Description of two new species in the genera Epectinaspis Blanchard and Strigoderma Burmeister (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Rutelinae: Anomalini)
Author
Ramírez-Ponce, Andrés
Author
Curoe, Daniel
text
Zootaxa
2014
3827
1
87
94
journal article
36821
10.11646/zootaxa.3827.1.8
dcb775aa-64b5-454c-922e-93e87b880b9e
1175-5326
286501
E97D7E33-3AA0-44E0-9B89-134224DC8E1C
Epectinaspis costaricensis
Ramírez-Ponce & Curoe
,
new species
(
Figs. 1–7
)
Type
material
(
2 ♂
).
Holotype
(♂,
INBIO
) labeled: “
Costa Rica
/Varablanca/
10.v.91
" // "
Epectinaspis costaricensis
Holotype
♂", red label and male genitalia and metathoracic wing card mounted.
Paratype
(
1 ♂
,
DJCC
), same data as
holotype
except: "
Epectinaspis costaricensis
Paratype
", yellow label.
Description of
holotype
. Male. Length
10.1 mm
; width
4.5 mm
.
Color.
Head orange-brown with green and red reflections; pronotum, scutellum, elytra, pygidium, venter, and legs orange-brown (except green anteromedial blotch on pronotum) with green reflections; prosternum, mesosternum, and metasternum, coxae, trochanters, and abdomen coppery-red with weak green reflections (
Fig. 1
).
Head
. Surface of frons flat, with a central bulge, deeply and densely rugopunctate with 4 setae on each supraocular region (
Figs. 2, 3
); interocular width equals 4.6 eye diameters. Clypeus subrectangular, with lateral angles broadly rounded, apex moderately reflexed; surface slightly convex, alveolate, becoming punctate near apex (
Fig. 2
). Mentum punctate; punctures moderately dense, moderately small; free margins with 10 long and erect setae (4 on each lateral margin and 2 on apical margin); prementum glabrous. Terminal segment of maxillary palpus wider than 3 basal palpomeres (1.3:1.0) and longer than 3 basal palpomeres combined (1.3:1.0).
Pronotum
. Margins beaded; with 5 long, curved, and erect setae on each side; basal angles acute. Surface sparsely punctate, with a weak, wide, and irregular furrow on midline; punctures moderate in size, deep (
Fig. 1
).
Scutellum
. Width length ratio 1.0–0.88, apex rounded; surface punctate; punctures moderate in size, smaller towards apex (
Fig. 1
).
Elytra.
Each with 11 punctate striae, 1 next to sutural margin, 6 on disc extending from basal margin to apex, 2 from humeral umbone to apex, and 2 adjacent to lateral margin (
Fig. 1
). Epipleuron not reaching metepisternum. Margins glabrous.
Propygidium
. Completely covered by elytra, surface punctate, setose; setae short, scattered.
Pygidium.
Shape subtriangular in posterior view; surface narrowly convex near apex and uniformly, moderately densely punctuate; punctures large, shallow, setigerous; setae long, more so on apex.
Venter.
Sternites 2–4 subequal in length; sternite 5 1.17 as long as sternite 4; last sternite 0.87 as long as sternite 4. Sternites 2–6 irregularly punctate; punctures medially moderately large, laterally becoming larger. Most larger punctures setigerous; setae long and more abundant on sides.
Legs.
Protibia with 2 external teeth and a subapical spur; spur subequal in length to protarsomere 2. Protarsomere 5 subequal in length to protarsomeres 1–4 combined, with a conspicuous internomedial tooth. Protarsus with inner claw deeply cleft; inner ramus 3 times as wide as outer ramus (
Fig. 7
). Mesotibia with conspicuous, oblique carina at middle; carina with 2 setiform spinules on basal end, 7 along its length, and 1 on apical end; apex with 7–8 spinules. Metatibia with 18–19 spinules at apex.
Male genitalia.
In dorsal view, parameres simple, straight, without bends or setae, narrowing towards rounded apex (
Fig. 4
); in lateral view, phallobase-tectum-parameres length ratio 1.0:1.66:1.40 (
Fig. 6
).
Female.
Unknown.
