A new species of Phanaeus Macleay (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae: Phanaeini) from Oaxaca, Mexico
Author
Edmonds, W. D.
text
Zootaxa
2006
2006-04-10
1171
1
31
37
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.1171.1.3
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.1171.1.3
11755334
5058747
17DC3F30-EE89-4C5A-AC50-CDA085EE0E7B
Phanaeus (Phanaeus) zapotecus
Edmonds
,
new species
Figs. 1, 3
, and 5
Type Specimens
.
Holotype
male—
MEXICO
:
Oaxaca
,
8 km
S
Sola de Vega
,
1850 m
, 49 vii 05,
D. Curoe
col./
mushroom baited trap
(
approximate coordinates:
16 28’ 50” N
;
96 59’ 40” W
)
.
Paratypes
(
32 males
,
48 females
)—
two males
,
eight females
same data as holotype
;
one male
6 mi
[~
10 km
] S
San Miguel Sola de Vega
, 8 vii 94, pinoencinojunipero,
Curoe
col.
;
20 males
,
29 females
same data as holotype except 717 ix 05, pine oak forest
;
three males
,
two females
same data as holotype except 717 ix 05, pine oak forest/ f.i.t. [=
flight intercept trap
]
;
four males
,
eight females
same data as holotype except 59 x 05, pine oak forest
;
one male
,
one female
same data as holotype except 59 x 05, pine oak forest/f.i.t
.;
one male
,
one female
MEX
[ICO]:
Hwy
131, 70 km
S
Oaxaca
,
Río
de la Y,
Km
20 W of jct.,
2150 m
, 17 vii 79,
H & A Howden
(
approximate coordinates: 16 40’;
97 01’ W
). (
The Howden
specimens also bear the blue identification label, “
Phanaeus endymion Harold, 1863
n. sp.
?
W. D. Edmonds
1983.”)
All
type specimens bear my determination/designation labels, printed in black ink on white paper with blue (
holotype
) or red (
paratypes
) lateral margins; they are distributed as follows
:
Holotype
male and
three paratypes
(
one male
,
two females
) deposited in collection of the
Instituto de Ecología
,
Xalapa
,
Veracruz
(
Mexico
).
Remaining
paratypes
distributed as follows:
Canadian Museum of Nature
,
Ottawa
(two pairs, including the
Howden
specimens cited above);
National Museum of Natural History
,
Washington, D. C.
(two pairs);
The Natural History Museum
,
London
(one pair);
Universidad Nacional Autónoma
de
México
(
UNAM
),
México
, D.F. (one pair);
Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle
,
Paris
(one pair); and at least one pair of
paratypes
in each of the following private collections:
Richard Cunningham
,
LaVerne
,
California
;
Daniel Curoe
,
Palo Alto
,
California
;
W. D. Edmonds
,
Marfa
,
Texas
;
Miguel Angel Morón
,
Coatepec
,
Veracruz
;
Guillermo Nogueira
,
Guadalajara
,
Jalisco
; and
Fernando VazdeMello
,
Lavras
,
Minas Gerais
.
Diagnosis
:
Phanaeus zapotecus
can be separated from the related Mexican species
P. endymion
by its distinctly granulate (X10) male pronotal disk, sagittal furrow present on the female pronotum, and usually allblack color; and
P. halffterorum
by its unmodified sutural margin of the elytra, usually allblack color, and Oaxacan distribution (
Fig. 7
).
Holotype
(
Fig. 1
)
: Large (major) male, length
17 mm
, width
10 mm
. Appearing completely weakly shiny black to unaided eye; magnification reveals slight green cast on elytra and femora and brighter green reflections on the undersides of the posterior pronotal angles, femora, and on sides of head horn. Clypeus with two conspicuous median teeth; frons bearing long, slender horn strongly curved over pronotum. Pronotum with expansive, flat triangular disk, with small callosity on each side near anterior margin and with posterolateral angles projecting caudally; sides weakly and sparsely asperate (sharply roughened) with distinct punctures present only behind lateral fossae (X25); triangular disk densely, evenly, and finely granulate; granules extending onto posterolateral angles and becoming effaced along posterior margin where surface appears faintly punctate, slightly swollen, and weakly impressed midlongitudinally. Pronotum with obsolete basal fossae; anterolateral angles subquadrate, distinctly upturned and concave. Elytral striae fine; interstriae convex, evenly but weakly shiny and minutely punctate (X25). Pygidium with obsolete punctures.
