Trichohoplorana nigeralba, Huang & Liu & Xiong, 2023

Huang, Gui-Qiang, Liu, Dong-Shuo & Xiong, Rong-Chuan, 2023, A revision of the genus Trichohoplorana Breuning, 1961 (Arthropoda, Insecta, Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Lamiinae, Acanthocinini), ZooKeys 1160, pp. 191-205 : 191

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1160.103596

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DD3B08DE-AF5E-4AF5-9E9F-E623C147308D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/68605399-2CE3-485B-96B7-2530C1A471B8

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:68605399-2CE3-485B-96B7-2530C1A471B8

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Trichohoplorana nigeralba
status

sp. nov.

Trichohoplorana nigeralba sp. nov.

Fig. 6 View Figure 6

Type material examined.

Holotype, ♀ (LPSNU), Yen Bai Province, Vietnam, V.2019, local collector leg.

Description.

Female, holotype. Body length: 14.0 mm, humeral width: 5.2 mm. Body black, antennal scape (except for outside of apex), pedicel, antennomeres III (except for apex), IV (except for apex), V (basal half), VI (basal half), elytra (apical half), protibiae (basal half), mesofemora (basal half), mesotibiae (basal half), metafemora (most of parts) and metatibiae (basal half) reddish brown; claws yellowish brown (Fig. 6A-C View Figure 6 ).

Frons (Fig. 6D View Figure 6 ) densely covered with short yellow and white hairs. Vertex densely covered with short white hairs on middle and short yellow hairs on center (Fig. 6A View Figure 6 ). Antennae sparsely covered with sub-erect, short, white setae; scape sparsely covered with short, brown setae; pedicel sparsely covered with short, brown setae, with several short, white setae at internal side of apex; antennomere III sparsely covered with short, white setae basally, other parts densely with short, brown setae; antennomeres IV-XI densely covered with short white setae on the basal half and densely with short, brown setae on the apical half; antennomeres III-VII fringed with several long, black setae ventrally; antennomeres VIII-X fringed with one or two long, black setae ventrally; antennae 1.5 times as long as body, length (mm) of each antennomere: scape = 2.7, pedicel= 0.8, III = 3.0, IV= 3.0, V = 2.2, VI = 2.0, VII = 1.7, VIII = 1.6, IX = 1.6, X = 1.5, X I = 1.3; antennomeres III and IV curved inward (Fig. 6A-C View Figure 6 ). Pronotum (Fig. 6A View Figure 6 ) covered with three yellow haired bands: two located at sides and starting from near anterior margin to posterior margin, one located in middle and starting from anterior margin to posterior margin; disc with a pair of subtriangular, yellow haired spots located at sides of middle; near anterior of pronotum distinctly expanded outward, pronotum densely punctured (except for apex and base), base of the subuliform tubercles on pronotum expanded forward. Prosternum (sides) and propleuron (venter) sparsely covered with short, yellow hairs (Fig. 6B, C View Figure 6 ). Scutellum (Fig. 6A View Figure 6 ) sparsely covered with short black hairs, densely covered with yellow hairs at apex, depressed in middle of apical margin. Elytra (Fig. 6A, B View Figure 6 ) sparsely covered with short black hairs on the basal half, a short yellow haired band at lateral margins of base, several yellow haired spots arranging into an longitudinal line starting from near posterior humeral angle to basal third, a yellow haired spot located behind the bumps, and several yellow spots along suture from basal fourth to middle; the tubercles at elytral base and near scutellum, and the bumps behind the tubercles densely covered with short, black setae; apical half of each elytron densely covered with short white hairs and four longitudinal yellow haired bands (first band located at lateral margin, second and third bands located in middle and fused at apical half, forth band located near suture); disc 1.9 times as long as wide at base, rounded apically, moderately covered with dense coarse punctures at basal half. Mesosternum, mesepisternum, and mesepimeron sparsely covered with short, yellow hairs; metasternum, metepisternum, and metepimeron densely covered with short, yellow hairs (Fig. 6C View Figure 6 ). Femora sparsely covered with short white setae and several suberect, long, white setae at external side; tibiae covered with extremely sparse, suberect, long, white setae, sparsely with short, thin, black setae on the basal third, densely with short, white setae in middle, and densely with short, thick, black setae on the apical third; tarsomere I-III (except for venter) densely covered with short white and sparsely suberect, long, white setae dorsally, tarsomere V (except for venter) sparsely covered with short, white setae at basal half and short, black setae on the apical half, with more sparse long black setae at apex (Fig. 6A-C View Figure 6 ). Abdominal ventrites I-V densely covered with short, yellow hairs, the hairs more dense at apices of ventrites I-IV; apex and sides of ventrite V sparsely covered with long, yellow pubescences (Fig. 6C View Figure 6 ).

Hind wings (Fig. 6E View Figure 6 ) with AA3+4 vein not bifurcate, AA4 vein missed, AA3 vein connected with Cu vein near apical 1/3 and not extending to margin; CuA2 vein connected with MP3+4 vein near basal 1/3 of MP3+4 vein and not extending to margin; MP3+4 vein bifurcate near apical 1/3, some parts of base of MP3+4 vein missed, a short and vague uncertain vein (?1, either a crossvein or base of MP3+4 vein) connected with base of MP3+4 vein; MP4 vein, MP3 vein and MS vein not extending to margin; a short uncertain vein (?2) located between MP4 vein and MP3 vein, not extending to margin. Abdominal ventrite V raised at apical sides and truncated apically (Fig. 6C View Figure 6 ).

Male. Unknown.

Etymology.

The specific epithet of this new species is derived from the Latin words " niger " and " albus " referring to most of parts of elytral basal half sparsely covered with short, black hairs and most of parts of elytral apical half densely with short, white hairs.

Distribution.

Vietnam (Yen Bai).

Diagnosis.

This new species can be distinctly distinguished from other species of Trichohoplorana by its peculiar elytral pattern (Fig. 6A View Figure 6 ).

Remarks.

When the senior author received the holotype of this new species, the right antennomere XI was missing and the elytral apex was broken. Then, the head, left antennomere XI, and prothorax were separated from the body due to his carelessness, and he correspondingly glued to the body the separated portions with white emulsoid. Consequently, some hairs on the antennae, elytra, metaventrite, and legs were worn so that some characters are unclear.