Variation in
paratype
(
1 ♂
, DJCC). The
paratype
is similar to the
holotype
but with the following differences: green reflections on frons more intense, punctures on pronotal disc shallower, metasternum and abdomen lighter, sternites with yellow area along apical margins, and apical teeth on external edge of protibia longer.
FIGURES 1–12.
Habitus and diagnostic structures of the new species. 1–7)
Epectinaspis costaricensis
. 1) habitus; 2) head, dorsal view; 3) head, lateral view; 4) male genitalia, dorsal view; 5) parameres, caudal view, 6) male genitalia, lateral view; 7) Protibia and tarsus. 8–12)
Strigoderma ngabe
. 8) habitus; 9) head, dorsal view; 10) male genitalia, dorsal view; 11) male genitalia, lateral view; 12) Protibia and tarsus.
Diagnosis.
This species is distinguished from all other species of the genus
Epectinaspis
by the following combination of characters: males with frons mostly flat and with a central bulge, pronotum glabrous, apex of mesotibia and metatibia with
7–8 and 18–19
spinules respectively, epipleuron not reaching metepisternum; male genitalia with apex of parameres simple, widely rounded, without setae (lateral view), bends or folds.
Epectinaspis costaricensis
resembles
E. chelifera
Bates
and
E. guatemalensis
Ohaus
, sharing with both species (to a large extent) the brown or orange-brown dorsal coloration with green or red reflections and an anteromedial blotch on the pronotum. Additionally, it shares with
E. guatemalensis
the same number of elytral striae on disc (nine), but differs in interocular width (6.5 eye diameters in
E. guatemalensis
,
4.6 in
E. costaricensis
); the quadrate pronotal basal angles (basal angles acute in
E. costaricensis
); the rugopunctate pronotal surface (surface punctate in
E. costaricensis
); the absence of a weak pronotal furrow (furrow present in
E. costaricensis
), the number of metatibial apical spinules (
13–15 in
E. guatemalensis
,
18–19 in
E. costaricensis
) and their areas of distribution, which appear very disjunct:
E. guatemalensis
occurs in
Guatemala
with one doubtful record for
Costa Rica
whereas
E. costaricensis
is known only from
Costa Rica
.
The only species (apart from
E. costaricensis
) that have the expanded epipleura not reaching posterior to the apical margin of the metacoxa are
E. ambigens
and
E. chelifera
.
Epectinaspis ambigens
,
however, is very different in conspicuous characters such as the dark coloration, the abundant pilosity on the frons and pronotum and its distribution in
Guatemala
and
Belize
(
E. costaricensis
distributed in
Costa Rica
only).
Epectinaspis costaricensis
shares more characters with
E. chelifera
as well as a nearer area of distribution. While most
Epectinaspis
species occur from
Mexico
to
El Salvador
, only
E. chelifera
(and
E. moreletiana
) have been recorded in
Panama
. The most conspicuous characters that
E. costaricensis
shares with
E. chelifera
are the expanded epipleura not reaching the metacoxa, the pronotum with a weak medial furrow and punctate (not rugopunctate) surface. The two species however, can be easily separated by their different interocular widths (4.6 eye diameters in
E. costaricensis
, 7.0 in
E. chelifera
), the pronotal basal angles (acute in
E. costaricensis
, obtuse in
E. chelifera
) and the number of spinules on the metatibial apices (
18–19 in
E. costaricensis
,
12–15 in
E. chelifera
).
Etymology
. This species is named after
Costa Rica
, the megadiverse Central American country where it was collected.
Distribution
. The two specimens were collected near Varablanca, Heredia province (
10°10'N
,
84°09'W
) at
1800 m
of elevation on shrub flowers in cloud forest habitat.
Temporal data
. The only two specimens known were collected in May.
Remarks.
Epectinaspis costaricensis
resembles
E. chelifera
Bates
,
E. guatemalensis
Ohaus
, and
E. ambigens
Bates
, but its diagnostic combination of characters, including coloration, will easily distinguish this new species. Most of the species in this genus are distributed from
Mexico
to
El Salvador
, but only
E. chelifera
and
E. moreletiana
(Blanchard)
have been recorded in
Panama
(the southernmost distribution).