Slime-Mold Beetles Of The Genus Agathidium Panzer In North And Central America, Part Ii. Coleoptera: Leiodidae
Author
MILLER, KELLY B.
Author
WHEELER, QUENTIN D.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2005
2005-03-24
2005
291
1
167
http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1206%2F0003-0090(2005)291%3C0001%3ASBOTGA%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090(2005)291<0001:SBOTGA>2.0.CO;2
0003-0090
5362016
Agathidium oculeum
Miller and Wheeler
,
new species
Figures 108
,
145
,
264–266
,
366
TYPE
MATERIAL
:
Holotype
, Ƌ in
CMNC
labeled ‘‘
MEXICO
:
Chiapas
: Volcan Tacana, lower slopes, ca.
4 km
N Union Juarez.
18 IX1992
.
R
.S.Anderson 92109/cloud forest litter Elev.
1950 m
./
HOLOTYPE
Agathidium oculeum
Miller and Wheeler, 2003
[red label with black line border]’’.
TYPE LOCALITY
:
Mexico
,
Chiapas
, lower slopes of Volcan Tacana, ca.
4 km
N Union Juarez,
1950 m
.
DIAGNOSIS: This species is very similar to
A. recurvatum
but the eyes are much more prominent, protruding, and finely faceted (fig. 108). The male genitalia are also similar to that species but differ in that the operculum is broader and more rounded in
A. oculeum
(fig. 264) than in
A. recurvatum
(fig. 267).
DESCRIPTION: Body moderately large (TBL =
2.82–3.97 mm
), broad, robust (PNW/TBL = 0.44–0.48), rounded, strongly contractile.
Head and pronotum redbrown; elytra redbrown, not iridescent; venter, antennae, palpi, and legs yellow.
Head broad (MDL/OHW = 0.64), dorsal surface flattened, dorsoventrally compressed; with very fine punctures, each with a short, very fine seta, surface between punctures shiny, very lightly microreticulate; frontoclypeal suture obsolete medially; eyes large with many facets, not reduced (fig. 108); gula slightly convex medially; antennomere ratios: length I:II:III = 2.1:1.0:1.8, width VII: VIII:IX = 1.0:1.0:2.1. Pronotum very large, broad (PNL/PNW = 0.73–0.76), strongly convex, anterolateral lobes strongly produced, lateral margin broadly curved, not angulate; with fine, sparse punctures, each with a short, very fine seta, surface between punctures shiny, smooth. Elytra broad, lateral margins strongly rounded, apically rounded (SEL/ELW = 1.03–1.20); punctation and surface similar to pronotum; sutural stria absent. Flight wings strongly reduced. Mesosternum moderately broad, not declivitous; medial carina well developed. Metasternum narrow (MTL/MTW = 0.12–0.16), flat medially, distinctly dorsally sloped anteriorly; oblique femoral carinae moderately developed, not prominent, low where meeting medially.
Male tarsi 554; pro and mesobasotarsomeres only slightly laterally expanded, with small ventral field of spatulate setae; mandibles not modified; metafemur moderately broad, with small tooth subapically along posterior margin (fig. 145); metasternal fovea moderately large, transverse with line of fine, dense, long setae. Median lobe in lateral aspect slender, moderately short, strongly curved medially, apical portion long, slen der, sinuate, apex sharply pointed, recurved ventrad (fig. 265); in ventral aspect slender, apical portion with margins sinuate, converging, apex slightly expanded and pointed apically (fig. 264); operculum flat, short, narrow basally, expanded apically, apex emarginate, each ramus broad and apically pointed (fig. 264); lateral lobes long, slender, not expand ed, sinuate, apex narrowly rounded with 2 stout setae (fig. 266).
Female not examined.
ETYMOLOGY: Named for the Latin word
oculeus,
meaning ‘‘full of eyes’’, for the large, many faceted eyes of members of this species.
DISTRIBUTION: This species has been collected from
San Luis Potosi
and
Chiapas
(fig. 366).
PARATYPES
:
MEXICO
:
Chiapas
:
10 mi
SE San Cristobal
de las
Casas
,
1 Sep 1993
, 8000̍, pinemadronoak forest litter,
Berlese
,
A Newton
(4,
FMNH
)
;
Pico Cerro Tzontehuitz
,
10 km
NE San Cristobal
,
16 Sep 1991
, 2910 m, cloud forest litter,
RS
Anderson
(1,
CNCI
)
.
DISCUSSION: This species has been collect ed from cloud forest litter and leaf and log litter from
Liquidambar
, pine, oak, and madrone forests. Elevation records are from
4800 to 8000 ft.