Parapaulipalpina lobata, new species, the first species of Parapaulipalpina Gnaspini, 1996 (Coleoptera: Leiodidae: Cholevinae: Ptomaphagini) from Brazil
Author
Gnaspini, Pedro
Author
Moraes, Gabriella M.
Author
Gomyde, Eduardo C.
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-09-05
5506
1
129
136
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5506.1.9
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5506.1.9
1175-5326
13746687
24C421CD-0CF8-4422-8692-0086B4C671B9
Parapaulipalpina lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
new species
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
B140C9C4-372B-4ACE-A029-F5EDFB62C895
(
Figs. 1–6
)
Material examined.
Holotype
, male (
CMNC
). Type locality and data:
Brazil
:
Pará
[State]:
Tucuruí
;
vi.1985
;
49º 40’ W
3º 46’ S
; FIT, meat & human dung;
N. Degallier
col.
Paratypes
(
CMNC
, except when noted):
1 male
and
1 female
with same data;
Belém
, IPEAN,
v.1985
, meat, FIT,
N. Degallier
,
2 females
; Ipean,
Belém
,
vii.1985
, FIT,
N. Degallier
,
1 male
and
1 female
(
MZSP 61161
and 61162).
[
Note
:
IPEAN
(
Instituto
de Pesquisa
e
Experimentação Agropecuária do Norte
) is presently in ‘EMBRAPA
Amazônia Oriental’
(EMBRAPA =
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária
)—see
EMBRAPA (2024)
].
FIGURE 1.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
new species
, male paratype. Habitus, dorsal (A) and left lateral (b) views.
FIGURE 2.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
new species
, male holotype. Head, dorsal (A) and left lateral (B) views.
FIGURE 3.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
new species
, male holotype. A, protarsus, ventral view (detail of tenent setae is shown in B); C–E, apex of protarsus in ventral (C), left lateral (D), and dorsal (E) views; F, hindleg (detail of apex of tibia and base of tarsus is shown in G); H, apex of metatibia, ventral view. est = empodial setae; mp = medial projection on the distal margin of the terminal tarsomere; mpp = pair of medial projections on the distal margin of the terminal tarsomere;?sdc = small dorsal spines close to the base of tarsal claw; slc = spines near base of tarsal claw.
FIGURE 4.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
new species
. A, male holotype genital segment; B, C, male holotype aedeagus, ventral (B) and right lateral (C) views; D, female spermatheca. All figures to the same scale. fl = flagellum.
FIGURE 5.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
new species
, male paratype in MZSP. A rotational view of the aedeagus, around its ‘longitudinal’ axis.
FIGURE 6.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
new species
, male paratype in MZSP. Apex of aedeagus in dorsal (A), left lateral (B), frontal (C), and ventral (D) views. do = dorsal opening; fl = flagellum; ll = left lobe; par = paralobe of the right lobe; rl = right lobe; tb = ‘tubercles’ on the internal margin of the ventral opening.
Measurements: Length:
1.05 mm
(
holotype
),
1.1–1.3 mm
(other males),
1.2–1.4 mm
(females); width:
0.6 mm
(
holotype
),
0.8 mm
(other males),
0.8–0.9 mm
(females).
Diagnosis and Description
. General characteristics as listed above. Body ovoid, convex; color dark redish brown (
Fig. 1
). Winged [metathoracic wing fully developed]. Head longer than high in lateral view (
Fig. 2B
); integument punctuated, punctures not organized in strigae (
Figs. 2A, B
); eyes slightly reduced (
Fig. 2B
). Pronotum transverse, widest at base; posterior angles acute; integument with [light] transverse strigae. Elytra together 1.25 times as long as wide, with transverse, diagonal, strigae. All legs with a crown of flat and equal sized spines around the tibia apex (e.g.,
Fig. 3G
). First
four male
protarsomeres expanded, with elongate discoidal tenent setae ventrally (
Figs. 3A, B
). Mesotibia curved inwards in both sexes. Metatibia straight; in males it is largely widened and flattened internally close to its apex (
Figs. 3F, G
). Tarsi of all legs (in both sexes) bearing a pair of empodial setae with asymmetric length, with different proportions on different legs (
Figs. 3C, H
, ‘est’); distal margin of the terminal tarsomere with a pair of medial projections (
Fig. 3C
, ‘mpp’), except on the hindtarsi, in which the projection is simple and triangular (
Fig. 3H
, ‘mp’); claws with a few long and acuminate spines at their dorsolateral margin (
Figs. 3D, E
, ‘slc’); the typical small dorsal spines close to the base of the claws of
Ptomaphagini
are not clear in the pictures here analysed and may be represented by the microtrichia observed around the base of the claws as in
Fig. 3E
(‘?sdc’). Male genital segment round, with spiculum gastrale straight and long (
Fig. 4A
). Aedeagus elongate (~4.2 times as long as wide, in dorsal view), with sides subparallel (
Fig. 5
)—widest near base and slightly narrowing towards apex (
Fig. 5A
), somewhat S-shaped in dorsal view (
Figs. 4B
,
5A
), with a small, subelliptical dorsal opening (
Fig. 6A
, ‘do’); curved ventrad (i.e., concave—concavity/total height = ~52% [
Figs. 5E, M
]), with the axis of the basal opening pointing about 45º downwards in relation to the ‘sagittal’ plane of the aedeagus); the paralobe of the right lobe elongate and curved ventrally (
Fig. 6A–C
, ‘par’); left lobe with acute apex in lateral view (
Fig. 6B
, ‘ll’). Lateral margins of the ventral opening with a series of ‘tubercles’ which might represent sensory structures (
Fig. 6D
, ‘tb’). Ventral face of aedeagus with a series of subparallel ridges-and-sulci (
Fig. 5
). Flagellum (of the endophallus) thin, sinuate, shorter (about 2/
3 in
length) than aedeagus (
Figs. 4B
,
6D
, ‘fl’). Parameres present, flat and thin, fused to the body of the aedegus except for their apical portion (
Figs. 5E, L
) [Note: the aedeagus is covered with debris, and it is not possible to observe the number of setae on the apex of the parameres and apex of aedeagal lobes].
