Ecuador were also found in this habitat with coccids. Apart from tropical transition forest, habitat data was not recorded for “the other two” Bolivian specimens mentioned below.

Material examined. Types: As a result of enquiries made by the author over two decades ago, Dr. John M. Kingsolver discovered three types, 1 male and 2 females (the original description of C. cordiae was based on three specimens including one male) all with the USNM Type No. 26488, the number recorded by Barber (1928) for C. cordiae , and with all characters described by him. However, Dr. Kingsolver found these specimens were labelled “ Coccidotrophus huachianus Barber ” [manuscript name] not C. cordiae , and “ Tachigalia ” not Cordia alliodora as given in the description. Nevertheless, the locality label includes Huachi, which is correct, and Dr. Kingsolver was sure that these three specimens must represent the type series of C. cordiae . He thought that both the name and host labels were probably a lapsus and placed explanatory labels, one for the holotype and one for the paratypes in the trays containing them. Having examined these specimens, the author agrees with Dr. Kingsolver and accepts them as the types of C. cordiae . The holotype and paratypes in the USNM bear the following data labels: “no 7a ex stem Tachigalia [handwritten] / Huachi RIO BENI BOLIV Sept. W M MANN / MULFORD BIOLOGI- CAL EXPLORATION 1921-22 [printed] / Coccidotrophus huachianus Barber [unpublished name, handwritten] U.S. N.M.Type No. 26488 [red type label]” ; “Type” [holotype], allotype and paratype, being so labelled. However, the paratype lacks the “MULFORD BIOLOGICAL EXPLORATION 1921-22 [printed]” label.

Other material. (43 total) 1 female, “ Bolivia Santa Cruz , 3.7km SSE Buena Vista, Hotel Fauna & Flora, 405m 5-15. x. 2001 17° 29.949′S, 63° 33.152′W coll. M. C. Thomas & B. K. Dozier tropical transition forest” ( FSCA) GoogleMaps ; 1 female, “Bolivia Omapini [spelling?] 15. 8. 89” ( FSCA). The 2 males and 3 females seen from Colombia has locality and habitat labels as follows: “Kolumbien Villavicencio (Meta) 20. II. 76 / ex Cordia alliodora zus mit larven pupen- Pseudococcidae ” ( FSCA, MIZP, NHML). Specimens from Ecuador (36) are labelled as follows “ ECUADOR: Yasuni, La Catolica Stn, 0°40′ 44.4″ S 76°23′ 58.7″ W 13-JAN 2009. E. Pringle collr. ex. Lowland rainforest on Cordia alliodora in assoc w. Azteca sp. & pseudococcid. EGP62” or with the same data except for a different EGP number, either 69 or 72 ( FSCA) GoogleMaps .

FSCA

Florida State Collection of Arthropods, The Museum of Entomology

NHML

Natural History Museum, Tripoli

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Silvanidae

Genus

Coccidotrophus

Loc

Coccidotrophus cordiae Barber

Halstead, David G. H. 2020
2020
Loc

Coccidotrophus cordiae

Barber HS 1928: 167
1928
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF