Algon daweishanus, Li & Tang, 2023

Li, Chong & Tang, Liang, 2023, New species and records of Algonina Schillhammer & Brunke, 2018, mainly from China, Zootaxa 5256 (5), pp. 457-482 : 464-466

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5256.5.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FD4EFDDB-BEFF-415D-BA96-A705FDE3D495

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7761283

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F4D263-1C28-0069-FF64-FABAFBBB40EF

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Algon daweishanus
status

sp. nov.

Algon daweishanus sp. n. kUƜŴÑḃffm

( Figs 24–26 View FIGURES 21–26 , 84–89)

Type material. Holotype. China: Yunnan: ♁, glued on a card with labels as follows: “ China: Yunnan Prov. , Hong-He Pre., Ping-Bian County, Daweishan , mixed forest, leaf litter, wood, sifted. 2000 m, 25.V.2012, Peng & Yin leg. ( SHNU) [red handwritten label]” ( SHNU) . Paratypes. 2♁♁, same data as holotype ( SHNU) .

Description. (Habitus: Figs 24–26 View FIGURES 21–26 ) Body 17.1–17.4 mm long (8.7–8.8 mm, abdomen excluded). Black, rather dull; palpi dark reddish brown, antennae dark reddish with basal three segments brown, gradually becoming paler distally, tarsi dark brown proximally, gradually becoming paler reddish distally.

Head subquadrangular, weakly convex at sides, 1.1 times as wide as long, eyes very small, tempora 1.6 times as long as eyes; sparsely punctate, dorsal surface with fine reticulate microsculpture (Type I), with 3 or 4 large punctures arranged in an oblique row from medio-apical margin of eye to medio-basal portion of head; an area from supra-orbital margin through postogenae to the basal angles with large setiferous punctures. Antennae long, with each segment conspicuously oblong.

Pronotum ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 21–26 ) almost as wide as long, widest at midlength, slightly narrowed toward base, more strongly narrowed toward anterior margin; with a dorsal row of punctures varying from 2 to 4 punctures, in addition, with an inconspicuous sublateral row of indistinct punctures; microsculpture as on head. Scutellum finely and sparsely punctate and with fine setae. Elytra ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 21–26 ) trapezoidal, transversal, lateral margin with inconspicuous emargination next to shoulders, posterio-lateral angles subtruncate; with distinct and broad depression at base, disc of elytra thus appearing semicircularly elevated around suture; surface relatively smooth, without oblique creases; entire elytra covered with regularly spaced setiferous punctures, setae as long as spaces between punctures, punctation on disc slightly sparser than along sides and base, base with a pair of conspicuous bigger setiferous punctures next to scutellum; entire elytra covered with very dense isodiametrical microsculpture (type IIIa).

Abdomen slightly wider than elytra, widest at 4th segment; tergites moderately densely but coarsely punctate and pubescent, punctures with distinctly visible, drop-shaped punctural grooves, sternites with punctures smaller than those on tergites, and grooves also smaller; posterior margin of tergite VII without whitish seam.

Aedeagus ( Figs 84–89 View FIGURES 78–89 ) large, median lobe in lateral view slender, bent toward paramere, apical piece long and sharp, with distinct subapical tooth; paramere slender, parallel-sided in apical half, apex subtruncate, exceeding level of apical tooth but not reaching apex of median lobe ( Fig. 50 View FIGURES 43–50 ), with several setae of various length at the apex, without peg-setae ( Fig. 51 View FIGURES 51–59 ).

Distribution. China (Yunnan).

Diagnosis. This is the largest species in the A. kaiserianus species group, and the aedeagus of the species is also the largest in this species group. The geographically closest species is A. fansipanicus Assing, 2015 from northern Vietnam, which differs from A. daweishanus sp. n. in the relatively parallel lateral margin and different punctation. The only species sharing the character of fully setose elytra is A. hubeiensis Schillhammer, 2006 , which differs in its smaller body size and the more arcuate margin of the elytra, and also the smaller aedeagus without subapical tooth. The trapezoidal elytra more resemble those of A. kaiserianus and A. tronqueti Schillhammer, 2006 , however, the elytra of the latter two have a broad glabrous area ( Figs 13–15 View FIGURES 7–14 View FIGURES 15–20 ).

Etymology. The species is named after the type locality in southern Yunnan.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Algon

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