Classification, Natural History, And Evolution Of The Genus Aphelocerus Kirsch (Coleoptera: Cleridae: Clerinae)
Author
OPITZ, WESTON
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2005
2005-05-11
2005
293
1
128
http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1206%2F0003-0090(2005)293%3C0001%3ACNHAEO%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090(2005)293<0001:CNHAEO>2.0.CO;2
0003-0090
5362748
YUNGAS
GROUP
Aphelocerus acutus
,
new species
Figures 61
,
105, 106
,
130, 133
,
169
,
268
; map 7
HOLOTYPE
: Male.
Mexico
, Chis.,
9 mi
SE Tapilula
,
Hwy.
195,
24 V 1983
,
5100 ft
,
C. & L. O’Brien
&
G. B. Marshall
(
LACM
). (Specimen point mounted; sex label affixed to paper point, white, hand printed; support card, white; locality label, white, machine printed;
LACM
repository label;
holotype
label, machine printed; plastic vial with abdomen and aedeagus.)
PARATYPES
:
Thirtyseven
specimens.
Five
specimens from the same locality as the holotype (
JNRC
, 3;
WOPC
, 2).
Mexico
:
Chiapas
:
Hwy.
190, 14 km
E Jct. W. Hwy
195, 169 m
,
20VI1991
, J. & E.
Beierl
(
JNRC
, 2;
WOPC
, 1)
;
Montebello Nat. Pk.
,
17V 1969
, H. J.
Teskey
(
CNCI
, 1)
;
32 km
N. Bochil
,
Yerba Buena
,
1737 m
,
8VI1969
,
Mal.
trap (
CNCI
, 1)
;
Colonia
(
ZMHB
, 2;
WOPC
, 1)
;
A.
Heyne
, (
WOPC
, 1)
;
6.4 km
NW of Pueblo Nuevo
,
River Bajada
,
15VII 1965
,
G. H. & K. L. Nelson
(
WOPC
, 2)
;
Lagunas
,
Montebello
,
5VI1974
, C. W.
O’Brien
(
WOPC
, 3)
;
2.8 km
W entrance
Pargue de Laguna Montebello
,
21VI1990
, R.
Turnbow
(
RHTC
, 1)
;
Sumidero Cyn.
,
1219 m
,
14 –26VI1987
, J. E.
Wappes
(
JEWC
, 1;
WOPC
, 1)
;
Sumidero Cyn.
,
1219 m
,
14VI1987
(
FSCA
, 5;
WOPC
, 3)
;
Ruinas de Chinkultik
,
16VI1987
, E.
Giesbert
(
FSCA
, 1)
;
Oaxaca
:
Tepamacoalco
(
MNHN
, 1).
Guatemala
:
Huehuetenago
:
15 km
N Nenton
,
950 m
5VI1997
, E.
Giesbert
, J.
Monzon
(
FSCA
, 2;
WOPC
, 2)
.
DIAGNOSIS: The members of this species differ from the superficially similar specimens of
A. cornuatus
,
n.sp.
, by the cyanescent hue of the pronotum and trigonal shape of the male and female pygidia (figs. 105, 106). The shape of the elytral middiscal setal tuft is as in figure 169.
DESCRIPTION:
Size
: Length
4.3–4.8 mm
; width
1.6–1.8 mm
.
Integument
: Head, pronotum, femora, pterothorax, and abdomen cyanscent; tibiae, tarsi, and elytra piceous.
Vestiture
: Integument vested mostly by dark setae, few pale setae; metepisterial, sutural, and elytral discal tufts well developed; latter bipartite, setae of anterior patch directed anteriorly, setae of posterior patch directed towards sutural margin.
Head
: Width across eyes feebly narrower than width across pronotum (20:21); frontal umbo and interocular depressions shallow; eyes subspherical, moderately convex; antenna as in figure 61.
Pronotum
: Equal in width and length (22: 22), considerably narrower than width of elytra across humeri (22:20), finely punctate, side margins moderately arcuate, feebly indented by subapical depression; elytra feebly convex in posterior half, depth at humerus 12, greatest depth in posterior half 15, surface finely punctated and shiny.
Abdomen
: Male and female pygidia as in figures 105 and 106, respectively.
Male genitalia
: As in figure 133; parameres acuminate; ventral sinus twice length of dorsal sinus.
VARIATION: The elytra vary from piceous to brunneus.
NATURAL HISTORY: Specimens have been collected during May (
1554 m
), June (
1220 m
, malaise trap at
1730 m
), and July (sweeping).
DISTRIBUTION (map 7): Known only from southeastern
Mexico
and western
Guatemala
.
ETYMOLOGY: From the Latin
acutus
(point ed). I refer to the acuminate shape of the parameres.