The genus Sicoderus Vanin 1986 (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Curculioninae: Erodiscini) in the West Indies
Author
Anderson, Robert S.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-10-10
4497
3
301
345
journal article
29174
10.11646/zootaxa.4497.3.1
55770274-cac7-4dde-871a-6c4cf42522c5
1175-5326
1454868
FED8ED2E-510F-4596-A31B-59E6DF73919C
Sicoderus ramosi
(Sleeper)
(
Figures 61–62
,
69
. Map 2)
Erodiscus ramosi
Sleeper 1954
: 350
. Holotype male (USNM) from Colonia Ramfis, Dominican Republic, examined.
O’Brien and Wibmer 1982
: 101
.
Sicoderus ramosi
;
Vanin 1986
: 593
.
Anderson 1999
: 135
.
Perez-Gelabert 2008
: 136
.
Description:
Length male,
4.2 mm
. Integument black, shining. Eyes rather widely separated by a distance about one-half width rostrum at midlength. Rostrum 1.00x length elytra in male. Antennal insertion at about apical 2/
5 in
male. Prothorax constricted anteriorly, globose, widest at about middle; punctures widely spaced, small, shallow on disc, slightly larger and deeper, but not forming striolae laterally on flanks; erect setae absent. Elytra in dorsal view widest at about midlength, lateral margins convergent both anteriorly and posteriorly; humeri fully reduced, not at all angulate; erect setae absent. Strial punctures evident, small, shallow; striae slightly impressed. Membranous wings absent. Abdominal ventrite 1 of male slightly raised in middle near posterior margin with small transverse patch of setosity at tip. Ventrite 5 with impression in apical one-half, not setose. Legs with front femora with ventral margin with small, blunt tooth, tooth absent (or nearly) on middle and hind femora; tarsal claws with small basal tooth. Aedeagus (fig. 69) widest at apex, internal sac with pair of elongate basal sclerites straight, convergent and separate anteriorly, each with short basal straight extension. Female not known.
Material examined:
Colonia Ramfis
,
3.IV.1953
,
J.A. Ramos
(
1 male
holotype
;
USNM
)
.
Colonia Ramfis
,
Trujillo Valley
,
7.VIII.1958
,
A.F. Archer
(
1 female
;
CMNC
)
.
Comments:
Vanin (1986)
recognized this species from four specimens occurring in three somewhat distant localities, one in
Haiti
and two in
the Dominican
Republic. I have examined the specimens considered by
Vanin (1986)
as this species and additional specimens not then available to him, and conclude that specimens from two of the localities represent additional new species, close to
S. ramosi
, but distinct in the form of the basal sclerite complex of the male internal sac. I have only been able to find a single additional specimen of
S. ramosi
, a female, which I associate with the
holotype
by general morphology and locality.