A New Species of Canthidium Erichson (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae) from the Endemic Biota of Los Chimalapas, Oaxaca, Mexico
Author
Mora-Aguilar, Eder F.
Author
Delgado, Leonardo
text
The Coleopterists Bulletin
2019
2019-12-19
73
4
1067
1074
http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/0010-065x-73.4.1067
journal article
10.1649/0010-065X-73.4.1067
1938-4394
10113974
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:50E315DC-95A6-426D-8EE3-EE69A360575E
Canthidium kohlmanni
Mora-Aguilar and Delgado
,
new species
Zoobank.org/
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
0A277144-6EF2-4AE6-9E14-323653931294
(
Figs. 1–7
)
Type Material.
Holotype
male labeled “
MEXICO
:
Oaxaca
,
San Miguel Chimalapa
,
Benito Juárez
,
El Puerto
,
8-VII-2013
,
16.7159° N
,
94.1076° W
,
1,250 m
,
Pinus-Quercus-Liquidambar
forest, Coprotrampa, E. Mora-A. y
L. Delgado
cols”
.
Holotype
is deposited in the
Colección Entomológica del
Instituto de Ecolog´ıa
A. C., Xalapa,
Mexico
.
Description.
Holotype
male. Length
3.9 mm
, width across humeri
2.7 mm
. Body form moderately convex and glabrous dorsally. Head and pronotum dark green and shiny, elytra darker, striae with green reflections, legs reddish brown; clypeus and frons slightly microreticulated (
Fig. 1
).
Head:
Clypeus slightly concave, apex bidentate, median emargination V-shaped, rugose-punctate anteriorly, transversally reticulated posteriorly; frons almost flat with 2 barely visible swellings, punctures confluent, sparser and shallower toward vertex; vertex slightly convex, almost impunctate on each side of midline. Eyes very narrow, with 2 facets at posterior end of genae; eyes separated by about 9–10 times maximum width of eye (
Fig. 3
). Antennae reddish brown, sericeous.
Pronotum:
Surface shiny, uniformly punctate; punctures sparse, shallow, minute to small at sides, like those on vertex (
Fig. 1
); lateral fovea semicircular and slightly marked; posterior margin lacking elongate punctures or groove.
Elytra:
Striae moderately impressed, interrupted by annulated punctures separated by about 2–3 diameters of 1 puncture; intervals very finely punctate, surface shiny (
Fig. 1
).
Wings:
Macropterous, wings functional.
Venter:
Proepisternum excavate anteriorly, surface microreticulated; sternellum smooth and with a line of setiferous punctures along base; mesosternum microreticulated with minute punctures; metasternum with minute punctures denser than mesosternum (
Fig. 2
).
Abdomen:
Sternites 1–6 microreticulated, with minute punctures; pygidium convex, shiny, with minute, shallow punctures (
Fig. 2
).
Legs:
Protibia with 3 large teeth on external border, apical and middle teeth separated by 2 denticles, inner apical margin of protibia produced into triangular anterior projection and slightly bent downwards; apical spur simple and slightly curved inward (
Fig. 4
); profemora microreticulated; meso- and metafemora densely punctate, punctures minute, shallow, denser apically.
Aedeagus:
Parameres moderately short, apices truncated to slightly rounded, inner margins slightly concave (
Figs. 5–7
).
Etymology.
We dedicate this species to Bert Kohlmann, friend and specialist of the subfamily
Scarabaeinae
, and author of the works on the species of
Canthidium
from North America and
Costa Rica
.
Taxonomic Remarks.
This species is distinguished by the following combination of characters: body moderately convex; dorsally dark green in color, pronotum and head with a light cast green and reddish; head with rounded swellings, not tuberculate; vertex slightly punctate; eye dorsally with two facets wide at the posterior end of gena, interocular distance separated by about 9–10 times the width of an eye; antennal club reddish brown and sericeous; pronotal surface with shallow and minute punctures on disc, at sides with punctures moderate in size; basal pronotal border not margined; elytra with eight clearly punctate striae; mesosternum with minute punctures; abdominal sternites shagreened, pygidium smooth and with minute, shallow punctures; macropterous; and the shape of the parameres (
Figs. 5–7
).
