Aleocharinae from Sabah (Borneo) collected by Guillaume de Rougemont (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae)
Author
Pace, R.
text
Linzer biologische Beiträge
2014
2014-07-31
46
1
727
794
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5306753
0253-116X
5306753
6EB57FAF-A54D-4A33-AB58-C03E7294FA00
Gyrophaena gigaedeagica
nov.sp.
(
Figs 2
and
69-72
)
T y p e m a t e r i a l
Holotype
,
Sabah
,
Danum Valley
, B.R.L.
, f.i.t.,
14-16.II.2007
,
G. de Rougemont
leg. (
CROU
).
D e s c r i p t i o n: Length
1.6 mm
. Body shiny, brown, antennae brown with the two basal antennomeres and base of the third pale yellows, legs dirty yellow. Second antennomere shorter than the first, third shorter than the second, fourth transverse, antennomeres five to ten as long as wide. Eyes longer than the postocular region in dorsal view. Body devoid of reticulation, that of the abdomen very transverse. Puncturation of the head evident, sparse and broadly absent on the longitudinal median band, that of the pronotum sparse and strong, distributed as in figure 71. Granulation of the elytra superfi- cial and sparse, that of the abdomen evanescent but salient near the posterior margin of all free tergites, male fifth free tergote without secondary sexual characters. Aedeagus:
Figs 69-70
; pronotum;
Fig. 71
; male sixth free tergite:
Fig. 72.
C o m p a r a t i v e n o t e s: In the shape of the aedeagus and of the male sixth free abdominal tergite the new species is similar to
G. immatura
KRAATZ, 1859
from
Sri Lanka
, of which I have examined
1 male
and
1 female
of the
type
series labelled "
Ceylon
, J. Nietner,
Gyrophaena immatura
Kr.
" (DEI). In the new species the dorsal and preapical portion of the aedeagus, in lateral view, are devoid a great curved lobe, and the internal sclerotised pieces of the aedeagus are devoid of a curved flagellum. The posterior angles of the male sixth free abdominal tergites are short in the new species,
Fig. 72
, but of average length in
G. immatura
.
E t y m o l o g y: The enormous size of the aedeagus, which occupies more than half the length of the abdomen, suggested the name of the new species; it means "holder of gigantic aedeagus".