A review of the genus Laemoglyptus from the Himalayas (Coleoptera: Cantharidae)
Author
Švihla, Vladimír
Department of Entomology, National Museum, Kunratice 1, CZ- 148 00 Praha 4, Czech Republic; e-mail: vladimir _ svihla @ nm. cz
Author
Kopetz, Andreas
Im Semmichbache 14, D- 99334 Eischleben, Germany; e-mail: andreas. kopetz @ t-online. de
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2012
2012-12-17
52
2
443
466
journal article
2557
10.5281/zenodo.5331595
3ac83b7c-bce6-49ab-bd17-a105ae984e00
0374-1036
5331595
Laemoglyptus bhutanensis
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 20
)
Type
locality.
Bhutan
,
125 km
from Phuntsholing.
Type material.
HOLOTYPE
(
NHMB
):
♂
, “[
Bhutan
]
125 km
von Phuntsholing
, 24/5 [white label, printed and handwritten] / Nat.–Hist.Museum Basel / Bhutan Expedition 1972 [white label, printed]”.
PARATYPES
(
NHMB
,
NMPC
): same label data,
1♂
2♀♀
; “[
Bhutan
]
Phuntsholing
,
2400 m
,
22.4.
[white label, printed and handwritten] / Nat.–Hist. Museum Basel / Bhutan Expedition 1972 [white label, printed]”.
Description.
Coloration. Head including antennae sooty to black, mandibles ferrugineous. Prothorax orange to terra-cotta with pair of narrow, mediolongitudinal sepia stripes slightly diverging posteriorly. Elytra sepia to sooty, legs chestnut brown to sepia, knees sometimes paler. Meso- and metasternum and ventral part of abdomen sepia.
Male. Eyes big and strongly protruding, head across eyes moderately narrower than pronotum, antennae moderately exceeding three fourths of elytral length, projections of antennomeres 3–10 more or less, but always distinctly longer than each antennomere. Surface of head very finely and very sparsely punctate, with fine, semisparse, recumbent brown pubescence, semilustrous. Pronotum similar as that in
Fig. 2
, posterolateral emarginations open. Surface of pronotum like that of head punctate, finely and sparsely yellow pubescent, semilustrous. Elytra slightly wider than pronotum, moderately dilated posteriorly, elytral venation slightly developed to absent. Surface of elytra rugulose-lacunose, with fine, yellow, short semierect pubescence, matt to semilustrous. Aedeagus as in
Fig. 20
.
Figs. 18–21. Aedeagus, ventral aspect. 18 –
Laemoglyptus bomfordii
Fairmaire, 1897
; 19 –
L. ater godawariensis
subsp. nov.; 20 –
L. bhutanensis
sp. nov.
; 21 –
L. himalaicus himalaicus
sp. nov.
Female. Eyes much smaller and less protruding than in male, antennae serrate, reaching almost elytral midlength.
Length (both sexes). 6.6–8.0 mm.
Differential diagnosis.
Laemoglyptus bhutanensis
sp. nov.
is most similar to
L. weigeli
Kazantsev, 2009
(cf.
KAZANTSEV 2009
) in the shape and length of the fused parameres and for the dorsal part of the aedeagus being apically more narrowed, but differing from this species by the more narrowed and lateraly concave divided portions of the dorsal part of the aedeagus and having the laterophyses dentate on their inner sides and divergent terminally. The other species of the
L. bhutanensis
-subgroup possess either longer parameres or a differently shapep apical portion of the dorsal part of the aedeagus (as in
L. jaegeri
Kazantsev, 2009
(cf.
KAZANTSEV 2009
)).
Etymology.
Named according to the country of its occurrence.
Distribution.
Bhutan
.