Cardiophorus carinatus Mathison and Douglas, 2018

Douglas, Hume B. & Mathison, Blaine A., 2018, Cardiophorus carinatus (Coleoptera: Elateridae), an unusual new species from the Lake Wales Ridge (Florida, USA) and rediscovery of Cardiophorus robustus LeConte, 1853, Florida Entomologist 101 (1), pp. 311-314 : 311-313

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1653/024.101.0223

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11522249

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FF87A9-FFC9-9A12-2B68-FC1C28582403

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Cardiophorus carinatus Mathison and Douglas
status

sp. nov.

Cardiophorus carinatus Mathison and Douglas sp. nov. ( Figs. 1–3 View Figs )

TYPE MATERIAL

HOLOTYPE male: Labelled “Lake Wales / Polk Co. FL / 12 Jan 1988 / J. Cronin,” “Scout Camp Scrub,” and with the authors’ red designation label “HOLOTYPE / Cardiophorus / carinatus / Mathison & Douglas 2017.” Paratype male: labelled “Lake Wales / Polk Co. FL / 19 Jan 1988 / J. Cronin,” “Scout Camp Scrub,” and with the authors’ yellow label “PARATYPE / Cardiophorus / carinatus / Mathison & Douglas 2017.” Both types deposited in the Florida State Collection of Arthropods , Gainesville , Florida. Type locality: United States of America, Florida, Polk Co. , Lake Wales 27.9000°N, 81.4500°W GoogleMaps

DESCRIPTION

Diagnosis: Males of this species are distinguished by the combination of the medially depressed supra-antennal carinae and costate elytral intervals.

Body: Length 4.9 mm. Integument with strong reticulate microsculpture throughout; head, prothorax, metaventrite brown-black; pronotal hind angles, elytra, and ventrites red-brown; pronotum convex, elytra narrowed from anterior third ( Fig. 1 View Figs ). Vestiture yellow-white throughout, longest setae about 1.5 times longer than width of antennomere 2.

Head: Antennae with sensory elements beginning on antennomere 3; antennomere 3 is 2.3 times longer than antennomere 2; antennae extending to metacoxae; mandibles with apices bidentate. Labrum convex; area between antennal fossa and eye without carinae or pits. Frons with supra-antennal carinae (frontal carina of Douglas [2003]) lowered toward labrum mesad, undivided at juncture with compound eye; frons with supra-orbital groove present.

Prothorax: Pronotum with hind angles abruptly divergent, not truncate dorsally; length of sublateral longitudinal carinae 0.5 times distance from base of carinae to side margin. Hypomeron with obtuse notch on hind margin ( Fig. 2 View Figs ); pronotal lateral carina (submarginal carina of Douglas [2003]) restricted to posterior half, and not reaching hind angle carina; smaller pronotal punctures separated by 0.5 to 2.0 diam on disc, with intermixed punctures 2 times larger than smaller ones. Prosternum with anterior lobe short, directed ventrad; prosternal process with ventral surface directed dorsad at 45°, not carinate laterally.

Metathorax: Coxal plates small, covering 1/4 of femora when retracted. Elytra immaculate, with interval 8 carinate on apical half, intervals 3 to 7 somewhat carinate on apical 4th. Upper edge of elytral epipleuron and ventrite edges not minutely serrate. Hind wings apparently capable of flight.

Abdomen: Urosternites 3 to 6 without lateral bulges; punctures difficult to measure accurately due to strong microsculpture; pubescence similar in density to and somewhat shorter than on elytra.

Genitalia: Aedeagus with parameres narrowed somewhat evenly from articulation to point, each with 2 setae; lateral expansions tiny, apical ( Fig. 3 View Figs ).

Female: unknown.

ETYMOLOGY

The species epithet carinatus is in reference to the strongly costate elytral intervals 3 to 6.

REMARKS

The costate elytral intervals and long antennae both distinguish this from all other New World Cardiophorus . The key to species of eastern USA and Canada by Douglas (2003) directs this species to couplet 6, where the users may find that aedeagal and habitus characters direct them down diverging paths. Here users can separate C. carinatus from all other New World Cardiophorus by its carinate elytra and long antennae. This species somewhat resembles the cardiophorine Horistonotus uhlerii Horn ( Coleoptera : Elateridae ) (also present in southeastern USA), but the scutellum of that species is not anteriorly emarginate. On a world basis, the carinate elytral intervals, medially depressed supra-antennal sutures, ascendant prosternal process, reduced metacoxal plates, small apically positioned paramere expansions make C. carinatus species similar to Cardiophorus (Perrinellus) reitteri (Schwarz) ( Coleoptera : Elateridae ) from Israel and Syria. However, the present species differs from C. reitteri in its shorter body length, wider and rounder prothorax, smaller eyes (ocular index 74 vs. 61), visible pronotal lateral carina, non-serrate epipleura and ventrites, and narrower aedeagus.

Specimens were collected in the Lake Wales Ridge ecosystem, a low ridge extending 241 kilometers south to north in central Florida in Highlands, Polk, Osceola, and Lake counties (with the majority of the ridge in the former 2). The ridge originated as a series of Pleistocene epoch sand islands, later uplifed by isostatic rebound of the crust beneath the Florida Platform ( Florida Forest Service 2005). Remaining native vegetation areas of the Lake Wales Ridge mainly are scrub, and are habitat for endemic vertebrates, including the Florida scrub jay and the sand skink ( FNAI 2010). Arthropods endemic to the Lake Wales Ridge ( Deyrup 1989) include: Floridobolus penneri Causey ( Spirobolidae : Floridobolidae ); Zelotes florodes Platnick & Shadab ( Araneae : Gnaphosidae ); Sosippus placidus Brady ( Araneae : Lycosidae ); Geolycosa xera archboldi McCrone ( Araneae : Lycosidae ); Cicindela highlandensis Choate ( Coleoptera : Carabidae ); Phyllophaga panorpa Sanderson ( Coleoptera : Melolonthidae ); Serica frosti Dawson ( Coleoptera : Melolonthidae ); Anomala eximia Potts ( Coleoptera : Rutellidae); Dasymutilla archboldi Schmidt & Mickel ( Hymenoptera : Mutillidae ); and Dorymyrmex elegans (Trager) ( Hymenoptera : Formicidae ). In addition, Deyrup (1989) listed 24 other arthropods that are endemic to multiple ridges in Florida, including the Lake Wales Ridge ecosystem. We hypothesize that C. carinatus is endemic to the Lake Wales Ridge area because it has not been detected elsewhere despite Douglas’ (2003) examination of over 6,000 Cardiophorus specimens from all states of eastern USA.

Little is known about the biology of C. carinatus , including the habits of the female or larva. The hind wings appear capable of flight in the male, but the female (although currently unknown) may be flightless and display the reduced morphologic features observed in some psammophilous elaterids from Florida (e.g., Selonodon spp. and Floridelater americanus [Horn]). The holotype was collected in a protected area for the sand skink, so pitfall trapping was not permitted (Mark Deyrup, personal communication 2013). These collecting restrictions may add to the rarity of this species in collections. Discovery of more specimens from this site may require ultraviolet light trapping or visual nocturnal searching of the soil surface with a headlamp.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Elateridae

Genus

Cardiophorus

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