New omethid and lampyrid taxa from the Baltic Amber (Insecta: Coleoptera)
Author
Kazantsev, Sergey V.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3186
59
63
journal article
45476
10.5281/zenodo.280009
a37ee696-86dd-44c4-89ac-1b8f023e05c7
1175-5326
280009
Electromethes
gen. n.
Type
species:
Electromethes alleni
sp. n.
Description. Adult male. Alate, flattened, elongate (
Fig. 1
). Head transverse, exposed. Eyes moderately large, spherical. Labrum conspicuous, sclerotised, located anteriad of clypeus. Palps small, slender; ultimate palpomeres securiform. Gula transverse (
Fig. 3
). Antennal sockets separated by ca. their diameter. Antenna 11-segmented, moderately long, antennomeres 4–10 flabellate; pedicel (antennomere 2) short, subequal in length and width to antennomere 3 and considerably shorter than subsequent antennomeres; pubescence on antennomeres 3–11 short and decumbent (
Fig. 2
).
Pronotum transverse, narrowed and rounded anteriorly, with punctate convex disk, explanate sides and almost straight posterior angles (
Figs 1–2
). Prosternum triangular (
Fig. 3
). Scutellum elongate, rounded at apex (
Fig. 1
). Discrimen complete, bifurcate near mesoventrite. Elytra elongate, flattened, slightly broadening posteriorly, densely punctate, with inconspicuous longitudinal costae, pubescence short and decumbent (
Fig. 1
). Epipleuron absent. Metathoracic wings fully developed.
FIGURES
1–3. General view of
Electromethes alleni
gen. n.
,
sp. n.
, holotype male. 1—dorsally; 2—same, latero-dorsally; 3— same, ventrally.
Legs relatively short and robust; hind coxae contiguous; trochanters short; femurs and tibiae straight, tibiae noticeably longer than femurs, almost non-widened distally; tarsomeres 1–4 slightly widened, with plantar pads; claws simple, shortly appendiculate at base.
Abdomen with eight ventrites; exposed portion of ultimate ventrite small, transverse, rounded at apex; ventrites without photic organs. Aedeagus with laterally exposed outside sternite 9 parameres (
Fig. 3
). Female. Unknown.
Diagnosis.
Electromethes
gen. n.
is easily distinguishable from other omethids by a combination of the following characters: more prominent and more sclerotised labrum, securiform ultimate palpomeres, non-flabellate antennomere 3, location of the bases of flabellae of antennomeres 4–10 at the apices of antennomeres (
Fig. 1
), triangular prosternum (
Fig. 3
), absent elytral epipleuron, present plantar pads on tarsomeres 1–2 (
Fig. 3
), etc.
Etymology. The name of the new genus is derived from "electron", the Greek for "amber", and the genus name "
Omethes
". Gender masculine.