Taxonomic review of the genera Micridium Motschulsky, 1869 and Micridina Johnson, 1969 (Coleoptera: Ptiliidae) with eleven new species including the first records from South America and Madagascar
Author
Darby, Michael
text
Zootaxa
2017
4242
2
233
254
journal article
36307
10.11646/zootaxa.4242.2.2
c4e5d710-edf2-4928-b53d-22c211fcad53
1175-5326
376374
0DD1868D-4EF5-4FB7-AEE9-372644800A79
Micridium lineatum
(
LeConte 1863
)
as
Ptenidium lineatum
(
Figs. 4
,
32
)
Micridium lineatum
Motschulsky 1869
Habitus
Fig. 4
. Length
0.53 mm
. Colour dark yellowish brown, antennae light yellow. Antennomeres 3–11 length
0.16 mm
. Width across eyes
0.17 mm
. Head punctured and pubescent. Pronotum length
0.16 mm
, width
0.21 mm
, widest in middle, punctured and pubescent throughout, lateral margins slightly sinuate before hind angles
Fig. 32
. Elytra length
0.34 mm
, width
0.25 mm
, punctured and pubescent throughout as pronotum. Wings visible through elytra.
Remarks
. The description, figure and measurements are taken from the syntype of
Micridium lineatum
Motschulsky
in BMNH. This is mounted on a small piece of clear mica(?) and includes a few fragments of a second specimen now lost. Labels are present as follows: '
Micridium
lineatum' (apparently in Matthews' hand, a third word is deleted); '
Micridium lineatum
, Type from Motschulsky, N. America, 19, 1865' (in Matthews' hand on a light green card with the rear corners cut off); '1586, 1587' (Matthews/Mason collection numbers); 'Matthews coll. 1904 - 120' (BMNH accession number) and 'Syntype' (added by BMNH) (
Fig. 4
). A second specimen in the BMNH bearing a red label inscribed in Matthews' hand '
Micridium
lineatum' and a Matthews/Mason number '3762' is not conspecific with the syntype.
The
holotype
of
Ptenidium lineatum
LeConte
is in the
Museum
of
Comparative Zoology
,
Harvard University
,
USA
(imaged at http://mczbase.mcz.harvard.edu/guid/
MCZ
:Ent:6629).
Details of the ventrum, viewed through the mount, were not sufficiently clear to enable positive determination to
Micridium
and for the reasons given above no attempt was made to detach the insect or to dissect it so that the sex is not known.