Modern hydrophilid clades present and widespread in the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous (Coleoptera: Hydrophiloidea: Hydrophilidae)
Author
Fikáček, Martin
Author
Prokin, Alexander
Author
Yan, Evgeny
Author
Yue, Yanli
Author
Wang, Bo
Author
Ren, Dong
Author
Beattie, Robert
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2014
2014-04-30
170
4
710
734
http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/zoj.12114
journal article
10.1111/zoj.12114
0024-4082
10273948
HYDROYIXIA ELONGATA
SP. NOV.
Type
locality and age:
China
,
Liaoning Province
, Shangyuan County, Chaomidian Village, Huangbanjigou, Yixian Formation, Early Cretaceous, Lower Cretaceous, Aptian, 124.6 Mya (
Swisher
et al
., 1999
). An alternative dating was proposed by
Zheng
et al
. (2003)
: Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary, Late Tithonian to Berriasian,
c.
145–140 Mya. See
Ren
et al
. (2010)
for discussion on various datings of the formation.
Material examined (
two specimens
):
Holotype
:
CNU 2010005
, piece and counterpiece (
Figs 5A, B
,
7H–L
)
.
Paratype
:
CNU 2009075
, piece only (
Figs 5C–E
,
7F–G
)
.
Description
(characters seen only in the
paratype
marked by an asterisk).
Body narrowly elongate. For body measurements see
Table 1
.
Head.
Clypeus large, slightly expanding laterally; frontoclypeal sutures very distinct, reaching lateral margin of head closely before eyes; anterior margin widely excised, excision angular laterally; dorsal surface finely and densely punctated*. Eyes rather large, separated by 2.3–2.6× the width of one eye. Labrum transverse, partly exposed anterior to clypeus, slightly narrowing posteriad*, weakly convex on anterior margin. Gula narrowing anteriad, with longitudinal ridge mesally, gular sutures widely separated. Mentum large, subrectangular,
c.
2.0× wider than long.
Prothorax.
Pronotum transverse, slightly narrowing anteriad, anterolateral corners slightly projecting anteriad; lateral margin arcuate, with a narrow bead; lateral portions with a group or trichobothria much larger than ground punctation*. Prosternal process wide and short, procoxae contiguous.
Mesothorax.
Mesoventrite subtriangular, extremely narrow at anterior margin; mesal portion probably with an elevated carina. Anapleural sutures well developed, slightly curved, converging anteriad, joint at anterior margin of mesoventrite. Mesepimeron subtriangular. Mesocoxae only narrowly separated. Elytra combined nearly parallel-sided, each elytron with sharply impressed sutural stria reaching
c.
elytral midlength; elytra with finely punctate elytral series*, serial punctures only slightly larger than interval punctation*, alternate elytral intervals with large and very conspicuous trichobothria; epipleuron well developed anteriorly, rather wide, subdivided into outer and inner portion.
Metathorax.
Metaventrite
c.
as long as mesoventrite, probably at least slightly elevated mesally, narrowly projecting between mesocoxae anteriorly; only slightly projecting posteriad. Anepisternum 3.1× as long as wide.
Abdomen
with five ventrites, ventrite 1 probably weakly carinate anteriorly, without carina in posterior portion. Ventrite 5 with shallow wide apical emargination.
Differential diagnosis:
Hydroyixia elongata
sp. nov.
differs from the following species especially in the narrowly elongate body shape (widely elongate in
H. latissima
), parallel-sided elytra (widest anteriorly and narrowing posteriad in
H. latissima
), distinctly larger mentum (small in
H. latissima
) and metaventrite
c.
as long as mesoventrite (much longer than mesoventrite in
H. latissima
).
Etymology:
The species name refers to the elongate body shape of this species.
Comments:
The
paratype
of
H. elongata
differs from the
holotype
by rather significantly larger body size (body length
11.8 mm
compared with
8.3 mm
of the
holotype
), which may indicate it is in fact not conspecific with the
holotype
. Still, both specimens correspond well in body proportions and the size of the mentum considered by us as diagnostic characters, and the variation of the body size (35%) is still in the range observed in variable species of the extant
Acidocerinae
. Unfortunately, the ventral characters are not preserved in the
paratype
, and its wellpreserved characters of the dorsal surface (e.g. trichobothria) cannot be compared with the
holotype
in which the dorsal portion is rather poorly preserved. We hence tentatively consider both specimens as representing a single species.