Neoeubria inbionis Shepard & Barr, a new genus and new species of Neotropical water penny beetle (Coleoptera: Psephenidae: Eubriinae), with a key to the adult Eubriinae of the Neotropic Zone
Author
Shepard, William D.
william.shepard@csus.edu
Author
Barr, Cheryl B.
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-06-05
3811
4
553
568
journal article
5367
10.11646/zootaxa.3811.4.7
f37862dc-d3d8-422d-8c39-debbbf81eb0c
1175-5326
4919029
C550F505-5BE1-422D-A196-1081B4CB6C04
Neoeubria inbionis
sp. n.
Figs. 1–4
,
25–27
Type material.
Holotype
(male):
COSTA RICA
:
Guanacaste Prov.
,
Parque Nacional Rincón de la Vieja
,
Las Pailas Trail
,
14-VI-2001
,
William D. Shepard
, leg. // reared from pupa collected on wood in seep basin //
HOLOTYPE
Neoeubria inbionis Shepard & Barr
[red label].
Deposited
in
INBC
.
Allotype
(female): locality data same as holotype //
ALLOTYPE
Neoeubria inbionis Shepard & Barr
[red label].
Deposited
in
INBC
.
Paratypes
(2 M & 5 F):
ECUADOR
:
Napo Prov.
,
Huahua Sumaco
,
Km
44 on
Hollin-Loreto Rd.
,
XII-15-1989
,
Malaise Trap
, MS/
JS Wasbauer, H
.
Real
//
CALIFORNIA STATE COLLN AGRICULTURE
//
PARATYPE
Neoeubria inbionis Shepard & Barr
[yellow label] (1 M) (
EMEC
); data same, except
XII-16-1989
(1 F) (
CSCA
); data same, except
XII-18-1989
(1 M) (
CSCA
); data same, except
XII-19-1989
(1 F) (
CSCA
); data same, except
XII-21-1989
(2
FF
) (
CSCA
,
EMEC
); data same, except
XII-22-1989
(1 F) (
CSCA
)
.
Adult Description.
Body oval; males (
Fig. 3
) smaller than females (
Figs. 1–2
,
4
); males 4.6–5.0 mm long and
2.75 mm
wide, females 5.0–
5.6 mm
long and
2.8–3.5 mm
wide. Integument color medium brown, shiny where setae sparse; covered dorsally with a combination of different kinds of setae: widely-spaced, long, erect blond and dark brown setae; sparse, shorter, pale brown setae; and very dense, recumbent, pale blond setae forming a pattern of broad bands and large spots. Venter uniformly clothed in medium-length pale blond setae.
Aedeagus of trilobed
type
(
Fig. 25
) and lightly sclerotized. Basal piece long, reduced to ventral plate basally with lateral flanges that clasp the base of parameres. Parameres long, widest at apical three-fourths of aedeagus; tips narrow, curved laterally; dorsally conjoined just anterior to midlength. Penis lanceolate; shorter than parameres; tip slightly curved ventrally and laterally compressed; base deeply cleft.
1.
Ectopria
is omitted from the key because it is probable that the Neotropical species belong in other genera.
Ovipositor (
Fig. 26
) with bacula long, 1.4 times as long as coxites, thin, gently curved; only partially sclerotized. Coxites 0.7 times as long as bacula; joined medially in basal half, divergent medially in apical half; laterally gently sinuate. Styli short, one-segmented. Long, thin accessory sclerite dorsally in basal third of membrane between coxites.
FIGURE 25.
Neoeubria inbionis
, aedeagus, A— dorsal view, B—left lateral view.
Immature specimens examined.
COSTA RICA
:
Alajuela
,
Alta Masis
,
9
VI
2000
,
Río San Lorenzo
[WDS- A-1302] //
William D. Shepard
, leg. (
1 larva
)
;
Guanacaste Prov.
,
Parque Nacional Rincón de la Vieja
,
Las Pailas Trail
,
18-I-2000
,
William
D.
Shepard
&
Cheryl
B.