Female description. Same as male, except for the slender protarsus, and non-expanded metatibia. Spermatheca coiled with 2-turns (
Fig. 4D
).
Etymology
. The name is given in reference to the wide and flat lateral projection at the apex of the metatibiae (from Latin, “lobed”).
Distribution.
Brazil
:
Pará State
.
Taxonomic Remarks.
The genus
Parapaulipalpina
previously included only four species, restricted to northern South America (see
Peck
et al.
, 2020
and
Fig. 7
)—
P. dentata
Gnaspini, 1996
(
type
species), from
Venezuela
;
P. filicornis
(
Jeannel, 1936
)
(transferred from
Adelopsis
by
Gnaspini, 1996
based solely on fig.
85 in
Jeannel, 1936
, because the male genitalia was not available for study at that time, and the external features were redescribed in
Gnaspini & Peck, 2019
—therefore, a comparison involving aedeagal morphology can not be fully done presently), from
Colombia
(no precise locality);
P. giachinoi
Salgado, 2005
, from
Peru
(and additional record in
Ecuador
in
Salgado, 2010
); and
P. tambopata
(
Salgado, 2013
)
(transferred from
Excelsiorella
(
Viruana
)
by
Gnaspini
et al.
, 2016
based on the drawings and discussion in the original description), from
Peru
. Recently,
Gomyde
et al.
(2024)
described a new feature (the paralobe of the aedeagus), considered to be synapomorphic for
Parapaulipalpina
and
Paulipalpina
Gnaspini & Peck, 1996
, examining specimens of
P. dentata
,
P. tambopata
, and
P. lobata
sp. nov.
(see their fig. 6), reinforcing their placement in
Parapaulipalpina
.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
sp. nov.
is the first species recorded in
Brazil
, enlarging the distribution of the genus (see
Fig. 7
) and the first one studied under SEM (because of that, many characters can not be presently discussed among all species). Unfortunately, the specimen examined with SEM was covered with debris, not allowing observation of details; because of the small number of specimens, which were fragile for handling, we were not able to produce additional images.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
sp. nov.
can be promptly recognized by the widened and flattened apex of the male metatibia, which is unique (maybe in the tribe as a whole) and diagnostic for the species. It is the smallest species recorded so far in the genus. The aedeagus of
P. lobata
sp. nov.
is concave ventrally, as in the other species of the genus, but, differently from them, there is a strong convex curvature near the apex. The flagellum of the aedeagus seems to be less elongate than the pattern described for the genus, being longer than the aedeagus in the other species known so far. However, the flagellum is connected to a strong basal piece, as it occurs in the other known species (based either on the descriptions and/or figures)—the aedeagus of
P. filicornis
is known only for the drawing in
Jeannel (1936)
, which does not allow a proper recognition of this feature; however, the drawing does show a seemingly unique feature of that species, which is an expansion near the apex of the flagellum.
Parapaulipalpina lobata
sp. nov.
seems to bear a slightly reduced eye, but not as strongly reduced as in
P. filicornis
(another diagnostic feature of that species).
FIGURE 7.
Distribution map of the species of
Parapaulipalpina
(plotted on ‘Google Maps’ map—available at https://www. google.com/maps). D =
P. dentata
Gnaspini, 1996
; F =
P. filicornis
(
Jeannel, 1936
)
(the grey ellipse indicates that this is not a precise locality); G =
P. giachinoi
Salgado, 2005
; L =
P. lobata
Gnaspini, Moraes & Gomyde
,
sp. nov.
; T =
P. tambopata
(
Salgado, 2013
)
.
Parapaulipalpina dentata
and
P. giachinoi
have a tubercle medially on the posterior margin of the male metafemur, which was not observed in
P. lobata
sp. nov.
, and not studied in the other species, but their aedeagi are different.
Parapaulipalpina tambopata
can be diagnostically recognized by the truncate elytra and non-expanded male protarsomeres (according to the original description).
Parapaulipalpina filicornis
,
P. tambopata
, and
P. giachinoi
are known only from their male
holotypes
(and a subsequently added male of the latter, from another country). Therefore, the spermatheca of the female is unkown for those species. The spermatheca of
P. lobata
sp. nov.
resembles that of
P. dentata
, by having a 2-turns coil followed by a somewhat long, curved duct ending with an apical bulb.