Aquatica gen. nov. from mainland China with a description of Aquatica Wuhana sp. nov. (Coleoptera: Lampyridae: Luciolinae)
Author
Fu, Xinhua
Author
Ballantyne, Lesley
Author
Lambkin, Christine L.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2530
1
18
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.196535
85bc5b29-c7c5-430b-8724-0267ced882c2
1175-5326
196535
Aquatica ficta
(Olivier)
Figs 2–7
Luciola ficta
Olivier, 1909
:249
.
Pic, 1911
:188
.
McDermott, 1966
:104
.
Ho & Jiang, 1997
:42
.
Yeh, 1999
:1
.
Jeng
et al.
2003
:545
.
Chen, 2003
:163
.
Luciola ovalis
Hope.
Matsumara 1918
:84
misidentification.
Chang 1994
:1
misidentification.
Type
.
Lectotype
female.
CHINA
: Guizhou (designated by
Jeng
et al
. 2003
:545). Not examined by these authors.
Specimens examined.
CHINA
. Fujian province, Fuqing,
14.v.2008
, XH FU, male,
4 females
(
ANIC
).
Taiwan
, Miyaoli, breeding,
7.ii.1981
, N Ohba,
2 males
(
ANIC
).
Taiwan
Taihoku,
6.v.1928
, F Hadden, male (
SAM
).
Diagnosis
. Males with orange pronotum (
Fig. 3
), dark brown elytra having very narrow pale margins which are prominent along the suture, and extend from humerus to mesoscutellum; margins extending narrowly around elytral apex and along lateral margin; ventral surface of epipleuron pale; aedeagus (
Figs 6, 7
) similar to that of
A. leii
with LL apices inturned and hooked; inner basal margins of LL not toothed; ML slender along most of its length with base bulbous; aedeagal sheath (
Fig. 5
) with sternite apically entire and slightly produced, consistent with
Jeng
et al.
(2003
Fig. 29), anterior half slightly bent to the right, posterior half strongly bent to right (margins may appear angulate where anterior and posterior halves join); sheath sternite about as wide in posterior half as anterior half; females (
Fig. 14
) macropterous and coloured as for males.
Jeng
et al
. (2003)
indicated this species frequents still water and is common around rice paddies in
Taiwan
.
Remarks
. Adequate characterisation of this species is important as
Jeng
et al
. (2003)
found no males in the Musée National d'histoire Naturelle, Paris when they designated a female
Lectotype
, and any subsequent identification of males is based on similarity of colour to the female. Males from
Taiwan
were identified by
Pic (1911)
as belonging to this species. While the colour pattern is very useful, the few specimens scored by
Ballantyne and Lambkin (2009)
differed slightly from
Jeng
et al
. (2003)
and further study of the variability of this species is necessary.