Male secondary sexual characters resolve taxonomic uncertainty: five new species and a review of the formerly monotypic rove beetle genus Mimosticus Sharp (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylininae)
Author
Brunke, Adam
Author
Solodovnikov, Alexey
text
Zootaxa
2014
3893
1
journal volume
10.11646/zootaxa.3893.1.2
41188fbe-cee3-4720-8ebc-9238329bba3c
1175-5326
250402
E5EC4E8B-A59E-478D-8A7A-21626F312564
Mimosticus sharpi
Brunke et Solodovnikov
sp. n.
(
Fig. 1
D, 2D, 3D, 4D, 5B, 6D, 7D, 8E, 9D, E, 10B (map))
Type
material.
Holotype
[point-mounted, terminalia and aedeagus dissected and attached to the specimen in a plastic genitalia vial with glycerin]: male, “
ECUADOR
Pichincha, Nanegalito,
12 km
S, Bellavista Nature Reserve, ca.
2200 m
,
0°0'54'' S
;
78°40'56'' W
, Z. Falin
30
OCT
;
ECU
1F99 0 59 ex: pyrethrum fogging fungus log/ [
SEMC
barcode label]/
Holotype
Mimosticus sharpi
sp. n.
Brunke et Solodovnikov des. 2014 [red label]” (
SEMC
).
Paratypes
:
Ecuador
:
Pichincha
:
1 female
, Mindo,
10.6 km
W, Mindo road
0°4'23'' S
;
78°45'14'' W
,
1375 m
,
28.III.1999
, R. Brooks, on fungusy log (
ZMUC
);
1 female
, Maquipucuna Biological Station, principal trail,
1275 m
,
0°7'22'' S
; 78°39'0'',
29.X.1999
, beating recent treefall leaves, Z. Fallin (
SEMC
);
1 female
, Nanegalito,
7 km
S on Nono road,
1540 m
,
0°0'23'' S
;
78°40'36'' W
,
27–31.X.1999
, flight intercept trap, Z. Fallin (
SEMC
);;
2 females
, Bellavista Nature Reserve,
2200–2300 m
,
0°00'55.77'' S
;
78°40'79.73'' W
,
24–28.VII.2007
, Malaise trap, C. Gillet (
BMNH
);
Napo
:
3 males
,
4 females
, Sierra Azul,
2300 m
,
0°40'0'' S
;
77°55'0'' W
,
17.II.–8.III.1996
, Malaise trap P. Hibbs (
SEMC
,
ZMUC
);
2 males
,
2 females
, Sierra Azul,
2300 m
,
0°40'0'' S
;
77°55'0'' W
,
12.II.–26.III.1996
, flight intercept trap, P. Hibbs (
SEMC
).
Peru
:
1 female
, “
Peru
Central” (
ZISP
);
Cusco
:
21 males
,
34 females
, Pillahuata, Manu rd. km 128,
17–28.IX.1982
, in vine and leaf litter, L.E. Watrous & G. Mazurek (
FMNH
,
ZMUC
).
FIGURE 8.
Aedeagus of
Mimosticus viridipennis
Sharp
(A–D),
M. tenuiformis
Brunke and Solodovnikov
(E) and
M. sharpi
Brunke and Solodovnikov
(F). Parameral view (A–B, E–F), lateral view (C–D). Internal sac not everted (A, C, E, F), internal sac everted (B, D). Scale bars = 0.5 mm.
FIGURE 9.
Abparameral view of median lobe of the aedeagus, showing internal sac
in situ
:
Mimosticus viridipennis
, Sharp
(A),
M. tenuiformis
Brunke and Solodovnikov
(B),
M. aeneipennis
Brunke and Solodovnikov
(C),
M. sharpi
Brunke and Solodovnikov
(D). Copulatory sclerite of internal sac of
M. sharpi
(E),
M. pseudosharpi
Brunke and Solodovnikov
(F) and
M. latens
Brunke and Solodovnikov
(G). Scale bars = 0.2 mm. a—ventral apex of paramere showing peg setae-like structures, b—copulatory sclerite, arrow—apical margin of copulatory sclerite.
Description.
Measurements: HL 1.1–1.2; HW 1.2–1.3; PL 1.6–1.7; PW 2.1–2.3; EL 2.3–2.4; EW 2.4–2.7. Total body length
11–12 mm
.
Black, with distinct golden iridescence on head and pronotum; elytra metallic bluish purple or brassy-purple; abdomen strongly iridescent. Some parts of legs can be paler: dark-brown. Several apical antennomeres often paler, brownish, two apical antennomeres very distinctly pale in some specimens, yellowish.
Head in dorsal view with nuchal ridge distinct laterally. Eyes moderately large, in dorsal view approximately 2 times as long as tempora. Antennae as in
Fig. 2
D, with relatively long antennomeres: antennomere 4 about 2.4–2.6 times as long as wide.
Pronotum slightly wider than long.
Elytra slightly wider and longer than pronotum.
Male: tergite VIII broadly rounded at apex; sternite VIII with characteristically “angulate” apical margin, without apical notch (
Fig. 4
D); sternite IX with narrow basal stalk, distinctly shorter than apical portion (
Fig. 6
D); tergite X with clusters of medium-sized macrosetae and with only a faint trace of an apical emargination (
Fig. 7
D). Aedeagus with well-developed, broad and emarginate copulatory sclerite in internal sac (
Fig. 9
E) but otherwise very similar to that of
M. aeneipennis
: paramere dilated apically (
Fig. 8
F), without sensory peg setae-like structures; internal sac with strongly sclerotized, densely packed, spine-like structures that are grouped in fields that differ in their size and degree of sclerotization.
Comparison.
Mimosticus sharpi
can be easily distinguished from
M. viridipennis
and
M. tenuiformis
by the nuchal ridge that is visible in dorsal view. From
M. aeneipennis
it can be distinguished externally by the larger eyes, bluish-purple elytra and more slender antennomeres 7–10. Among males of the
sharpi
species complex,
M. sharpi
can be distinguished by the broadly rounded apical margin of tergite VIII and the characteristically angulate apex of sternite VIII, the stalk-like basal portion of sternite IX that is distinctly shorter than the apical half, broader tergite X that is only faintly notched apically, and the well-developed, broad and emarginate copulatory sclerite of the internal sac of the aedeagus.
Distribution and bionomics.
Mimosticus sharpi
is known from several localities in
Ecuador
and from one locality in Cusco,
Peru
. Specimens were collected on fungusy logs, in leaf litter, in flight intercept or Malaise traps in montane forests at elevations ranging between
1300 and
2300
m.
Etymology.
This species is dedicated to David Sharp (
1840–1922
), a great coleopterist of the past, who described the genus
Mimosticus
, correctly hinted towards its affinity with the Australian fauna, and who made an enormous contribution to the knowledge of the Neotropical
Staphylinidae
.