A review of the Subtribe Lebiina Bonelli (Lebiini, Carabidae, Coleoptera) from Southwest of Saudi Arabia
Author
Rasool, Iftekhar
Author
Abdel-Dayem, Mahmoud S.
Author
Felix, Ron F. F. L.
Author
Aldhafer, Hathal M.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-02-13
4379
1
87
102
journal article
30756
10.11646/zootaxa.4379.1.5
2c7fe9b1-f5a7-4169-bcc0-d544c884e01f
1175-5326
1172356
E860555F-9CED-4A38-AAF8-B7AB5C1A7E71
Lebia (Nematopeza) melanura
(
Dejean, 1831
)
Nematopeza melanura
Dejean, 1831
: 370
Type
locality:
Senegal
Type depository:
Syntype male in MNHN
Material
examined:
Total
9 specimens
:
Asir
:
3 ♂
and
5 ♀
,
KSA
, “
Al Hubail
,
Wadi Reem
,
N18°06.981'
E42°13.939'
Alt
.
451 m
,
20.X.2014
, (LT),
I. Rasool
&
M. Al Harbi
”
[
KSMA
].
1 ♂
, “
Al Hubail
,
Wadi Reem
,
N18°06.981'
E42°13.939'
Alt
.
451 m
,
20.X.2014
, (LT), I. Rasool & M. Al Harbi”
[RMNH].
Recognition.
Small sized beetles (
Fig. 20
), TBL
4.65–6.25 mm
.
Colour:
Head black, pronotum, femora, tibiae and antennomeres I–III testaceous; rest of the antennae, mouth parts and tarsi dark brown; elytra testaceous with a trilobed black patch at posterior third, widened at apex to the margin of elytra, median lobe extending along suture to middle, occupying two inner intervals, lateral lobes prolonged up to apical third, occupying all intervals and left lateral margin.
Microsculpture:
Elytra, head, clypeus and labrum with isodiametric mesh pattern; pronotum smooth; abdomen with transverse microlines.
Head:
Slightly wider than long, HL
0.92–1.28 mm
and HW
0.99– 1.35 mm
, narrower than pronotum; frons and vertex sculptured, vertex with weak longitudinal irregular furrows, frons with irregular coarse punctures (
Fig. 32
); labrum truncate at anterior margin.
Pronotum.
Transverse, PL
0.80– 1.06 mm
and PW
1.24–1.68 mm
, anterior margin slightly concave, anterior angles strongly rounded, lateral margin anteriorly rounded, obliquely straight in posterior half, sinuate in front of posterior angles, posterior angles almost right, pronotal base strongly incised towards posterior angles and lobate in middle (
Fig. 32
); disc sculptured, median longitudinal impression deep.
Elytra:
Elongate subovoid, EL
3.25–3.9 mm
and EW
2.3–2.95 mm
, lateral margin obliquely convex; apex of elytra obliquely truncate, not serrate, striae complete, deep and punctate, intervals convex throughout.
Legs
: Tibiae in mid leg of male with one preapical incision on inner side.
Abdomen
: Abdominal sterna moderately pubescent, last sternum rounded and tetra-setose in both sexes.
Aedeagus:
AL
1.33 mm
; in lateral view, it is slightly curved and sinuate dorsally (
Fig. 40
); with equal width along its length except apical lamina, apical lamina short and pointed.
Affinity.
This species is close to
L. chaudoiri
(Alluaud, 1932)
, but according to Alluaud (1932),
L. melanura
can be differentiated by elytral black patch shorter, less protruding towards the scutellum, and finer punctuation on head and striae.
Ecological note.
Members of this species were collected from elevation
451 m
in valley with damp place having gravels and stones among different kinds of grasses. This species was collected by UV–light during October.
Geographical distribution.
It is described from
Senegal
(
Dejean, 1831
) also known from
Ivory
Coast
,
Gambia
,
Guinea
(
Lorenz, 2017
) and newly recorded during this study from
Saudi Arabia
(
Fig. 43
).
Lebia melanura
is an Afrotropical species that exemplifies AFA Chorotype.
Comments:
Lebia melanura
and
L. chaudoiri
are problematic to distinguish and often wrongly recognized. The morphological characters suggested by Alluaud (1932) to differentiate
L. chaudoiri
from
L. melanura
include: black suture longer extending towards the scutellum, smaller red humeral spots, stronger punctuation on the head, the striae coarser punctuate and the posterior angles of the pronotum more elevated. In
L. melanura
, all above distinguishing characters overlap with those of
L. chaudoiri
in several examined specimens from
Ivory coast
,
Congo
,
Senegal
,
Chad
,
Tanzania
and Arabian Peninsula. The genitalia of both species seem also the same. These results suggest that
L. melanura
and
L. chaudoiri
are identical species. However, the
holotypes
of both species were not found in their
type
depository, so the authors keep the current status of both species.