Barr
, collected on wood in seep basin [WDS-A-1283](
24 larvae
,
1 pupa
)
; data same, except
14-VI-2001
, William D. Shepard, leg. [WDS-A-1386] (
3 larvae
,
3 pupae
); data same, except
15-VI-2003
, William D. Shepard & Cheryl B. Barr [WDS-A-1541] (
11 larvae
);
data same, except
Quebrada Pailas
below
Catarata
,
14-VI-2001
,
William D. Shepard
, leg. [WDS-A-1387] (
1 larva
)
.
NICARAGUA
:
Río San Juan
,
Refugio Bartola
,
10 VIII 2002
, riffle 3,
Río Bartola
,
William D. Shepard
, leg. [WDS-A-1492] (
1 larva
)
.
PANAMA
:
Chiriquí
,
Fortuna Forest Res.
,
March 2004
,
Checo Colón-Gaud
, leg. (
1 larva
)
. All immature specimens are deposited in
EMEC
.
Etymology.
Named in honor of INBio, the Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad in
Costa Rica
. The case is genitive.
Distribution.
Nicaragua
,
Costa Rica
,
Panama
and
Ecuador
, based on adult and larval specimens.
FIGURE 26.
Neoeubria inbionis
, ovipositor, A—dorsal view, B—left lateral view.
Habitat.
The
type
locality in Parque Nacional Rincón de la Vieja at an
780 m
is a series of seeps in a small basin connected by a spring run to a narrow, slow-flowing forest stream which is a tributary of the Río
Colorado
. The entire area around the seeps and both streams is heavily forested and generally heavily shaded. In the seep basin the water is only about
2–3 cm
deep over a substrate composed of a thick deposit of silt and fine detritus on which lie sticks and larger pieces of rotting, waterlogged wood (
Fig. 27
). In the basin the water is extremely slowmoving but in a couple of meters it begins to flow downhill in a narrow spring run which is crossed by the Las Pailas Trail between Stops 3 and 4.
FIGURE 27.
Shallow, seep pool with waterlogged wood at Parque Nacional Rincón de la Vieja, type locality of
Neoeubria inbionis
.
Larvae and pupae of
N. inbionis
were collected on pieces of decomposing wood found in the seep basin. Larvae were positioned below the water’s surface and pupae were above. The water is likely hypoxic because of the fine organic detritus substrate, coupled with the lack of sunlight for aquatic photosynthesizers due to the heavily-shaded nature of the site. Possession of a plastron facilitates larval survival in this water.
Neoeubria
was the only psephenid present in the seep area, and the only other co-occurring aquatic byrrhoid
Coleoptera
was an unidentified ptilodactylid larva. Other arthropods present in the seep area included aquatic
Hemiptera
,
Belostoma
(Belostomatidae)
and
Ambrysus
(Naucoridae)
, and the crustacean
Hyallela
(Amphipoda)
. No specimens were collected from the spring run formed by the seeps. A single larva was collected in a second, larger stream, Quebrada Pailas, a tributary of the Río
Colorado
, which is also located along the Las Pailas Trail.
The other sites at which larvae were collected by the senior author are also forest streams, although with rocky substrates and faster flow. Although the particular microhabitat of the larvae at these sites is unknown, at all of them submerged wood was common.
Neoeubria inbionis
has been collected at elevations ranging from as low as 40+ m in
Nicaragua
, to as high as
780 m
in
Costa Rica
.
The Ecuadorian adults were all taken in Malaise traps which were set in a forested area to catch flies. Although we could obtain no further information beyond the label data, collection of adults via Malaise traps indicates that
N. inbionis
adults behave like other eubriine adults and fly near the aquatic habitat in which the larvae occur.
Phylogeny.
In the recent phylogeny of the
Psephenidae
by
Lee et al. (2007)
,
Neoeubria
is included as “Genus A.” In the most parsimonious tree
Neoeubria
is placed in a basal trichotomy within the subfamily
Eubriinae
. The trichotomy positions
Neoeubria
in one branch,
Sclerocyphon
+
Tychepsephus
in another branch, and the remainder of the eubriine genera in a third branch.