A new subterranean species of Entomoculia Croissandeau, 1891 from the Canary Islands, Spain (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Leptotyphlinae)
Author
Hernando, Carles
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3607-0556
Natural Sciences Museum of Barcelona, Passeig Picasso s / n, 08003 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
montmutia@gmail.com
Author
Lopez, Heriberto
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6988-5204
Island Ecology and Evolution Research Group, Instituto de Productos Naturales y Agrobiologia (IPNA-CSIC), 38206, La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
text
Contributions to Entomology
2024
2024-01-10
74
1
1
6
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/contrib.entomol.74.e112399
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/contrib.entomol.74.e112399
2511-6428-1-1
367188C1D82E41C986E5E14A37FB1B6E
BAA35C1A692C545587A608E66BDA256D
Entomoculia (Stenotyphlus) vulcanica
sp. nov.
Figs 1-6
Type locality.
Caldera de Los Marteles, MSS, UTM 28R 448100/3092038, Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain.
Type material.
Holotype
♂ CANARY ISLANDS: "GRAN CANARIA / Caldera de Los Marteles MSS-2 / UTM 28R 448100/3092038 / 22-05-2021, H.
Lopez
leg." (IPNA).
Paratypes
1 ♀: "GRAN CANARIA / Caldera de Los Marteles MSS-1 / UTM 28R 448100/3092038 / 07-12-2009, H.
Lopez
leg." (CHC); 1 ♂: "GRAN CANARIA / Los Majaletes MSS-2 / UTM 28R 450511/3091134 / 26-12-2010. H.
Lopez
leg." (CHC); 1 ♂: "GRAN CANARIA / Caldera de Los Marteles MSS-1 / UTM 28R 448100/3092038 / 26-03-2016, H.
Lopez
leg." (IPNA).
Description.
Male.
Habitus as in Fig.
1
. Body length: 1.7 mm. Colour: entirely depigmented (reddish-brown). Apterous and anophthalmous. Labrum tridentate (Fig.
2
). Antennae with ten antennomeres (Fig.
1
). Metatrochanter unarmed, without denticles or spiniform process. Morphology of aedeagus characteristic, sternal plate long and narrow, with the external margin serrated, endophallus with two accessory pieces: one dorsal, forked at apical end and another central and stiletto-shaped.
Head elongated, slightly wider than the pronotum, almost parallel-sided, with punctation widely scattered over whole surface, neck well marked, entirely covered by an elongated polygonal reticulation and with two longitudinal series of small setal pores on both sides of the neck (Fig.
1
). Labrum tridentate with two small lateral denticles and protruding median denticle, bearing eight long setae (Fig.
2
). Antennae with antennomeres markedly setulate (especially the last one) progressively increasing in size from the third antennomere onwards, ending with the last very thickened (Fig.
1
).
Pronotum as long as wide and widest at anterior angles, subparallel-sided; anterior and posterior margins almost straight and anterior and posterior angles rounded; surface covered with small, scattered punctation, with very short setae (Fig.
1
).
Elytra small and strongly narrowed at base; distinctly narrower than pronotum and subparallel (Fig.
1
); surface covered by punctation similar to that on pronotum and by an isodiametric polygonal microsculpture.
Abdomen tergites with polygonal reticulation and widely scattered punctation; the first visible tergite is trapezoidal and the second to fifth tergites quadrangular; tergite VIII posterior margin regularly projected into a point at middle (Fig.
3
). Sternite VIII symmetrical, posterior margin with small median excision bearing two distinct blunt protuberances on both sides (Fig.
4
).
Legs with the metatrochanter unarmed, without denticles or spiniform process.
Aedeagus. Sternal plate long and narrow, with the external margin serrate (Figs
5a
,
6a
); endophallus with two accessory pieces (i.e. copulatory pieces
sensu
Coiffait (1959)
): one dorsal, forked at the apical end (Figs
5c
,
6c
) and other central and stiletto-shaped (Figs
5b
,
6b
).
Figures 1-6.
Entomoculia (Stenotyphlus) vulcanica
sp. nov.
1.
Habitus in dorsal view;
2.
Labrum in dorsal view;
3.
Male tergite VII;
4.
Male sternite VIII;
5.
Aedeagus in right lateral view;
6.
Aedeagus in left lateral view;
a)
Sternal plate;
b)
Dorsal accessory piece;
c)
Central accessory piece.
Female.
General appearance as the male, except for unmodified sternite VIII.
Differential diagnosis.
Entomoculia vulcanica
sp. nov. is very similar, at least in one of the characters of the external morphology, to the two species known from the Canary Islands:
E. canariensis
from the Island of La Gomera and
E. lauricola
from the Island of Tenerife. This character is the metatrochanter of the male, without denticle or spiniform process; however,
E. vulcanica
sp. nov. is separated from both, besides the morphology of the aedeagus and sternite VIII clearly different, by having the labrum tridentate (Fig.
