A new Vietnamese species of Euconnus (Napochus) with modified antennal club (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Scydmaeninae)
Author
Jałoszyński, Paweł
Author
Nomura, Shûhei
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-11-13
4521
1
133
136
journal article
27967
10.11646/zootaxa.4521.1.9
6567904b-77d9-4d6f-b708-b96a162904a5
1175-5326
2609729
03D748E7-6D46-4955-9D79-0B71A57E888C
Euconnus
(
Napochus
)
bachmamontanus
sp. n.
(
Figs 1–7
)
Material studied.
Holotype
:
VIETNAM
:
♂
, two labels: "FIT:
Mt.Bach Ma
(
1,150m
) /
T.T.
Hue Prov.
/ [C-VIETNAM] /
5-10.v.2003
,
S. Nomura
leg." [white, printed], "
EUCONNUS
/ (
NAPOCHUS
) /
bachmamontanus
m. / Jałoszyński & Nomura, '18 /
HOLOTYPUS
" [red, printed] (NSMT).
Paratype
:
1 ♂
, same data as for holotype (
NSMT
)
.
Diagnosis.
Napochus
with pronotum broadest at base, and with a sharply delimited, tetramerous club, which is modified in males: antennomeres VIII and X symmetrical and transverse, IX elongate, slightly broader than VIII and X– XI, asymmetrical, with a deep dorsal cavity occupying its proximal half; aedeagus with a subtriangular and rounded ventral plate flanked by a pair of elongate projections with apices twisted laterad, dorsal plate similar in shape to ventral plate but with more broadly rounded apex.
Description.
Body of male (
Fig. 1
) moderately stout and strongly convex, darkish brown, covered with yellowish vestiture. BL
1.63–1.68 mm
.
Head in dorsal view short and transverse, moderately convex, broadest at eyes, HL
0.30–0.33 mm
, HW
0.38 mm
; vertex convex, frons between eyes convex, in front of eyes flattened, rapidly declines anterad; tempora in lateral view much shorter than eyes, in dorsal view strongly and evenly curved mesad; eyes large, coarsely faceted and strongly convex, bean-shaped; frons and vertex with fine and inconspicuous punctures and sparse, long and suberect setae posteriorly and lateroposteriorly replaced by relatively thin but long bristles. Antennae (
Figs 1–3
) moderately long and slender, AnL 0.83–1.00 mm, antennal club (
Figs 2–3
) tetramerous, sharply delimited and as long as half AnL, antennomeres I and II elongate, III–VII each about as long as broad, VIII symmetrical and about as long as broad, IX asymmetrical, elongate, broader than remaining club segments, with large and deep dorsal cavity occupying its proximal half, X symmetrical, distinctly transverse, XI slightly asymmetrical, indistinctly elongate. Antennae covered with sparse, long and erect setae
Pronotum subtrapezoidal, broadest at base; PL
0.40–0.43 mm
, PW
0.45–0.48 mm
. Anterior and posterior margins weakly angulate, sides rounded and strongly convergent anterad, in anterior 1/5 rapidly but only slightly more narrowed. Pronotal base with a lateral pair of small but distinct pits connected by a distinct transverse impression, sublateral carinae indistinct. Punctures superficial, inconspicuous; setae long, sparse, suberect to erect, bristles on sides relatively thin.
Elytra more convex than pronotum, oval, broadest distinctly in front of middle; EL
0.93 mm
, EW
0.80 mm
, EI 1.16. Elytral base with distinct and strongly elongate humeral calli, which are sharply, nearly stepwise delimited mesally; elytral apices separately rounded. Punctures more distinct than those on head and pronotum but very small and shallow, unevenly distributed, separated by spaces 0.5–3 × as wide as diameters of punctures; setae sparse, long and erect.
Legs long and slender, unmodified.
Aedeagus (
Figs 4–7
) stout, drop-shaped; AeL
0.35 mm
; median lobe in ventral view broadest near middle and strongly narrowing distad, dorsal and ventral apical plates subtriangular with rounded apices, ventral plate flanked by a pair of elongate sclerites with their apices twisted laterad, dorsal plate in lateral view curved dorsad at an obtuse angle; parameres slender, their apices not reaching apex of ventral plate, each with one apical and one subapical seta.
Female. Unknown.
Distribution.
Central
Vietnam
, Thừa Thiên-Huễ Province.
Etymology.
Locotypical, after Mount Bach Ma.
Remarks.
To date, only one species placed in
Napochus
was known to occur in
Vietnam
.
Euconnus tuonglinhensis
Franz, 1983
was described on the basis of four specimens, of which at least one, the
holotype
, is a male, and Franz did not mention any oddities in the antennal club. Moreover,
E. tuonglinhensis
has a distinctly different aedeagus, which was illustrated by
Franz (1983)
with a subrectangular apex, asymmetrical internal sclerites and the parameres much longer than those in
E. bachmamontanus
. No described species of
Napochus
are known to occur in
Cambodia
and
Laos
; and males of all species recorded from
Thailand
have unmodified antennae.
Before
Neonapochus
was synonymized with
Napochus
, a subgeneric placement of
E. bachmamontanus
would have been problematic. The only '
Napochus
-like' species showing a distinct sexual dimorphism in the antennal structure was
E.
(
Neonapochus
)
maklini
(
Mannerheim, 1844
)
. However, in males of the latter species, antennomeres IX and X are asymmetrical, with the anteromesal region of each developed as a subtriangular projection directed distad (illustrated in
Jałoszyński (2016))
. There is no excavation, and the antennomere IX is transverse and smaller than X. Neither
E. maklini
, nor
E. bachmamontanus
differ in any other important structures from the
type
species of
Napochus
. The discovery of the new Vietnamese species supports the previous decision of placing
Neonapochus
as a synonym of
Napochus
(and thus extending the subgeneric diagnosis to include not only beetles with unmodified antennomeres, but also those with dimorphic antennae).
Euconnus bachmamontanus
demonstrates that the range of morphological diversity within
Napochus
is broader than that known to authors who gave original diagnoses of
Neonapochus
and
Napochus
. Species showing various modifications in males (cephalic structures, as in the former subgenus
Cephaloconnus
, or antennal characters, as in
Neonapochus
) might have likely evolved from within
Napochus
, and not as components of any clade sister to it.