A Review of Genus Cyclosomus Latreille (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Lebiinae: Cyclosomini) in Asia.
Author
Kavanaugh, David H.
Department of Entomology, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA 94118.
Author
Cueva-Dabkoski, Mollie
Student Science Fellow, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, and & 2355 Pearl Street, Santa Monica, CA 90405.
text
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences
2023
2023-02-15
67
21
493
537
journal article
299696
10.5281/zenodo.11512952
2b56e3b0-2274-4963-b243-9c991b07072c
0068-547X
11512952
Cyclosomus vespertilio
Cueva-Dabkoski & Kavanaugh
, sp. nov.
Figures 13
,
14I
,
15D
,
16H
,
17H
,
22
Type material
.
HOLOTYPE
, a male, in
NMNH
, labeled: “
NEPAL
: Royal Chitwan National Park, black light
820ft
31 Oct1977
Gary F. Hevel”/ “
HOLOTYPE
Cyclosomus vespertilio
sp. n.
M. Cueva-Dabkoski and D.H.
Kavanaugh 2023
” [red label].
A
total of
44 paratypes
:
one male
and
one female
, in
CAS
and
NMNH
, same label data as
holotype
;
one male
, in
NHMUK
, labeled: “
India
”/ “Bowring, 63.47*”/ “
NHMUK
010795925”;
one female
, in
NHMUK
, labeled: “
India
”/ “Bowring, 63.47*”/ “H.E.Andrewes Coll. B.M.1945-97.”/ “Ex coll. Brit. Mus.”/ “
Cyclosomus marginatus Motch. Compared
with type H.E.
A
.”;
one male
, in
NHMUK
, labeled: “Indian Orient”/ “Fry Coll. 1905.100.”/ “
NHMUK
010796097”;
one male
, in
NMNH
, labeled: “
INDIA
New
Delhi
”/ “
14-VII-1967
KEGibson light trap”;
one female
, in
NHMUK
, labeled: “
India
77.15 K.” [handwritten];
12 males
and
22 females
, in
NHMUK
and
CAS
, labeled: “
India
. Nevinson Coll. 1918-14”;
one female
, in
NHMUK
, labeled: “
India
. Nevinson Coll. 1918-14”/ “
Cyclosomus marginatus Motch.
”/ “NNHMUK 010796368”;
one male
, in
NHMUK
, labelled: “
India
. Nevinson Coll. 1918-14”/ “Ex coll. Brit. Mus.”/ “H.E.Andrewes Coll. B.M.1945-97.”/ “
Cyclosomus suturalis Wied.
(see back) Compared with type H.E.
A
.” [back labeled: “The median band in type is very narrow”]/ “NNHMUK 010796362”;
one female
, in
NHMUK
labeled: “
India
Dilhi
[sic]”/ “39155” [= Moradabad, based on
NHMUK
accession records (M. Barclay, personal communication)]/ Fry Coll. 1906.100.”/
Cyclosomus marginatus Mots.
India
Or. v. major
” [handwritten]/ “NMHUK 0100795973”. Each
paratype
also bears the following label: “
PARATYPE
Cyclosomus vespertilio
sp. n.
M. Cueva-Dabkoski and D.H.
Kavanaugh 2023
” [yellow label].
Type
locality
.
Nepal
,
Royal Chitwan National Park
Etymology.
The species epithet,
vespertilio
, is a Latin word for bat, here used as a noun in apposition. It refers to the shape of the middle transverse dark band of the joined elytra, which resembles a black bat with its wings spread in most specimens.
Diagnosis.
