A new North American genus of Hetaeriinae (Coleoptera: Histeridae), with descriptions of six new species from the U. S. A. and Mexico
Author
Tishechkin, Alexey K.
Author
Caterino, Michael S.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2311
1
18
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.191863
e9d3affc-0041-4b43-bba7-e3de99c63842
1175-5326
191863
DBD13266-65D1-4EE4-837A-D9D4D261C313
Renclasea skelleyi
Tishechkin & Caterino
,
n. sp.
(
Figs. 1
,
3
,
4
)
Material examined:
Holotype
male: "FLORIDA: Levy Co. 4.0 mi. SW Archer
16-V-1991
; P. E.
Skelley
blacklight on ground /
HOLOTYPE
Renclasea skelley
sp. n.
A. K. Tishechkin & M. S. Caterino des. 2008" (
FSCA
).
Paratypes
(6): female from Florida, Putnam Co.,
2.5 mi
NE Florahome, collected by P.
Skelley
on
January 8, 1993
(
FSCA
); male from Florida, Marion Co., Lake Delancy collected at UV lights by J. Cicero on
August 31, 1996
(
FSCA
); male from Florida, Marion Co., Ocala Nat. Forest,
2.5 mi
N of 40, FS97 collected at UV/MV lights by R. Morris and S. Lingafelter on
July 26–27, 2002
(AKT); male and female from
Georgia
, Tattnall Co.,
2–3 mi
E of 147 along Ohoopee River near Reidsville,
32°0.54'N
82°8.48'W
, collected at UV lights by R. Morris and E. H. Donaldson on
May 7, 1998
(PWK); male from the same locality collected at UV lights by R. Morris on
August 1, 1998
(AKT).
Diagnosis:
By the presence of alutaceous microsculpture in elytral intervals 1–4 and along the posterior margin of elytra this species resembles only
R. helavai
. Apart from its disjunct distribution,
R. skelleyi
can be distinguished from the latter by only weakly marked traces of dorsal striae 1–3, different pattern of female pygidial ornament (
Fig. 7
A) and lack of median callus on mesoventrite in females.
Description:
L: 1.89; W: 1.49; E/Pn L: 1.81; E/Pn W: 1.19; Pn W/L: 1.66; E L/W: 0.92; Pr/Py: 1.15; Sterna: 0.47, 0.16, 0.44; Tibiae: 0.51, 0.60, 0.69 (n=7). Body reddish-brown, shiny, except areas of alutaceous microsculpture on elytra (
Fig. 1
B) and pygidium, smooth and asetose. Frons almost flat, clypeus depressed at middle between lateral carinae; labrum narrowly rectangular, weakly produced at the middle of apical margin. Prosternal sides convergent (
Fig. 1
A), much more strongly in anterior fourth, above antennal cavities, weakly inwardly sinuate, with the anterior angles narrowly rounded, almost rectangular; marginal stria present along lateral edge, almost entire, variably narrowly interrupted between anterior angles and outer part of anterior emargination; pronotal lateral sides narrowly flattened and slightly reflexed; median angle of pronotal posterior margin about 100º. Prosternum (
Fig. 1
D) with anterior margin of prosternal lobe weakly concave; prosternal keel slightly elevated and flattened, covered with fine microsculpture, without carinal striae.
Scutellum elongate triangular, small; elytra (
Fig. 1
B) convex, widest at middle, with minute sparse background punctures, these more conspicuous along sutural stria; dorsal elytral striae 2–3 weakly marked on disc, abbreviated both anteriorly and posteriorly, weaker traces of oblique humeral stria and dorsal stria 1 also present; sutural stria abbreviated in anterior fourth; elytral intervals with elongate band of fine alutaceous microsculpture, somewhat expanded and merging in posterior third.
Mesoventrite (
Fig. 1
C) flat in males, with somewhat depressed areas laterad of the mesoventral projection base in females; mesoventral projection short, triangular, its apex slightly elevated; mesometaventral suture 'curly bracket'-shaped, thin and inconspicuous; disc of metaventrite in males in anterior half with shallow wide triangular depression bordered laterally by anterior parts of outer striae of metaventrite; weak wide elevation present near posterior margin of metaventrite; disc of metaventrite in females weakly, evenly convex. Lateral parts of meso- and metaventrite with fine alutaceous microsculpture.
FIGURE 1.
Generic appearance and characters,
Renclasea skelleyi
. A. pronotum; B. left elytron; C. ventral habitus; D. prosternum; E. protibia and tarsus; F. mesotibia; G. metatibia.
Propygidium weakly convex, disc with fine dense shallow punctures merging locally into shallow transverse wrinkles; marginal stria of propygidium complete; pygidium smooth, with few small shallow punctures along anterior margin, weakly convex, with striate ornament in females (
Fig. 7
A). Male and female genitalia as illustrated (
Figs. 3
,
4
).
Etymology.
This species is dedicated to one of its collectors, Paul
Skelley
of FSCA, in appreciation of our long collaboration and his efforts in collecting rare and poorly known beetles in southeastern
United States
.
Distribution.
Known from several localities in northern Florida and southern
Georgia
(
Fig. 14
).