Aleocharinae from Sabah (Borneo) collected by Guillaume de Rougemont (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae)
Author
Pace, R.
text
Linzer biologische Beiträge
2014
2014-07-31
46
1
727
794
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5306753
0253-116X
5306753
6EB57FAF-A54D-4A33-AB58-C03E7294FA00
Drusilla caputserpentis
nov.sp.
(
Figs 42
and
178
)
T y p e m a t e r i a l
Holotype
,
Sabah
,
Danum Valley
, B.R.L.
, f.i.t,
14-16.II.2007
,
G. de Rougemont
leg. (
CROU
).
D e s c r i p t i o n: Length
7.12 mm
. Pronotum and elytra opaque, rest of the body shiny. Head blackish-brown, pronotum and elytra brown, abdomen yellowish-red, posterior margin of the first to fourth free abdominal tergites brown, fifth free tergite reddishbrown, antennae blackish-brown with the two basal antennomeres reddish-brown and apex of the eleventh yellow, legs yellowish-red. Second antennomere shorter than the first, third longer than the second, fourth to tenth longer than wide. Eyes shorter than the postocular region in dorsal view. Reticulation of the fore-body evident, that of the abdomen very transverse and superficial. Puncturation of the head evident, fairly close and absent on a narrow longitudinal median band and on the frons, that of pronotum and elytra very dense and deep, that of the abdomen fine and fairly close. Pronotum with median sulcus at the bottom of an ample longitudinal concavity and with feeble lateral impressions. Spermatheca:
Fig. 178.
C o m p a r a t i v e n o t e s: The spermatheca of the new species shares some of the characters of the spermatheca of
D. perdensa
PACE, 2004
from
Thailand
. Both have a triangular appendix on the distal bulb of the spermatheca, and the proximal portion of the spermatheca is folded. However the intermediary portion of the spermatheca of the new species is much dilated near the proximal bulb, which is not the case in
D. perdensa
. The apical umbilicus of the distal bulb of the spermatheca of the new species is narrow:
0.024 mm
wide, whereas in
D. perdensa
it measures
0.036 mm
.
E t y m o l o g y: The name of the new species, meaning "snake head" refers to the shape of the distal bulb of the spermatheca.