Nine new species of Enithares (Heteroptera: Notonectidae) from New Guinea, with distributional notes on other species and an updated world checklist
Author
Polhemus, Dan A.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-05-07
4772
1
132
182
journal article
22330
10.11646/zootaxa.4772.1.5
b14b0d0d-cf67-4895-965c-12792c622b21
1175-5326
3814079
B497198A-08CD-4A21-AE04-14390499853B
Enithares atra
Brooks
(
Figs. 11, 12
,
17
,
22
)
Enithares atra
Brooks 1948
.
J. Kansas Entomol. Soc.
, 21: 48, fig. 11.
Holotype
, male,
New
Guinea
,
Rigo
,
Luglio
, in SEMC.
Material
examined
.
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
,
Central Prov.
:
5 males
(
holotype
and
paratypes
)
,
7 females
(
allotype
and
paratypes
),
Rigo
,
Luglio
, 1889,
L. Loria
(
SEMC
,
USNM
ex
JTPC
)
;
3 males
,
8 females
,
Owen Stanley Range
, trib. to
upper Mimani River
,
0.8 km
.
W of Dorobisoro
,
500 m
.,
9°27′39′′S
,
147°54′56′′E
, water temp. 23.5 °C.,
9 October 2003
, 08:30–12:30 hrs., CL 7264, D.
A
.
Polhemus
(
USNM
,
BPBM
)
;
2 males
,
5 females
,
2 immatures
,
Owen Stanley Range
, trib. to
upper Mimani River
,
1.70 km
.
NE of Dorobisoro
,
535 m
.,
9°27′25′′S
,
147°56′15′′E
, water temp. 23.5 °C.,
7 October 2003
, 13:00–15:00 hrs., CL 7260, D.
A
.
Polhemus
(
USNM
,
BPBM
).
Milne Bay Prov
.
:
1 male
,
9 females
, headwater reach of
Goilayoli River
above crossing on road from
Watunou
to
Huhuna
,
11.5 mi.
ENE of Alotau
,
275 m
.,
10°18′43′′S
,
150°37′16′′E
,
6 April 2002
, 10:00–13:00 hrs., CL 7161, D.
A
.
and J. T.
Polhemus
(
USNM
)
;
7 females
,
Pini Range
, spring and streamlet nr. old
Duabo
mission station,
300 m
.,
10°25′05′′S
,
150°18′24′′E
, water temp. 25° C.,
9 April 2002
, 14:00–15:00 hrs., CL 7170, D.
A
.
and J. T.
Polhemus
(
USNM
,
BPBM
)
;
3 females
,
Sagarai River
basin,
Bwaona River, E.
of
Mila village
,
90 m
.,
10°30′14′′S
,
150°18′50′′E
, water temp. 27–29° C.,
7 April 2002
, 10:45–12:45 hrs., CL 7165, D.
A
.
and J. T.
Polhemus
(
USNM
)
;
6 males
,
2 females
,
Cloudy Mountains
, headwater tributary to
upper Watuti River
, S. of
Gelemalaia village
,
715 m
.
10°29′50′′S
,
150°13′58′′E
, water temp. 22° C.,
10 April 2002
, 16:00–17:30 hrs., CL 7175, D.
A
.
Polhemus
(
USNM
,
BPBM
)
;
2 males
,
Cloudy Mountains
, rocky stream
0.6 mi.
above Gadowalai village
, S. of
Gelemalaia
,
135 m
.,
10°28′57′′S
,
150°14′27′′E
, water temp. 24.5° C.,
12 April 2002
, 10:00–10:30 hrs., CL 7176, D.
A
.
Polhemus
(
USNM
,
BPBM
)
;
9 males
,
21 females
,
Engineer Group
,
Tubetube Island
, small stream above
Samoa
,
15–
45 m
.,
10°35′03′′S
,
151°11′36′′E
, water temp. 28° C.,
19 January 2004
, 09:00–10:30 hrs., CL 7299, D.
A
.
and J. T.
Polhemus
(
USNM
,
BPBM
)
.
Discussion
.
Enithares atra
was originally described from a series of
12 specimens
taken by Loria at in the Rigo district, along the south coast of New
Guinea
southeast of Port Moresby.
Brooks (1948)
stated that the type series of
E. atra
was in USNM, but Lansbury did not find it there, and Byers later confirmed to him by correspondence that it was in Kansas at SEMC. Thus, when preparing his monograph, Lansbury did not see the actual
holotype
of this species, but only one male
paratype
. He instead based his re-description on material from Lae and Finschhaven, localities lying on the north coast of New
Guinea
far from from the original Rigo type locality.
A
disjunct distribution of this
type
is quite atypical for most species of aquatic
Heteroptera in New
Guinea
, which led the author to suspect that
Lansbury (1968)
may have misinterpreted the species concept for
E. atra
.
A
comparison of
Brooks’
(1948)
Figure 11
to material collected by the author in the vicinity of
Dorobisoro
in the
Rigo District
, near to the original
type
locality, shows that the male genitalic structures match well, particularly in regard to the shape of the slender, tapering
LABP
, which is partially depicted by
Brooks
. A more detailed illustration of the male genitalia for one of these more recently collected
E. atra
specimens is provided in
Fig. 17
.
Lansbury (1968)
also did not indicate which specimens he made his illustrations from, although there are three possibilities based on the material he listed: a male
paratype
from Rigo at BMNH; a male and female from Lae in Oxford; or a series of
5 males
and
9 females
from Finschhafen in the South Australian Museum. The genitalia of male specimens collected more recently by the author in the vicinity of
Madang
match Lansbury’s figures, particularly in regard to shape of the LABP, which terminates in a slightly expanded, truncate apex (
Fig. 17
, compare to Fig.
273 in
Lansbury 1968
), so it is clear that he illustrated a north coast male, from either the Finschhafen or Lae series. These north coast populations are in fact an undescribed species, treated herein as
E. orsaki
n. sp.
As now understood,
E. atra
is a lowland species occurring in the southern foothills of the Papuan Peninsula, and ranging eastward through the islands east of Milne Bay as far as Tubetube, in the Engineer Group (
Fig. 22
). All previous records of this species from the north coast of New
Guinea
, including those in
Lansbury (1968)
, are referable to
E. orsaki
n. sp.
(see following description and discussion). Based on verified collections,
E. atra
occupies the South Papuan Peninsula Foreland area of freshwater endemism (Area 30) as defined by D.
Polhemus & Allen (2007)
.