Four new species of the genus Anillinus Casey (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Anillini) from Alabama, U. S. A., with a revised key to the Alabama species
Author
Sokolov, Igor M.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-07-03
4808
3
547
559
journal article
21549
10.11646/zootaxa.4808.3.9
43a886b0-89af-4040-9d32-476bf25c6e2a
1175-5326
3933785
1A650979-86E0-4928-97CF-64D5FCDB53D1
Anillinus humicolus
Sokolov
,
sp. n.
(
Figs. 1D
,
2D
,
3D
,
4
J–L, 5)
FIGURE 5.
Locality records for the newly described species of
Anillinus
:
A. clinei
, black cross;
A. folkertsioides
, red stars;
A. hildebrandti
, yellow circle;
A. humicolus
, black diamond. Physiographic regions of Alabama (
Fenneman 1938
) numbered as follows: 1—Highland Rim; 2—Cumberland Plateau; 3—Alabama Valley and Ridge; 4—Piedmont Upland.
Type material.
Holotype
, one male (
CMNH
), dissected, labeled: \
ALABAMA
:
Jefferson Co.
Cherokee Bend
,
Mountain Brook
nr
Birmingham
,
T
.
N.King
,
July 10 1971
\ [computer printed] \ THOMAS C.
BARR COLLEC-
TION 2001
ACC. No. 38,014 \ [computer printed] \ 7/10/71 M B \ [handwritten].
Specific epithet.
Species name originates from the Latin adjective “
humicolus
” meaning “soil-dwelling”, and refers to the presumable habitat of the new species.
Type
locality.
USA
,
Alabama
,
Jefferson County
,
Mountain Brook
(suburb of Birmingham)
.
Differential Diagnosis.
Males of
A. humicolus
can be distinguished from those of the other congeners by the effaced microsculpture on the head and pronotum, and the structure of the median lobe with numerous big spines in the internal sac.
Description.
Medium-sized for genus (ABL
1.88 mm
).
Habitus:
Body form (
Fig. 1D
) moderately convex, elongate ovoid (WE/ABL 0.38), head wide relative to pronotum (WH/WPm 0.74), pronotum moderately narrow in comparison to elytra (WPm/WE 0.81).
Integument:
Body color brunneo-piceous, appendages testaceous. Microsculpture greatly reduced; head and pronotum without microsculpture except small triangular area at the middle of vertex with several polygonal meshes (
Fig. 2D
); elytra with well-developed polygonal microsculpture. Body surface shiny, surface sparsely and finely punctate, covered with sparse, yellowish, short setae. Vestiture of elytra moderately long (0.3–0.4 length of discal setae).
Prothorax:
Pronotum (
Fig. 2D
) moderately convex, of moderate size (LP/LE 0.40), moderately transverse (WPm/LP 1.32), with lateral margins slightly and rectilinearly constricted posteriorly (WPm/WPp 1.18). Anterior angles indistinct, posterior angles slightly obtuse (110°). Width between posterior angles much greater than between anterior angles (WPa/WPp 0.88). Basal margin slightly concave in middle.
Scutellum:
Externally
visible, triangular, with narrowly rounded apex.
Elytra:
Narrowly depressed along suture, with traces of 1–2 striae, of length (LE/ABL 0.58) and width (WE/LE 0.66) average for genus. Humeri distinct, rounded, in outline forming right angle with longitudinal axis of body. Lateral margins subparallel in middle, slightly divergent at basal fifth, evenly rounded to apex in apical third, without subapical sinuation. Basal margination distinct.
Legs:
Protarsi of male with moderately dilated tarsomere 1. Profemora moderately swollen. Metafemora unmodified.
Male genitalia
: Median lobe (
Fig. 4J
) of aedeagus anopic, slightly arcuate and slightly twisted. Shaft elongate, subparallel, with elongate subparallel apex, with rounded tip. Ventral margin of median lobe straight, not enlarged, without poriferous canals. Dorsal copulatory sclerites in form of fused, intertwining blade-like structures slightly widening basally, shaped like an arc with ends facing dorsally, and situated at the middle of shaft. Between dorsal sclerites and apical orifice internal sac has a scaly membranous field with a group of eleven big spines. Left paramere (
Fig. 4K
) of shape common in genus, paramere apex with two short setae. Right paramere (
Fig. 4L
) short, with four long setae apically, which are equal to the length of paramere.
Geographic Distribution.
This species is known only from Jefferson County,
Alabama
(
Fig. 5
, black diamond).
Habitat.
The label does not contain any information about subterranean habitat or about any other habitat. Presumably this species is not a cavernicolous species.
Relationships.
Based on the structure of the median lobe,
A. humicolus
is a sister species to the cavernicolous
A. valentinei
Barr
(cf.
Fig. 6G
, page
68 in
Sokolov 2012
). The latter is known to occur in Jefferson County, where it was documented from Crystal Caverns (
Peck 1995
;
Sokolov 2012
) situated approximately
16 miles
to the NE of the
type
locality of
A. humicolus
.