Description of a new species of the genus Neolucanus Thomson, 1862 (Coleoptera: Lucanidae) from central Vietnam
Author
Nguyen, Thai Quang
text
Zootaxa
2013
3741
3
377
384
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3741.3.6
faec5b23-d8c4-4e74-8f02-734b2887041d
1175-5326
220458
6AE1439F-6D30-4431-84EA-1822C5984CA9
Neolucanus baongocae,
Nguyen
,
new species
Type
material.
Holotype
:
Vietnam
: Lam Dong Province:
♂, Mt. Bidoup, Bidoup—Nui Ba National Park,
1550 –1623m
,
15.V.2013
, deposited at VNMN) Hanoi,
Vietnam
.
Paratypes
:
Vietnam
: Lam Dong Province:
40 specimens
(37 ♂♂, 3 ♀♀), same data as
holotype
:
1♂
, 1♀ deposited in BNHM;
1♂
deposited at CMNO;
1♂
deposited at LBC;
30 ♂
deposited at LXC;
1♂
deposited at NZUF;
1♂
deposited at NMNH;
2♂
, 1♀ deposited at NQTC; 1♀ deposited at VNMN.
FIGURE 1.
Neolucanus baongocae
new species
♂ (Holotype) dorsal (a) and ventral (b), Bidoup Mountain, Lam Dong province, central Vietnam (scale bar = 1 cm).
Holotype
description (
Figs 1
,
5–8
).
♂, total length
43.5 mm
, mandible length
10.5 mm
, head width
11.5 mm
, prothorax width 17.0 mm, elytra length
20.5 mm
, elytra width
15.5 mm
.
Habitus:
Mandibles, head, and legs black; pronotum red on disc and posterior margins; elytra brownish yellow, black on margins; scutellum black; ventral surface black.
Head:
About 2 times wider than long. Dorsal surface smooth, without punctures. Surface gradually depressed distally, frontal margin strongly depressed. Canthus obtuse, completely dividing the eye. Preocular margin broad. Mentum with short, erect, reddish-yellow setae, anterior margin convex, with anterolateral angles rounded. Submentum deeply concave, rectangular. Gula smooth. Mandibles rather short, about 1.8 times longer than head; stout, with yellow setae on the basal section. Apical fork formed by an upper subapical horizontal tooth and the acute apex of the mandible; two sharp teeth at inner apical margin, a triangular subbasal tooth at the base, 5–7 small teeth between the two anterior teeth and the subbasal tooth.
Antenna:
With 3 apical antennomeres pubescent; antennomere 7 with width slightly greater than that of antennomere 6 and sharply pointed at tip.
FIGURE 2.
Neolucanus baongocae
new species
♀ (paratype), dorsal (a) and ventral (b) (scale bar = 1 cm).
FIGURE 3.
Neolucanus baongocae
new species
♂ (paratypes), large male (a) and small male (b) (scale bar = 1 cm).
FIGURE 4.
Neolucanus fuscus
♂ Dorsal view medium black form (a); large black form (b) and large yellow form (c) from type locality (Tam Dao, Vietnam).
FIGURE 5.
Neolucanus baongocae
new species
(holotype) (a),
N. fuscus
(b): lateral view.
Pronotum:
Surface shiny and smooth; as long as and markedly wider than head; strongly convex and shiny red on disc, black at sides; front angle rather blunt, the lateral margin slightly concave at middle; hind and lateral angles obtuse, not spiniform.
Elytra:
Markedly wider than head and slightly narrower than pronotum; surface shiny on disc, sides nearly straight, smooth, without striations or punctures. A broad and diffuse black band at the base. Each elytron is brownish yellow; the outer margins with a wide, black band, oval shaped.
Legs:
Lateral margin of protibiae with two distinct teeth at distal half; the rest smooth. Mesotibiae and metatibiae straight, without teeth. All tibiae have yellow setae on surface.
Male genitalia:
See
Fig. 8
.
Male
paratypes
:
Body length from apex of mandible to tip of elytra:
31–47 mm
.
