Taxonomic Review of the Australian Genus Pediomorphus Chaudoir, 1878 (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Abacetini)
Author
Will, Kipling
text
The Coleopterists Bulletin
2019
2019-09-22
73
3
629
645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/0010-065x-73.3.629
journal article
133200
10.1649/0010-065X-73.3.629
99bf6930-d483-4789-886e-2aaf5b44d9b1
1938-4394
5402311
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:48CFB8E9-AA28-413D-98CB-1841B65ED236
Pediomorphus obtusus
, Will
,
new species
Zoobank.org/
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
43422B4B-6B47-4E87-B282-9DBCFB2A96AD
(
Figs. 13
,
19
,
32
)
Type Material.
HOLOTYPE
:
Male
. //“
Kununurra
,
N.W.A.
13-22.ii.68”// “U.C. Berkeley EMEC 705,250”// [deposited
ANIC
, Reg. No.
25-067869
]
.
PARATYPES
:
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
:
4 specimens
- same data as holotype,
EMEC705249
, EME705251- EME705253.
9 specimens-
Kununurra
,
22.xii.1991
-
6.i.1992
,
R.I. Storey.
EMEC705239
,
EMEC705241
-
EMEC705248
, [
QDAF
]
.
NORTHERN TERRITORY
:
Gregory National Park
, at light,
1.vi.2001
,
AA Calder
,
EMEC705238
, [
ANIC
]
.
QUEENSLAND
:
Townsville
,
17.i.1903
,
FP Dodd
,
EMEC705222
.
Townsville
,
5.ii.1945
,
B Malkin
, [
USNM
].
Rd to Broadwater at Blackbull Ck,
17°54
′
28″ S
141°08
′
45″ E
, UV light,
7m
,
31.xii.2007
,
K Will
, AUS2007.xii.31.5, [
EMEC
]
.
Normanton
,
20.v.1976
,
K and E Carnaby
, [
ANIC
].
3 specimens
–
55 km
W of Normanton
,
Flinders River
crossing, [
QDAF
]
.
Type Locality.
Kununurra,
Western Australia
, in the vicinity of
15°47’ S
128°45’ E
(
Fig. 19
). The area has an elevation of about
50 m
. Where not modified, the habitat is open savanna woodland and Ord River riparian drainage.
Diagnosis.
Similar to
P. variabilis
but with the pronotal hind angles obtuse and not prominent. The male genitalia have several evident spine fields.
Description. Size:
sbl = 5.4 [4.8–5.8] mm; greatest width across elytra = 1.9 [1.3–2.0] mm.
Color:
Dorsal and ventral surfaces castaneous; legs, mouthparts, and antennae concolorous or slightly paler brunneous. Dorsally distinctly and ventrally slightly shiny to moderately dull. Dorsally with spectral iridescence, venter, elytral epipleura, and legs with or without slight spectral iridescent.
Head:
Dorsal microsculpture not evident at 50Xx magnification. Clypeal-ocular impressions shallow, short, parallel, poorly delimited. Ocular ratio = 1.43 [1.43–1.56]. Eyes relatively large size, somewhat prominent, with small posterior orbital area, single subocular carina long, sharply defined, in some a second, short, low carina and region slightly rugose. Labrum with anterior margin slightly convex. Median tooth of mentum narrow, rounded or emarginate across apex. Antennae very long, antennomeres 8–11 surpassing pronotal base.
Thorax:
Pronotum dorsally with distinct punctures only in and around basal impressions, microsculpture not evident at 50X magnification. Pronotum widest across middle, lateral margins converging to base, not or only very slightly sinuate. Lateral marginal bead narrow, widening slightly near base and ending just at hind angles or rarely extending slightly and obscurely along base where bead, when present, is interrupted by irregular puncture; basal margin without marginal bead; anterior angles not prominent, broadly roundedtriangular; hind angles widely obtuse, not denticulate; basal impressions linear, broad, shallowly impressed, reaching basal margin. Seta at hind angle in marginal bead. Elytra parallel-sided, dorsally very depressed, epipleura in dorsal view very slightly sinuate at level of umbilicate marginal puncture 7. Elytral striae finely, shallowly crenulate-punctate. Basal third of striae 6–7 shallower and more coarsely punctate than other striae. Elytral microsculpture not evident at 50X magnification. Intervals flat or very slightly convex, more convex in apical third. Elytral plica very small, elongate. Prosternal process shallowly rounded to somewhat flattened, apically margined. Prosterna smooth except for a few very shallow, fine medial punctures. Meso- and metasterna coarsely punctate.
Abdomen:
Abdominal ventrites densely, finely, shallowly rugose.
Aedeagus:
Medium lobe long, with thin apical region slightly turned ventrally in lateral view, tip rounded in ventral view, 4 evident fields of spinules visible on endophallus in repose.
Etymology.
The specific epithet is the Latin masculine nominative
obtusus
, which is a reference to the bluntly obtuse pronotal hind angles in these beetles.