A review of Thysanarthria with description of seven new species and comments on its relationship to Chaetarthria (Hydrophilidae: Chaetarthriini)
Author
Fikáček, Martin
Department of Entomology, National Museum, Cirkusová 1740, CZ- 19100 Praha 9 – Horní Počernice, Czech Republic & Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Viničná 7, CZ- 12844 Praha 2, Czech Republic
mfikacek@gmail.com
Author
Liu, Hsing-Che
Department of Environmental Engineering and Management, Chaoyang University of Technology, No. 168, Jifeng E. Rd., Taichung City 413, Taiwan
td965771@gmail.com
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2019
2019-06-20
59
1
229
252
journal article
8143
10.2478/aemnp-2019-0020
a03ecce2-b526-4f94-aa65-620016956099
1804-6487
4488918
9F309FCC-A2ED-47B9-BC37-D0C4A3B482E5
Thysanarthria atriceps
(
Régimbart, 1903
)
(
Figs 2a
,
3B,G,H
,
4
A–J)
Hydrobius atriceps
Régimbart, 1903: 33
.
Hydrobius atriceps
:
KNISCH (1924a: 169
, catalogue);
ZAITZEV (1908: 373
, catalogue).
Thysanarthria atriceps
:
ORCHYMONT (1926a: 195
, transfer to
Thysanarthria
);
ORCHYMONT (1926b: 242
, transfer to
Thysanarthria
explained in more detail, comparison with
T. championi
); BALFOUR--BROWNE (1952: 134, distribution); BALFOUR- BROWNE (1957: 21, distribution);
HANSEN (1999: 105
, catalogue);
HEBAUER (2001: 394
, redescription and update of distribution);
HEBAUER (2005: 39
, distribution);
HEBAUER (2006: 24
, catalogue).
Type
material.
Not examined.
Additional material examined.
MALAWI
:
2 ♀♀
(
NMPC
):
Nkhotakota
env.,
12.92716°S
34.2831°E
,
2–3.i.2002
, J. Bezděk lgt.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
:
WESTERN
CAPE:
3 ♂♂, 2 unsexed specimens (
NMPC
):
8 km
NEE of Stanford, in gravel/sand and small isolated pools at the sandy stream and on/in sandy banks along the stream,
34°25.0′S
19°32.4′E
,
4–5.xii.2015
, Arriaga, Fikáček, Seidel & Vondráček lgt. (
RSA
49).
ZIMBABWE
:
1 ♂, 7 unsexed specimens (
NMPC
):
20 km
W Gwanda,
120 km
SE
Bulawayo
,
6.xii.1999
, F. Kantner lgt.
Redescription.
Body
length 1.4–2.0 mm, maximum body width
1.1–1.3 mm
. Head and labrum black, pronotum and elytra uniformly yellowish; legs reddish to yellowish.
Head
with strongly granulate microsculpture on interstices; punctation sparse. Eyes separated by 2.7× the width of one eye in dorsal view.
Pronotum
with sparse setiferous punctation similar to that on head; interstices with strongly granulate microsculpture.
Elytra
with 10 striae sharply impressed except anteromedially (near scutellar shield) where neither striae nor serial punctures are visible; interval punctation sparse, setiferous; interstices without distinct microsculpture.
Aedeagus
(
Figs 4
A–J) c.
0.5–0.6 mm
long. Phallobase slightly widened at base of parameres, slightly narrower than bases of parameres combined, weakly constricted at c. midlength, slightly bent in lateral view. Paremere widely rounded basally, narrowing in apical third, apex rounded. Median lobe narrow, membranous apically, without subapical projections; apex reaching c. level of apex of parameres; gonopore transversely oval, situated in distal third.
Variability.
The examined specimens from the
Republic of South Africa
and
Zimbabwe
differ slightly in the shape of the basal part of the parameres (compare
Figs 4
A–E and 4F
–
J) but seem to be identical in all other aspects including the morphology of the median lobe. Examination of much larger material from Africa covering the known distribution would be needed to reveal whether these differences may be constant and correlated with geography; without such a study we consider the observed differences to be intraspecific variation for the moment.
Differential diagnosis.
Thysanarthria atriceps
seems to be the only species occurring in Africa and is hence easy to identify. In form of the median lobe and parameres it resembles only the Arabian
T. brittoni
from which it differs in relatively longer and narrower parameres and less constricted phallobase.
Biology.
The species seems to be usually collected at light. Examined South African specimens were collected from wet sandy banks of a small lowland stream (
Fig. 11E
), the beetles were found when the sandy parts were flooded with water or pressed to get submerged, which caused the beetles to float on the water surface.
Fig. 4. Male genitalia of
Thysanarthria
species. A–E –
T. atriceps
(
Régimbart, 1903
)
from Zambia: 20 km W of Gwanda, coll. NMPC (A–C – whole aedeagus in dorsal, lateral and ventral view; D–E – detail of median lobe and parameres in dorsal and ventral view); F–J –
T. atriceps
from Republic of South Africa: 8 km NEE of Stanford, coll. NMPC (F–H – whole aedeagus in dorsal, lateral and ventral view; I–J – detail of median lobe and parameres in dorsal and ventral view); K–O –
T. brittoni
Balfour-Browne, 1951
, holotype (K–M – whole aedeagus in dorsal, lateral and ventral view; N–O – detail of median lobe and parameres in dorsal and ventral view).
Distribution.
Central and southern part of Africa and
Madagascar
(where the
type
locality is situated); on African continent so far recorded from
Togo
, the
Ivory Coast
,
Angola
,
Rwanda
,
Burundi
,
Malawi
,
Zimbabwe
,
Mozambique
, and the
Republic of South Africa
(
HEBAUER 2006
).