Seven new species and additional records of Palaearctic Leptusa, primarily from Yunnan, China (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Aleocharinae)
Author
Assing, V.
text
Linzer biologische Beiträge
2008
2008-07-10
40
1
251
273
journal article
8375
10.5281/zenodo.4523588
b5bd33f4-df29-4eae-9955-954a70a03482
0253-116X
4523588
Leptusa
(
Drepanoleptusa
)
puetzi
nov.sp.
(
Figs 63-71
)
T y p e m a t e r i a l:
Holotype
6:
China
:
Yunnan
[
CH
07-28], Nujiang Lisu Aut. Pref., Gaoligong Shan, side valley
19 km
NW Liuku,
25°59'02"N
,
98°42'23"E
,
2730 m
, devast. prim. forest, litter sifted,
9.VI.2007
, leg. A. Pütz /
Holotypus
6
Leptusa puetzi
sp.n.
det. V. Assing 2007 (cAss).
D e s c r i p t i o n:
3.2 mm
. Habitus as in
Fig. 63
. Coloration: head dark brown with anterior part paler; pronotum dark brown with paler margins; elytra reddish brown; abdomen dark brown, with posterior margins of segments somewhat paler; legs and antennae yellowish brown.
Head approximately as wide as long; puncturation dense and shallow, interstices distinctly narrower than diameter of punctures and with distinct microsculpture. Eyes approximately as long as postocular region in dorsal view (
Fig. 64
). Antennae (
Fig. 66
) distinctly incrassate apically; antennomere IV approximately as long as wide; V-X of increasing width and increasingly transverse; X strongly transverse, approximately twice as wide as long. Maxillary palpi with preapical palpomeres approximately 2.5 times as long as wide.
Pronotum 1.21 times as wide as long and 1.25 times as wide as head; maximal width in anterior half; posterior angles marked; lateral margins in posterior half weakly concave in dorsal view; puncturation very dense and ill-defined; microsculpture shallow (
Fig. 64
).
Elytra approximately as long as pronotum; humeral angles pronounced; posterior margins strongly sinuate near posterior angles; puncturation coarse (much more so than that of pronotum), dense, and somewhat granulose (
Fig. 64
); microsculpture indistinct. Hind wings apparently fully developed. Legs slender; metatarsomere I approximately as long as the combined length of II and III.
Abdomen with segments III-VI subparallel; segments III-V with pronounced anterior impressions, segment VI with shallow impression; anterior impressions of segments III- VI with conspicuously coarse and dense puncturation; remainder of tergal surfaces of segments III-VI with rather fine and moderately sparse puncturation; puncturation of tergite VII slightly granulose; tergites III-V without, tergites VI-VII with very shallow microsculpture; posterior margin of tergite VII with palisade fringe (
Fig. 65
).
6: tergites VII and VIII with pronounced median keel (
Figs 65, 67
); posterior margin of tergite VIII weakly concave in the middle (
Fig. 67
); sternite VII unmodified; sternite VIII broadly convex posteriorly (
Fig. 68
); median lobe of aedeagus slender (
Figs 69-70
); apical lobe of paramere as in
Fig. 71
.
♀
: unknown. E t y m o l o g y: The species is dedicated to Andreas Pütz, specialist of
Byrrhidae
, who collected the
holotype
.
C o m p a r a t i v e n o t e s:
Leptusa puetzi
is distinguished from all its congeners especially by the distinctive morphology of the median lobe of the aedeagus. The species is attributed to
Drepanoleptusa
PACE
especially based on the morphology of the median lobe of the aedeagus, which is rather similar to that of
L. sichuanensis
and
L. stimulans
. From the latter, which was collected in the same locality, the species is additionally distinguished by smaller size, paler coloration, different morphology of the antennae, completely different puncturation of the whole body, the completely different shape and chaetotaxy of the apical lobe of the paramere, and the different male secondary sexual characters. For illustrations of other
Drepanoleptusa
species known from
China
see
PACE (1997
,
1999
,
2001
) and
ASSING (2002
,
2006
).
D i s t r i b u t i o n a n d b i o n o m i c s: Thetypelocalityisidenticaltothatof
L. stimulans
(see above). The
holotype
was sifted from the leaf litter of a degraded primary forest at an altitude of
2730 m
.