Canthidium kohlmanni
is similar to
Canthidium pseudoperceptibile
Kohlmann
and Sol´ıs (the new species was compared with
paratypes
of this species), but it is distinguished from
C. pseudoperceptibile
by the frons and vertex with denser and shallower punctures (
Fig. 3
versus
Fig. 9
), the pronotum with finer and shallower punctation (
Fig. 1
versus
Fig. 8
), the protibia with the apical and middle teeth separated by denticles (
Fig. 4
versus
Fig. 10
), and the shape of the parameres of the male genitalia (
Figs. 5–7
versus
Figs. 11–12
).
To include
C. kohlmanni
, we propose the following modifications in Moctezuma
et al.
’s (2019) key to the species of
Canthidium
of North America.
13. Head and pronotum weakly punctate,
appearing smooth .............................. 13
ʹ
- Head and pronotum coarsely punctate,
appearing roughened ........................... 14 13
ʹ
. Punctures on pronotal disc small, moderately
deep (
Fig. 8
); apical and middle protibial teeth
without denticles between them (
Fig. 10
); left
paramere with projection on inner edge (
Fig.
11) ........................
C. pseudoperceptibile
Kohlmann and Sol´ıs
- Punctures on pronotal disc minute, shallow
(
Fig. 1
); apical and middle protibial teeth with
denticles between them (
Fig. 4
); parameres
without projection on inner edge (
Fig. 5
) ...
...........
C. kohlmanni
Mora-Aguilar and
Delgado,
new species
Distribution.
Canthidium kohlmanni
is only known from the
type
locality, in the undisturbed forests of the mountainous areas of Benito Juárez in the
Figs. 1–7.
Canthidium kohlmanni
, holotype.
1–2)
Habitus, dorsal and ventral views, respectively;
3)
Head;
4)
Protibia;
5–7)
Parameres, caudal, dorsal, and lateral views, respectively.
Los Chimalapas region of
Oaxaca
,
Mexico
. The locality and surrounding areas have a rugged topography with ravines and hills with mixed pine-oak forest and tropical deciduous forests at
1,250 m
elevation. The distribution of
C. pseudoperceptibile
is allopatric with
C. kohlmanni
, since the former species inhabits tropical forests in the lowlands of the states of
Veracruz
and
Chiapas
in
Mexico
and
Guatemala
and
Belize
but on the Gulf of
Mexico
and Atlantic slopes.
Los Chimalapas has remained as a biologically unexplored region in
Mexico
, principally at elevations above
1,000 m
. However, since the last decade of the last century to present, many species from this region have been described. Currently, one genus and 23 species of animals and 20 species of plants are endemic in the region (Appendix 1). Two groups stand out by the greater number of endemic species in this region, plants and beetles.
Coleoptera
is the most diverse group yet less studied. In Los Chimalapas, there are currently known one genus and one species of rove beetles, one species of zopherid beetle, 11 species of scarab beetles, and two species of passalid beetles that are endemic in this region (Appendix 1). Most of the species endemic species to this region are restricted to cloud and mixed forests with conifers located above
1,000 m
elevation.
Figs. 8–12.
Canthidium pseudoperceptibile
, male paratype.
8)
Habitus, dorsal view;
9)
Head;
10)
Protibia;
11–12)
Parameres, caudal and lateral views, respectively.
It is remarkable that this region conserves endemic species of large size, such as sturdy trees,
e.g
.,
Persea obscura
Lorea-Hern. (Lauraceae)
, or a robust beetle species,
e.g
.,
Proculus reyescastilloi
Delgado and Mora-Aguilar (Passalidae)
. The area of Los Chimalapas has remained as a little-disturbed region due to its mountainous and steep topography, which make accessibility difficult. Priority efforts to conserve this region must be given to maintain not only particular species, but its huge composite biodiversity of species and landscapes (Navarro- Sigüenza
et al.
2008).