FIGURES 1–4
. Fig. 1.
Phanaeus zapotecus
Edmonds
, dorsal view male holotype. Fig. 2.
Phanaeus endymion
Harold
, dorsal view male. Fig. 3.
Phanaeus zapotecus
Edmonds
, dorsal view forebody female paratype. Fig. 4.
Phanaeus endymion
Harold
, dorsal view forebody female.
FIGURES 5–7.
Fig. 5.
Phanaeus zapotecus
Edmonds
, oblique view female paratype. Fig. 6.
Phanaeus endymion
Harold
, oblique view female. Fig. 7. Known distributions of the Mexican species of the
Phanaeus endymion
group (sensu
Edmonds 1994
). Solid circles: collecting sites for
P. endymion
; stars:
P. halffterorum
; triangle:
P. zapotecus
.
The
holotype
is not the largest male in the type series; it was selected because it shows the least wear of the large males available. This specimen bears glue residue on the right hind coxa and adjacent metasternum used to secure the stainless steel pin. The aedeagus is extracted and mounted on a paper point with a blue tip.
Variation
: Dorsum dark, slightly shiny, appearing black to unaided eye except in occasional specimens with conspicuous metallic green on posterior portion of head, pronotum, and/or elytra; metallic coloration most common on male pronotum and elytra, usually confined in female to margin and midlongitudinal impression of pronotal disk. Low (X5) magnification and bright light often reveal, especially in males, weak bluishgreen or green luster on areas otherwise appearing black. In smallest individuals, horn reduced to conical tubercle or rounded cusp. Female (
Figs. 3
,
5
) with low, narrow trituberculate, cephalic carina. In small males, granulate triangular disk progressively smaller, granules becoming squamate behind remnant of disk with asperate sculpturing on sides stronger. Pronotum of female (
Figs. 3
,
5
) fairly evenly and densely covered with small punctures (X10) on finely roughened surface; punctures becoming smaller on middle of disk, bearing raised anteromedian trituberculate tumosity near anterior margin; tubercles equalsized and set in moreorless straight, transverse line; disk with distinct midlongitudinal furrow (
Fig. 3
) extending forward from posterior margin to about middle of disk, furrow more strongly sculptured than adjacent surface of disk and often with hint of metallic green color. Pygidium with faint to distinct but fine, sparse punctures. Length (including head):
13–20 mm
; width at bases of elytra: 7.5–11.5 mm.
Etymology of Species Name
. Latinization of
zapoteco
, Spanish adjective meaning “zapotec” or “zapotecan,” in reference to the indigenous people and places of much of central
Oaxaca
.
Discussion
. Henry and Anne Howden discovered
Phanaeus zapotecus
in 1979. They collected a pair of individuals in wild toadstools in the Sierra Madre del Sur, south of the city of
Oaxaca
. The Howden specimens were referred to by me (
Edmonds 1994
) as
Phanaeus endymion
(“
Oaxaca
endymion”) with the qualifier: “My guess is that more specimens will support recognizing this
Oaxaca
population as a distinct species …” Attempts by me and others in the intervening years to collect more individuals were unsuccessful until recently, when Daniel Curoe collected
P. zapotecus
on three occasions from the same general area. Curoe’s careful field work resulted in 79 additional specimens, which were collected in July, September, and October south of the town of San Miguel Sola de Vega (often cited only as Sola de Vega),
Oaxaca
. The collection site consists of seasonally dry pineoak forest with occasional juniper and lies at an elevation of approximately 1850 meters on the leeward (inland valley) slopes of the Sierra Madre del Sur. Most specimens were collected from pitfall traps baited with local mushrooms (
one male
was collected directly from a mushroom), and there seemed to be a preference for fresh and somewhat aged mushrooms over badly decomposed ones. A few specimens were collected from flight intercept traps while traps baited with human feces and carrion (decomposing squid) yielded no specimens. This species, unlike most of its congeners, is crepuscular. The only other mycetophagous species collected there,
Liatongus rhinocoerulus
Bates
, is active during the day. The only other member of the
P
.