Variability:
Two forms can be identified by the shape of the mandibles: 1) a large form, with body length greater than
35 mm
, mandible length equal to two-thirds of the head width, and mandible with an upraised and bent inside carina near base; 2) a small form, with body length
31–35 mm
, and mandibles slenderer and without upraised and bent inside carina.
8 Female
paratypes
(
Fig. 2
): Body length from apex of mandibles to tip of elytra:
29–32 mm
.
Habitus:
Mandibles, legs, and head black; pronotum reddish black on disc and black at margins. Elytra are brownish yellow with a black patch dilated at base and gradually narrowing at the apex of each elytron to make a “v” shape, black at margins.
Head:
Covered by punctations on dorsal surface except the middle of posterior margin; middle of head with bulbous protrusion. Frontal margin strongly concave. Canthus completely dividing the eyes. Mentum densely punctate and sparsely covered by yellow setae, rectangular but nearly square, and rounded at anterolateral angles. Submentum concave and sparsely punctate and setose. Mandible strongly incurved at base of outer margin and nearly straight at inner margin, with 2–3 small inner teeth. Antennal club with 3 apical antennomeres pubescent; antennomere 7 with width slightly greater than that of antennomere 6 and sharply pointed at tip.
Pronotum:
small punctures on the surface; convex at middle; anterior angle pointed, lateral angle and posterior angle are rounder; all margins smooth.
Elytra:
Surface shiny and smooth on disc, with the sides nearly straight, smooth, without striations or punctures; yellow with a black v-shape black patch dilated at base and gradually narrowing towards the apex.
Legs:
Protibia rather straight, with 2 distinct, small teeth mostly at the apical 1/3 along the lateral margin; otherwise smooth. Mesotibia and metatibia straight, without teeth.
FIGURE 6–8.
Neolucanus baongocae
new species
. 6, mentum and submentum of holotype; 7, mandibles of large male; 8, male genitalia (holotype), ventral (a), lateral (b), and dorsal (c).
Distribution. Central
Vietnam
:
Lam Dong Province (Mt. Biduop,
type
locality).
Etymology.
This species is named after my daughter, Baongoc Nguyen.
FIGURE 9.
View from the collecting site in Biduop—Nui Ba National Park, Vietnam, elevation 1575 m.
Diagnosis.
Based on characteristics of the mandibles and body,
Neolucanus
can be partitioned into five main groups as follows:
The
Neolucanus fuscus
group
, which has long, slender mandibles, forked at the tip. This group includes:
N. brochieri
,
N. delicatus
,
N. fuscus
,
N. inaharai
,
N. lehmanni
, and
N. sianoukei
.
Maes (1992) listed
N. armatus
(from Tam Dao) as a junior synonym of
N. delicatus
but
N. armatus
is a synonym of
N. fuscus
. The
type
locality of
N. delicatus
is
Annam
(Didier 1927), but for a long time some authors (Mizunuma & Nagai 1994, Baba 1995) reported
N. delicatus
from north
Vietnam
(Tam Dao—Vinh Phuc). This lead to confusion between
N. delicatus
and
N. fuscus
. In comparison, the mandibles of
N. delicatus
are slender and more curved upward than in
N. fuscus
.
Okuda (2009) reported
N. delicatus
from Quang Ngai (central
Vietnam
). Schenk (2011) did not list
N. sianoukei
in this group; perhaps it is a synonym of
N. fuscus
.
The
Neolucanus sinicus
group,
which has short, stout mandibles with an upward and forward tooth before the apex in large males. This group includes:
N. benoiti
,
N. chongguo
,
N. curvidens
,
N. diffusus
,
N. donckieri
,
N. doro
,
N. extremus
,
N. eugeniae
,
N. fiedleri
,
N. guizhoui
,
N. hagiangensis
,
N. iijimai
,
N. imitator
,
N. insuralis
,
N. latissimus
,
N. lemeei
,
N. montanus
,
N. nitidis
,
N. pallescens
,
N. pseudovicinus
,
N. quangxii
,
N. rufus
,
N. sarrauti
,
N. shaanxiensis
,
N. sinicus
,
N. swinhoei
,
N. tao
,
N. vicinus
, and
N. zebra
.
