Euconnus Thomson of Japan: redescriptions of species established by Reitter, Sharp and Franz, new synonyms, and summary of current state of knowledge (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Scydmaeninae)
Author
Jałoszyński, Paweł
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-01-25
5093
1
1
37
journal article
2431
10.11646/zootaxa.5093.1.1
0faf68be-3777-4466-8cd5-9eb8ca72a239
1175-5326
5901006
C2F5E368-CB15-4207-9944-E52C190FBF20
Euconnus
(
Euconnus
)
tsugaruensis
Hoshina & S. Arai
Euconnus
(
Pycnophus
)
tsugaruensis
Hoshina & Arai
in Hoshina
et al.
(2003): 28.
Euconnus tugaruensis
; misspelling in Hoshina & Arai 2003: 11.
Euconnus
(
Euconnus
)
tsugaruensis
Hoshina & S. Arai
;
Jałoszyński, 2021b: 268
, implied, by placing
Pycnophus
as junior synonym of
Euconnus
s. str.
Euconnus
(
Euconnus
)
hosakae
Hoshina
et al.
, 2020: 72
;
syn. n.
(
Figs 79–83
)
Material examined. HONSHU:
Fukushima Pref.
:
1 ♂
,
2 ♀♀
, Ten-ei-mura,
Futamata Valley
,
850 m
,
19.10.2003
, P. Jałoszyński (cPJ);
1 ex.
Minamiaizu
,
Kamabusayama Mt.
,
Asahida V.
,
16.07.1949
,
K. Nagayama
leg. (
NSMT
)
;
Gunma Pref.
:
1 ex.
,
Kumanotaira
,
Usui Pass
,
Matsuida T.
,
17.06.1995
,
S. Nomura
leg. (
NSMT
)
;
Ibaraki Pref.
:
1 ex.
,
Nishi-Kanasago Shr.
,
Kanasago-mura
,
04.06.1994
,
S. Ohmomo
leg. (
NSMT
)
.
Remarks.
This species is known to occur on Honshu. Hoshina
et al.
(2003) described
E. tsugaruensis
based on a single male and
two females
. The body length of the male was given as
1.7 mm
; the aedeagus was illustrated in a resting position, not distorted, which makes it possible to identify this species. The only enigmatic part of the description is “metasternum (...) with a high median carina; mesosternum smooth and convex”, which is repeated without any changes also for
E. otorii
a few pages further on. It is possible that the authors confused mesoventrite with metaventrite. Several years later, Hoshina
et al.
(2020) described the very same species again, under the name of
E. hosakae
. Interestingly, they compared the newly described species to
E. ohnoensis
, whose aedeagus is not very similar to that illustrated for
E. hosakae
, but did not make any remarks concerning the similarity to
E. tsugaruensis
. The
type
series of
E. hosakae
included
two males
and
one female
, and the body length is given as
1.51–1.58 mm
. I examined
six specimens
that match descriptions of both
E. tsugaruensis
and
E. hosakae
, and their body lengths range from
1.53 to 1.60 mm
; a range 1.51–1.70 is not unusual within one
Euconnus
species.
The aedeagi illustrated for
E. tsugaruensis
and
E. hosakae
are identical; differences are results of unskillful drawing, as already demonstrated e.g., for
E. dulcis
redescribed by
Hoshina (2019c)
; see remarks at the latter species in earlier section of this paper. Although the general shape of the median lobe illustrated for
E. tsugaruensis
and
E. hosakae
are slightly different, the aedeagus illustrated in the present paper (
Figs 80–83
) demonstrates that the endophallic structures in all examples are exactly the same, only simplified in a different way in Hoshina
et al.
(2003) and Hoshina
et al.
(2020). Without doubt,
E. tsugaruensis
and
E. hosakae
are identical.
FIGURES 79–83.
Euconnus tsugaruensis
, male from Fukushima Pref. Dorsal habitus (79); aedeagus in ventral (80, 82) and lateral (81, 83) views.
Apart from the unique aedeagus,
E. tsugaruensis
can be easily distinguished from remaining nominal
Euconnus
species
known to occur in
Japan
by the conspicuous body form (
Fig.79
), slender antennae almost gradually thickening toward apices, the remarkable shape of the head, which has particularly long and slightly concave tempora and narrow vertex, and the setal pattern (nearly asetose head, pronotum with dense setae and bristles, and elytra with sparse, long, erect setae).
The placement of
E. tsugaruensis
in the
subgenus
Pycnophus
Casey, 1897
(currently a junior synonym of
Euconnus
s. str.
), and
E. hosakae
in
Euconnus
s. str.
, is here confirmed as correct.