2
), with only one denticle in the other two Canarian species. The new species differs completely from all non-Canarian species of the genus, as these have the labrum with two denticles and the metatrochanter of the male armed with a denticle or spiniform process. For illustrations of the aedeagus, male sternite VIII and labrum of
E. canariensis
and
E. lauricola
, see
Outerelo (1980)
and
Outerelo and
Hernandez
(1989)
.
Distribution.
So far, only two nearby collecting sites are known around the Caldera de los Marteles in the north-eastern sector of the Island, also called Neocanaria in geological terms, which has a higher diversity of subterranean species compared to the rest of the Island or Paleocanaria (
Naranjo et al. 2020
).
Bionomics.
This new species has been collected in the central east region of the Island of Gran Canaria, in two nearby localities showing slight geological and floristic differences. The locality described in labels as "Caldera de Los Marteles" is, in fact, a pyroclastic cinder cone near the volcanic caldera, comprised of 1-6 cm lapilli, volcanic bombs, and slag (up to 70 cm) (Figs
9
,
10
). In turn, Los Majaletes is located at a lower altitude and is geologically characterised by stacks of massive basalt flows up to 2-3 m thick with interspersed scoriaceous layers that must function as a deep MSS. The vegetation at Caldera de Los Marteles is dominated by a pine woodland of
Pinus canariensis
C. Sm., with clearings occupied by shrubby vegetation with
Adenocarpus foliolosus
(Aiton) DC.,
Chamaecytisus proliferus
(L. f.) Link,
Euphorbia regis-jubae
J. Gay,
Micromeria benthamii
Webb & Berthel. and
Teline microphylla
(DC.) P. E. Gibbs & Dingwall (Fig.
7
). At Los Majaletes, the pines are absent, the vegetation being dominated by the same assembly of bushes (Fig.
8
).
Figures 7-10.
Habitat of
Entomoculia (Stenotyphlus) vulcanica
sp. nov.
7.
Appearance of the vegetation in Caldera de Los Marteles;
8.
Appearance of vegetation at Los Majaletes;
9.
Terrain of cinder cone excavated in road construction near Caldera de Los Marteles, showing the presence of an MSS;
10.
Detail of pyroclastic deposit that forms the MSS in the same cinder cone.
The model of a subterranean trap, used to study the biodiversity of the MSS at these two localities, has led us to discover a rich underground invertebrate community of many different taxonomical groups. Most of this fauna are epigean species non-adapted to subterranean life, which penetrate through the fissures of the soil until reaching the MSS, attracted by the bait in the traps or because the environmental conditions of this habitat are suitable for part of their life cycle. However, what is really striking about the MSS of these two localities is the amount of differently adapted subterranean species that we have collected there over the years, using this model of trap. Together with this new species of
Entomoculia
, we have collected the pseudoscorpion
Occidenchthonius beieri
Zaragoza, 2017; the spiders
Agraecina canariensis
Wunderlich, 1992,
Walckenaeria subterranea
Wunderlich, 2011 and undescribed blind species of the genera
Dysdera
Latreille, 1804 and
Macarophaeus
Wunderlich, 2011; a new species of blind opilion, the millipede
Dolichoiulus oromii
Enghoff, 2012; the cockroach
Symploce microphthalma
Izquierdo & Medina, 1992; together with new blind species of the beetle genera
Lymnastis
Motschulsky, 1862 (
Carabidae
),
Euconnus
Thomson, 1859,
Domene
Fauvel, 1872 (
Staphylinidae
) and
Oromia
Alonso-Zarazaga, 1987 (
Curculionidae
).
Etymology.
The specific name refers to the presence of this new species on a volcanic island.
Discussion.
For the moment, all the Canarian species of the genus
Entomoculia
are characterised by lacking a denticle or spiniform process on the metatrochanter of the male and by having a different number of denticles on the labrum (one or three), compared to non-Canarian species of the genus; with the metatrochanter of the male armed with a denticle or spiniform process and with the labrum bidentate. Due to these morphological peculiarities,
Outerelo and
Hernandez
(1989)
considered that the Canarian species of
Entomoculia
could be included in a new subgenus or even in a genus that presents a series of characters shared with the genera
Entomoculia
and
Mesotyphlus
Coiffait, 1957, although it could be that this is only a distinct group of species belonging to the genus
Entomoculia
that are found exclusively in the Canary Islands. Further molecular data and morphological studies of the Canarian species of
Entomoculia
will probably provide the necessary data to establish their correct taxonomic position.