New records and description of fifty-four new species of aquatic beetles in the genus Hydraena Kugelann from South America (Coleoptera: Hydraenidae)
Author
Perkins, Philip D.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2011-10-28
3074
1
198
journal article
31530
10.5281/zenodo.1050060
2d28bebf-e3c5-457b-9152-8a6877ded281
1175-5326
1050060
Multispina
Group
Two species comprise the
Multispina
Group:
H. multispina
and
H. cordispina
. These species are very unusual, having a spinose labrum and spinose elytra, and the elytra have only five series of punctures between the suture and the humeral umbo (
Figs. 21–22
). The coxae are rather widely separated by P1 and P2, and the plaques are unusually shaped. The genae are carinate laterally. The aedeagus of
H. multispina
is also very unusual (
Fig. 41
).
Only females are known for
H. cordispina
; it is possible that this species is parthenogenetic (
20 specimens
in
type
series, all female). The female gonocoxite in both species is "divided", having a weakly sclerotized midlongitudinal area (
Fig. 150
). The spermatheca (
Figs. 158–159
) is more similar to that of members of the
Leechi
and
Marginicollis
Groups than to that of the
Paeminosa
and
Curvosa
Groups. In
H. cordispina
the proximal end of the spermatheca, where the duct joins, is very constricted, and may be closed (
Fig. 159
).
H. cordispina
was collected from leaf litter, and is probably humicolous. The microhabitat of
H. multispina
is not known, but characters of the female abdomen, specifically the patch of setae on each side of the fifth ventrite (
Fig. 150
), suggest less than fully aquatic habits (in fully aquatic
Hydraena
these setae are in a transverse band that forms the posterior border of the ventral respiratory bubble).