(Wan
et al
. (2007) considered
N. aterrimus
to be a junior synonym of
N. montanus
. Fujita (2010) downgraded
N. robustus
and
N. rutilans
to subspecies of
N. sinicus
).
The
Neolucanus castanopterus
group
, which has short, flat mandibles without any upward or forward teeth on upper side of mandible. This group includes:
N. castanopterus
,
N. chiangmaiensis
,
N. dohertyi
,
N. lawannorum
,
N. marginatus
,
N. oxyops
,
N. parryi
,
N. pentaphylus
,
N. similis
,
N. suzumurai
, and
N. svenjiae
.
The
Neolucanus brevis
group
, which has short, stout, upward curved mandibles that are never forked at the tip. This group includes:
N. borneensis
,
N. brevis
,
N. cingulatus
,
N. didieri
,
N. guiardi
,
N. laticollis
, and
N. punctulatus
. Arrow (1949) indicated that
N. latus
is closest to
N. brevis
,
differing from sides of the head: rounded in front, It is
N. brevis
; but sides of the head obtusely angular in front, It is
N. latus
. Therefore
N. latus
can be assigned to the
N. brevis
group. The localtity of
N. latus
is
India
,
Burma
(Arrow, 1949) so perpaps, the putative
N. latus
as pictured in Fujita (2010), which was collected from Tam Dao, is instead
N. similis
.
The
Neolucanus maximus
group
, which has stout mandibles, a robust body and a broad canthus. Some species have two vertical teeth on upper side of each mandible. This group includes:
N. angulatus
,
N. baladeva
,
N. giganteus
,
N. insulicola
,
N. maedai
,
N. maximus
,
N. okinawanus
,
N. perarmatus
,
N. protogenetivus
,
N. saundersi
, and
N. tanakai
.
(Fujita [2010] downgraded
N. spicatus
to a subspecies of
N. giganteus
). Tsukawaki (2011) described a new species
Neolucanus katsuraorum
,
very close to
N. maedai
; very few characters differ between the two, and
N. katsuraorum
may be a synonym or subspecies of
N. maedai
.
I did not assign the species below to any above groups because of a lack of literature in my library:
Neolucanus lividus
,
Neolucanus maculosus
, and
Neolucanus palmatus
.
The female of
Neolucanus baongocae
can be easily distinguished from females of
N. lividis
,
N. palmatus
, and
N. maculosus
by the following characteristics: female of
N. baongocae
reddish black on disc and black at margins of pronotum, whereas body of female of
N. lividus
entirely black; pronotum of female of
N. palmatus
and
N. maculosus
entirely brownish black (Mizunuma & Nagai, 1994).
The new species,
Neolucanus baongocae
, possesses a long upward and inward carina on each mandible. It does not exhibit the characteristics of any of the above groups.
In comparing habitus with other species, the new species,
Neolucanus baongocae
, is closest to the medium form of
Neolucanus fuscus
Didier, 1926
, from Tam Dao National Park (Vinh Phuc,
Vietnam
).
Neolucanus baongocae
can be distinguished from
N. fuscus
by the following combination of characters:
mandibles of large males of
Neolucanus baongocae
proportionally shorter than those of large males of
N. fuscus
;
N. baongocae
with an upraised carina inside the bend of male mandible
pronotum surface red with black margins (totally black in
N. fuscus
)
submentum strongly concave (flat in
N. fuscus
)
Lateral margin of pronotum slightly concave between anterior angle and lateral one (straight in
N. fuscus
)
Note on the natural history and habitat.
The new species,
N. baongocae
, was found in an undisturbed forested mountain area of Bidoup—Nui Ba National Park, Lam Dong Province. Specimens were collected during the day and when walking around and at night by light traps. The elevation of the collection site was
1550–1623m
. The new species was collected on dense, foggy days. The forests at collecting points are characterised by mediumsized trees and high humidity.