First record of the family Cantharidae on Socotra, with description of a new genus and two new species of the subfamily Silinae (Coleoptera: Elateroidea)
Author
Geiser, Michael
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2017
Acta. Ent. Mus. Natl. Pragae
2017-12-31
57
93
99
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/aemnp-2017-0110
journal article
10.1515/aemnp-2017-0110
0374-1036
5323896
72BA3B6D-318E-462D-A853-11732D6B9DD4
Socotrasilis
gen. nov.
Type
species.
Socotrasilis socotrensis
sp. nov.
Description.
Head with protruding eyes almost as wide as pronotum. Antennae serrate.
Pronotum transversely oval without distinct anterior or posterior angles, its lateral margin with (presumably sexually dimorphic) modifications, its disc more or less evenly convex, without any visible pores, lobes, concavities or tubercles (as found in other
Silinae
genera).
Claws of each tarsus simple, none cleft, and without basal teeth or lobes.
Elytra very thin and weakly sclerotised, with somewhat leathery texture, their apices individually rounded, leaving a small gap in between, exposing middle part of second-last tergite. Fully winged and with distinct humeral callus.
Figs 5–8.
Socotrasilis enigmatica
gen. et sp. nov.
5 – holotype, dorsal habitus; 6 – male genitalia, ventral view; 7 – male genitalia, dorsal view; 8 – pronotum of male. Scale bars represent 1mm.
Last tergite relatively large and protruding. Last ventrite deeply split into two rounded lobes. Aedeagus relatively simple, its outer capsule (composed of what Wittmer refers to as ‘Dorsalschild’ and ‘Ventrales Basalstück’) opened ventrally, not completely covering internal structures in ventral view; with very large, broad and weakly sclerotised median lobe (‘Mittelstück’ in Wittmer’s terminology), and pair of laterophyses behind, other sclerotised structures often found inside aedeagus capsule of other
Silinae
genera absent. Dorsal shield unusually broad, almost disc-like, subcircular in dorsal view, non-emarginated (
Fig. 7
).
Differential diagnosis.
Distinguished from other genera of the subfamily
Silinae
by the combination of the following characters: All claws simple and none cleft in male, lacking a basal tooth. Pronotum modified in male, with an emargination and an ear-like lobe in basal half of the lateral margin, but without the additional modifications found in many other
Silinae
genera. Furthermore, the dorsal shield of the aedeagus is very unusual within the subfamily. The sole known species of this genus resembles some small Indo-Malayan species of
Podosilis
Wittmer, 1978
and ‘
Silis
’ Charpentier, 1825
sensu lato
(i.e. species currently placed in
Silis
, which do not fit the restricted definition of this genus given by
KAZANTSEV (2011)
and will have to be transferred to other genera in the future). Both genera have more complex pronotal modifications in males, including multiple lobes, incisions or appendages and pores on the disc (
Silis
); also, they are readily distinguished by their claws.
Eusilis
Reitter, 1887
, with one known species from Central Asia, also has simple claws, but a very different pronotum (twice as wide as long, widest in basal half, strongly sculptured, and with a pair of deep impressions on the disc and a thin appendage on its lateral margin); also, its aedeagus is of a very different build. The large Afrotropical genus
Silidius
has one claw of each tarsus cleft in males. Although habitus and pronotum shape show a great deal of variation within
Silidius
, none of the described species shows much similarity to
Socotrasilis
. The Palaearctic genera
Autosilis
Kazantsev, 2011
and
Silis
(sensu
KAZANTSEV 2011
)
are distinguished by their claws (see
WITTMER 1977
: figs 1–2 for
A. nitidula
(Fabricius, 1792))
, pronotal modifications and a different structure of the aedeagus.
Etymology.
A combination of the locality ‘Socotra’ and the related genus
Silis
. Gender feminine (as in
Silis
).