endymion
group occurring in the same region is
Phanaeus endymion
. Barney Streit (pers. comm.) has recently collected this species from pitfall traps baited with decomposing mushrooms on the Pacific side of the Sierra Madre del Sur fairly near Sola de Vega (Hwy. 175, Km. 2023;
314 m
, July, 2005; this site is about 30 air km north of Puerto Angel and 85 air km southeast of Sola de Vega).
P. endy mion
is widely distributed in southern
Mexico
(
Fig. 7
) and is commonly found also utilizing human feces.
Phanaeus zapotecus
conforms well with the characteristics of the
P
.
endymion
species group as defined by
Edmonds (1994)
; the only observed exceptions are in the cephalic tubercle of very small males (which is not perceptibly bidentate in any of the specimens in the
type
series) and in the front tibiae (which lack a clear, slitlike notch between the third and fourth lateral teeth). The aedeagus is virtually identical to those of
P. endymion
and
P. halffterorum
. Besides the characters presented in the key below,
P. zapotecus
differs from
P. endymion
by the fact that the male pronotal disk never has distinct, shiny micropuntures (X25) as does that of
P.endymion
. This new species shares several characteristics with
P. halffterorum
, another similar species to
P. endymion
. The shape and sculpturing of the male pronotum are quite similar in
P. halffterorum
and
P
.
zapotecus
; the female pronotum of both bears a distinct sagittal furrow; and the elytral interstriae are evenly textured (i.e., not distinctly shinier medially). Moreover, the two species are similar ecologically, both being mycetophagous species inhabiting pineoak montane habitats (
Edmonds 1994
).
Edmonds’ (1994) key to members of the
P. endymion
group included
Phanaeus zapotecus
(as “
Oaxaca
” specimens) in
P. endymion
. The following modification of that key will separate it as a distinct species.
1a Sutural margin of each elytron upturned to form a sharp ridge, which is progressively more elevated posteriorly and prolonged into a small, sharp tooth at apical angle; elytral margin slightly excised adjacent to this tooth. Color bright green or dark blue. Southcentral
Mexico
(states of
Mexico
and
Guerrero
;
Fig. 7
) ..................................... ................................................................................
Phanaeus halffterorum
Edmonds
1b Sutural margin of elytra simple. Color and distribution variable.................................. 2
2a Triangular pronotal disk of male (
Fig. 1
) evenly and densely, but finely granulate (X10), granules usually larger and becoming squamose along lateral margins of disk and extending onto posterolateral angles (when distinctly developed); sides of pronotum roughened (X10), lacking distinct punctures except behind lateral fossae. Female pronotum (
Figs. 3
,
5
) minutely roughened, evenly, distinctly punctured (X10), punctures becoming smaller dorsally but never disappearing altogether; disk impressed medially as distinct furrow visible to unaided eye, extending forward from posterior margin to near middle of disk. Sierra Madre del Sur, southcentral
Oaxaca
(
Fig. 7
) .... .................................................................................
Phanaeus zapotecus
,
new species
2b Pronotal disk of male either lacking distinct granulation, or, if granules present, these are minute and restricted along lateral margins of disk (
Fig. 2
); sides of pronotum smooth, minutely punctured. Female pronotum (
Figs. 4
,
6
) smooth, puncturing (X50) fine and usually restricted to sides; median furrow lacking, or at most indicated by fine, scarcely visible line ...........................................(to couplet 2a in
Edmonds, 1994
)