Taxonomic revision of the Western Hemisphere checkered beetle genus Axina Kirby (Coleoptera: Cleridae: Clerinae)
Author
Opitz, Weston
Florida State Collection of Arthropods Division of Plant Industry, Entomology Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 1911 SW 34 th Street Gainesville, Florida 32614 - 7100
text
Insecta Mundi
2020
2020-09-25
2020
793
1
70
journal article
7872
10.5281/zenodo.4564947
06c4d529-b187-453f-8534-3739700e0328
1942-1354
4564947
0B89F97A-AAA5-4CE2-9DA2-CC47EA03346D
Axina adelosa
Opitz
,
new species
Figures 43
,
69
,
82
.
Type material.
Holotype
.
Male. Type locality:
São Paulo
(Cantareira), Brazil,
Feb, B
. Pohl (
WFBM
)
.
Paratypes
.
5 specimens
.
Brazil
:
Estado
do
Bahia
,
Villa Victoria
,?-?-1890,
Ch. Pujol
(
MNHN
, 1;
WOPC
, 1)
;
Itapetinga
,?-
XI-1967
,
F. M. Oliveira
(
WOPC
, 1)
;
Estado
do
Rio de Janeiro
,
Petropolis
, collection date not noted,
F. Sahlberg
(
SDEI
, 1)
.
Paraguay
:
?-?-188?,
Drake
(
SDEI
, 1)
.
Diagnosis.
There are two faintly visible brown fasciae on the elytral disc. This characteristic will distinguish the members of this species from congeners.
Description.
Size
. Length 9.0 mm; width
2.2 mm
.
Form
. As in
Fig. 82
.
Color
. Testaceous, except each elytron with 3 faintly visible light brown markings, one at humeral angle, one at elytron middle, and one preapical.
Head
. Cranium finely punctate, frons slightly wider than length of antennal pedicel; EW/FW 45/15.
Thorax
. Pronotum finely punctate, with 2 tumescences, concave at middle; PW/PL 100/140; elytra with few asetiferous punctures concentrated in basal half near sutural margin, one stria adjacent to sutural margin extended from elytron middle to elytral base; EL/EW 385/70.
Abdomen
. Aedeagus (
Fig. 43
), phallobasic lobes long, widely separated; phallic plates with one spine at apical 1/3; phallobasic apodeme abbreviated.
Variation.
Size
. Length 9.0–10.0 mm; width
2.2–2.3 mm
. Except for body size, the available specimens are quite homogeneous.
Natural history.
The
holotype
was collected in
Brazil
during February and November.
Distribution
(for map see
Fig. 69
). This species occurs in
Brazil
and
Paraguay
.
Etymology.
The specific epithet,
adelosa
, is a Greek adjective that stems from
adelos
(= obscure). I refer to the dimly visible light brown markings on the elytral disc.