Adults of
C. vespertilio
can be distinguished from those of other
Cyclosomus
species
in Asia by the following combination of character states: Body size medium for genus, BL males =
6.6 to 7.4 mm
, females =
6.5 to 7.6 mm
; body form (
Fig. 13A, C, D
) roundly ovoid (ratio BL/EW = 1.36 to 1.41; ratio EL/EW = 0.88 to 0.93), with elytra widest at or near mid-length; dorsal surface with distinctly contrasting pale and dark areas; pronotum (
Fig. 14I
) relatively broad (ratio PWM/PL = 2.79 to 2.93) and more broadened basally (ratio PWM/PWA = 1.63 to 1.75), with disc rufous to piceous, lateral pale bands broad and more or less well-defined, anterior angles broad, lateral margins evenly arcuate, not or faintly sinuate near anterior angles; free apex of prosternal intercoxal process short (
Fig. 15D
); elytra pale yellowish-brown with basal, middle, and longitudinal dark bands present and dark reddish brown to black, preapical dark spot absent, middle transverse dark band varied, moderately thick in most specimens (
Fig. 13A
), markedly thickened (
Fig. 13C
) or narrowed (
Fig. 13D
) (much as in
C. marginatus
), in a few specimens; elytral striae moderately impressed, elytral intervals flat or nearly so; elytral epipleura with long setae only in humeral and subhumeral areas, setae in apical two-thirds distinctly shorter; median lobe of male genitalia with shaft distinctly thicker and more arcuate, ventral curvature distinctly curved throughout in lateral aspect (
Fig. 16H
), apical lamella smoothly rounded and slightly elongate in dorsal aspect (
Fig. 17H
); specimen from northern
India
or
Nepal
.
FIGURE
13.
Cyclosomus vespertilio
Cueva-Dabkoski and Kavanaugh
sp. nov.
A. Holotype male, dorsal habitus; B.
Labels associated with holotype; C. Dark male (India); D. Pale male (India). Scale lines = 1.0 mm.
Specimens of
C. vespertilio
are most similar to those of
C. inustus
and
C. marginatus
. Most specimens of
C. vespertilio
have the middle dark band of the elytral color pattern darker and thick-er than those of the other two species, with its form in most specimens as in
Fig. 13A
or intermediate between that form and the extreme as shown in
Fig. 13C
. The extreme minimally developed form shown in
Fig. 13D
was found in only
two specimens
, and these specimens resemble those of
C. marginatus
. Refer to the key and Diagnosis sections for
C. inustus
and
C. marginatus
for distinguishing features.
Description.
Size medium for genus, BL males =
6.6 to 7.4 mm
, females =
6.5 to 7.6 mm
; body form (
Fig. 13A, C, D
) roundly ovoid (ratio BL/EW = 1.36 to 1.41; ratio EL/EW = 0.88 to 0.93), with elytra widest at or near mid-length.
Color. Head rufous to black, clypeus and labrum slightly lighter in dark specimens, venter rufous; antennae, mandibles, maxillae, and maxillary and labial palpi pale yellow-tan to rufous. Pronotum with disc rufous to piceous, lateral pale bands yellow-tan, broad and more or less well-defined. Elytra mainly yellow-brown, with piceous to black markings; elytral base, scutellum, and longitudinal dark band on elytral interval 1 dark reddish brown to black, dark basal band slender, piceous to black, extended laterally to interval 5; middle transverse dark band piceous or black, varied in form, moderately thick in most specimens (
Fig. 13A
), markedly thickened (
Fig. 13C
) or narrowed (
Fig. 13D
) (much as in
C. marginatus
), in a few specimens; preapical dark spot absent. Venter rufous, proepipleura and elytral epipleura pale yellow-tan. Legs pale, yellow-tan to rufous.
Reflection, luster, and microsculpture. Dorsum and venter without metallic reflection. Head and pronotum dull, with microsculpture moderately impressed and comprised of isodiametric meshes; elytra slightly shiny with isodiametric meshes slightly less deeply impressed; venter with isodiametric to slightly transverse meshes shallowly impressed,
Head. Eyes large, hemispheric; antennae slightly short, extended only to basal one-fifth of elytra; clypeus bisetose; labrum with apical margin deeply emarginate, three pairs of setae present; mentum asetose, with a broad, apically emarginate medial tooth; submentum anteriorly with a single pair of setae.
