On some Palaearctic click beetles deposited in the Hungarian Natural History Museum, 2 (Coleoptera: Elateridae) * Author Németh, T. Author Platia, G. text Zootaxa 2014 3841 4 451 490 journal article 10.11646/zootaxa.3841.4.1 90099cdf-7676-4f05-b341-abf78046626b 1175-5326 229391 A0742D14-7A39-485E-B665-5C3A7F194D5E Roznerathous hellenicus sp. n. ( Figs 5–7 , 72) Material examined. Holotype , male: Greece : “ GREECE Lakonia Kotasia [Chotasia or Hotasia], 1981. V.17. Leg. Rozner Gy. coll. István Rozner Budapest” ( HNHM ). Description. Male ( Fig. 5 ). Entirely ferruginous, covered with dense, yellow-fulvous vestiture. Frons ( Fig. 6 ) deeply impressed before strongly and uniformly thickened anterior margin, nearly straight, directed forwards and well protruding above clypeus, puncturation coarse, with punctures more or less clearly umbilicate with very short intervals or contiguous. Antennae ( Fig. 7 ) exceeding apices of posterior angles of pronotum by 1.5 antennomeres, serrated from fourth antennomere on, second subcylindrical, 1.5× longer than wide, third subconical, 1.5× longer than wide and 1.2× longer than second; second and third, taken together, 1.2× longer than fourth; fourth to tenth triangular, on average from 1.7 to 2× longer than wide; last longer than penultimate, with subparallel sides, constricted at apex. Pronotum as long as wide, widest at posterior angles, very convex on disk, abruptly sloping at sides and base; sides from base to apex nearly regularly narrowing, posterior angles short, not divergent and not carinate, lateral margins complete and totally visible on dorsal view; puncturation coarse and uniformly distributed, punctures deep, simple or vaguely umbilicate with very short, shiny intervals. Scutellum shield-shaped, convex, punctured. Elytra 2.64× longer than pronotum and as wide, convex; sides subparallel from base to middle, slightly dilated behind middle and regularly narrowing to apices; striae well marked and deeply punctured, interstriae subconvex with very fine and dense punctures. Aedeagus as in Fig. 72 (length 1.37 mm ). Female unknown. Size. Length 8.7 mm ; width 2.31 mm . Etymology. The specific epithet refers to Greece from where the species is described.