Taxonomy of the ' Afroeudesis group' of glandulariine ant-like stone beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Scydmaeninae)
Author
Jałoszyński, Paweł
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-05-29
4612
2
205
220
journal article
26653
10.11646/zootaxa.4612.2.4
099a649b-9b80-4d9d-bc71-441b4f6d603c
1175-5326
3234300
7525A835-B189-4F33-B17B-59D722E50951
Afroeudesis
Franz
Afroeudesis
Franz, 1963: 16
(as subgenus of
Pseudoeudesis
).
Type
species:
Pseudoeudesis basilewskyi
Franz, 1963
(des. orig.). Recognized as a member of Glandulariini and elevated to genus rank by
Jałoszyński (2015a)
, who also gave an emended diagnosis and divided the genus into subgenera (
Jałoszyński 2015a
,
2016b
).
Revised diagnosis.
Afroeudesis
differs from all genera of Glandulariini in a unique autapomorphy: frons and vertex with a subtriangular elevated 'platform' covered with scale-like microsculpture and with longitudinal median groove, the platform is anteriorly demarcated by a deep frontal impression (
Fig. 12
). Additionally, the following combination of synapomorphies characterizes
Afroeudesis
: body (Figs 5–8) moderately stout, distinctly constricted between head and prothorax and between prothorax and elytra; head (
Fig. 12
) about as long as broad or slightly elongate, with the most convex site of eye closer to occipital constriction than to mandibular bases; posteromedian impression on vertex present, setae on frons and vertex forming a largely symmetrical pattern; lateral margins of anterior portion of clypeus divergent anterad; antennal insertions distant from mandibular bases; pronotum broadest in front of middle or subequal in width between posterior and anterior third, lacking lateral and sublateral carinae, with transverse antebasal groove or impression connecting a pair of inner lateral pits and with a pair of outer lateral pits; bristles on head and pronotum absent; mesoventral intercoxal process carinate, narrow; anterior metaventral process present; metaventral intermetacoxal process with a pair of long spines; and aedeagus with free, slender parameres.
Remarks.
Species of
Afroeudesis
are similar in the general appearance, but show a significant variability in some structures. They can have the mandibles planar or with a dorsal preapical tooth, the hypostomal ridges complete or incomplete, the hypomeral ridges present or absent; the anterior metaventral process broad or narrow, the lateral metaventral carinae present or absent, the mesoscutellum exposed or hidden under the posterior pronotal margin; one, two or even none basal elytral foveae, and an even or odd number of the pronotal antebasal pits. Differences in these characters are used in subgeneric diagnoses and were compiled in a table by
Jałoszyński (2016b)
.
Interestingly, differences between subgenera of
Afroeudesis
seem to be bigger than those between
Meridaphes
,
Pseudoraphes
and
Stenichnoconnus
, maintained here as separate genera. It would be possible to divide
Afroeudesis
into four genera, especially that the split between the sub-Himalayan, African and South American components of this clade may be very ancient. However, the subgenera of
Afroeudesis
share the unique elongate, subtriangular and unusually microsculptured 'platform' on the frons and vertex, a structure that has clearly evolved only once within the Glandulariini. The subgeneric classification of
Afroeudesis
species is here maintained.
FIGURE 41.
Distribution of '
Afroeudesis
group'.
Composition and distribution.
Afroeudesis
comprises five species in four subgenera:
Afroeudesis
s. str.
with one species (
Tanzania
); subgen.
Eburneus
Jałoszyński, 2016b
with one species (
Ivory Coast
); subgen.
Eudesoides
Jałoszyński, 2016b
with one species (
Brazil
); and subgen.
Nanoscydmus
Jałoszyński, 2009
with two species (
China
:
Yunnan
, and
Nepal
) (
Fig. 41
). A specimen from the northern, sub-Himalayan region of
India
(Darjeeling) representing an undetermined species was also seen.