Artoadenus OPITZ, 2015
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5282503 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6544690 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DC6CBD1D-FFA8-FFF3-6DC2-FA0BFE82AE25 |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Artoadenus OPITZ |
status |
gen. nov. |
Artoadenus OPITZ , new genus
Type species: Artoadenus dius OPITZ , new species. By present designation.
Diagnosis: Within Platynopterinae only in the male members of Artoadenus and Platynoptera do we find a glandular pit on the metatibiae ( Fig. 100 View Figs 97-102 ). However, Artoadenus specimens may be distinguished from specimens of Platynoptera by the shape of the terminal palpomeres of the maxilla and labium. In Artoadenus these palpomeres are subdigitiform whereas in Platynoptera they are strongly securiform.
Description: Size: Length 10.0-16.0 mm; width 5.0-7.0. Form: Elytra oval,posterior angle broadly rounded ( Fig. 147 View Figs 145-148 ). — Integumental color: Antenna black; mandible black, other mouthparts flavotestaceous, maxillary and labial terminal palpomeres black; cranium mostly black, epicranium narrowly flavotestaceous, lower frons flavotestaceous; pronotum bicolorous, mostly flavotestaceous, disc with two paralateral black streaks; elytra unicolorous or bicolorous, when unicolorous flavotestaceous, when bicolorous black regions usually at elytral apical third, flavotestaceous in remainder, rarely with two black fasciae; legs mostly black, posterior facies flavotestaceous; pterothorax mostly flavotestaceous; abdomen black. Vestiture: Integument highly setose, funicular antennomeres densely setose, cranium and pronotum densely vested with decumbent setae, elytra densely vested with short secondary setae and fewer primary setae that become more prominent along epipleural and sutural margins; legs highly setose. Head: Cranial setose punctation small; eyes bulging, finely faceted and deeply broadly incised along frontal margin; antenna ( Fig. 64 View Figs 62-69 ) capitate, inserted at level of eye incision (= ocular notch); antennal carina very prominent, comprised of 11 antennomeres, scape very robust, pedicel rotund, funicular antennomeres transverse, capitulum very long, about 5 times longer that length of other antennomeres combined, anterior margin of capitular antennomeres undulated; labrum deeply incised, transverse tormal process horizontal and contiguous; mandible robust; maxilla well developed, terminal palpomere subsecuriform; labium well developed, terminal palpomere subsecuriform; gula triangular. Thorax: Pronotum with incipient trichobothrium, transverse, side margins rounded, anterior margin linear, prebasal depression feebly developed, dorsolateral carina not extended to anterior margin of pronotum, carina joins pronotal hem at pronotal posterior angle; elytra trapezoidal, increasingly widened to rounded posterior angles, discal carinae faintly visible, 1º and 2º elytral setae present; mesoscutellum triangular; protibial anterior margin spinous; ungues with denticle; tibial spur formula 0-1-1; tarsal pulvillar formula 3-3-3; glandular pit on male metatibia. Abdomen: Six visible sternites; pygidium rounded distally in males. Male genitalia ( Figs 113, 114 View Figs 109-132 ): Aedeagus short, tegmen feebly sclerotized, lobate distally, fimbriate; phallus well sclerotized; spicular fork comprised of two narrow plates that connect at proximal fourth, intraspicular plate narrow and long.
Distribution: The members of this genus are known from México, Panamá, Venezuela, French Guiana, and Guyana.
Etymology: The generic epithet is a compound name stemming from the Latin artus (= limb) and the Greek aden (= gland). I refer to the glandular pit on the male metatibia.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.