Prothorax. Pronotum (
Fig. 14I
) trapezoidal, almost as wide as elytra at humeral angles, relatively broad (ratio PWM/PL = 2.79 to 2.93) and more broadened basally (ratio PWM/PWA = 1.63 to 1.75), anterior angles broad, rectangular or slightly acute, narrowly rounded apically; anterior margin smoothly concave between anterior angles; lateral margins gently arcuate, not or faintly sinuate near anterior angles; basal margin slightly bisinuate, faintly lobate medially; anterior and basal margination thin but distinct laterally, obsolete medially; lateral margination very slender and finely impressed; midlateral setae present, inserted just medial to lateral margination and at about one-third the distance between the anterior and basal angles along the lateral margin; basolateral setae present, inserted on lateral edge of pronotum and just anterior to posterior angles. Prosternal intercoxal process moderately long, lanceolate, with complete margination, free apex of process short (as in
Fig. 15D
).
Elytra. Broadly ovate, slightly shorter than wide (ratio EL/EW = 0.88 to 0.93), broadly rounded apically, humeri slightly obtuse, angulate; elytral striae moderately impressed throughout; elytral intervals flat or nearly so, smooth; parascutellar setiferous pore present at base of interval 1 near junction of striae 1 and 2; two discal setiferous pores present on interval 3 adjacent to stria 2, one inserted just posterior to elytral mid-length and the other inserted near apical one-third; apical seta present, inserted near apex of interval 3; umbilicate series comprised of 11 to 13 setae.
Legs. Males and females with front tarsi similar in shape and width (as in
Fig. 2C
), but males with tarsomeres 1 to 3 with two rows of adhesive squamosetae ventrally (as in
Fig. 2B
), females without such setae; middle tarsi with tarsomeres 1 to 3 distinctly broader in males (as in
Fig. 2D
) than in females and with two rows of adhesive squamosetae ventrally (as in
Fig. 2E
), absent from females. Tarsal claws smooth, edentate.
Male genitalia. Median lobe with shaft distinctly thickened and markedly arcuate, ventral curvature distinctly curved throughout, shaft tapered gently to apex in lateral aspect (
Fig. 16H
), apical lamella smoothly rounded and slightly elongate, slightly narrowed basally in dorsal aspect (
Fig. 17H
).
Habitat distribution.
Unknown, but presumed to be restricted to the sandy shores of medium to large rivers at low elevation, like members of most other species of the genus. The elevation of New
Delhi
is about
200m
, of Morababad about
190 m
, and that of suitable habitat in Chitwan National Park about
550 m
, so members of this species occupy at least that altitudinal range at the southern base of the Himalayan Mountains.
Geographical distribution.
Fig. 22
.
This
species is apparently restricted to northern
India
and
Nepal
, along tributaries of the
Ganges River
draining the southern slope of the
Himalayan Mountains
. We have found only three specific records, two of which represent the known extremes of the range of the species.
The
western locality is
New
Delhi
(
Delhi State
,
India
[in
NMNH
]) and the eastern site is in
Chitwan National Park
(Narayani Zone,
Nepal
[in
CAS
,
NMNH
]). However, most of the specimens we examined were labeled simply “
India
” and were from the “Nevinson Collection” in
NHMUK
. According to Max Barclay (
NHMUK
, personal communication), most of the Nevinson material labeled “
India
,” and for which no further supporting specificity has been found, has been from northern
India
, including Punjab,
Sikkim
and
West Bengal
(“Darjeeling”). It is likely, therefore, that the range of this species extends somewhat further east and west along the southern edge of the Himalaya than has yet been confirmed.
Geographical variation.
Although there is some individual variation (
Figs. 13A, C, D
) in development of the dark color pattern of the elytra in this species, we could not discern any particular geographic component to that variation.
Geographical relationships with other
Cyclosomus
species.
The known range of
C. vespertilio
is within the broad range of
C. flexuosus
at its northern limit, so these two species may be sympatric or even syntopic in at least some areas. However, they have not yet been recorded together from any locality. It is also possible that
C. vespertilio
is sympatric with
C. marginatus
and/or
C. suturalis
in the eastern or southeastern part of its range, depending on just where in “Bengal” (i.e, the area now including
West Bengal
,
India
and
Bangladesh
[see above]) the last two actually occur.