Trechus species from Mt. Choke of northern Ethiopia related to T. niloticus (Quéinnec & Ollivier) with notable male genital morphology (Carabidae: Trechini)
Author
Schmidt, Joachim
General and Systematic Zoology, University of Rostock, Germany
Author
Merene, Yeshitla
Department of Zoological Sciences, Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia & Amhara Agricultural Research Institute, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-08-06
5492
3
343
355
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5492.3.3
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5492.3.3
1175-5326
13234851
8F81F053-DE78-4684-BCC9-875AE0C41615
Trechus
(
Abyssinotus
)
reebae
(
Quéinnec & Ollivier, 2021
)
Fig 2A
,
3A, F, I
Citations.
Nilotrechus reebae
Quéinnec & Ollivier
:
Quéinnec
et al.
(2021)
: 55.
Trechus
(
Abyssinotus
)
reebae
(Quéinnec & Ollivier)
:
Merene
et al.
(2023)
: 49
.
Type
material.
Not studied. Identification is based on the original description, including habitus and male genital figures (
Quéinnec
et al.
2021
) as well as on several
additional specimens
collected close to the
type
locality.
Additional material.
12 ♂♂
,
14 ♀♀
,
Ethiopia
,
Amhara
,
Mt. Choke
, western crater valley, alt.
3700–3800 m
,
10°41’14”N
37°50’07”E
,
24.II.2019
, leg.
D. Hauth
,
J. Schmidt
,
Yeshitla M.
,
Yitbarek, W.
(
NHMAA
,
CAF
,
CSCHM
)
.
22 ♂♂
,
11 ♀♀
,
Mt. Choke
, western crater valley, alt.
3500–3600 m
,
10°41’00”N
37°50’35”E
,
01.
V
.2022, leg.
J. Schmidt
,
Yeshitla M.
(
CSCHM
).
11 ♂♂
,
4 ♀♀
, N-slope
Mt. Choke
,
N of Waber
, alt.
3450–3600 m
,
10°44’48”N
37°46’22”E
,
07.
V
.2022, leg.
J. Schmidt
,
Yeshitla M.
(
CSCHM
).
Description.
See
Quéinnec
et al.
(2021: 55–56)
. Proportion EL/AL = 2.01–2.12 (Ø = 2.05; n = 8).
Diagnosis.
See key to species, below.
Distribution
. Endemic to Mt. Choke in northern
Ethiopia
. Based on
Quéinnec
et al.
(2021)
and new sampling data, the species occurs on top of the western crater rim and on western slope of the crater valley, as well as on the north-facing mountain range north of the village Waber (
Fig. 4
).
Habitat preferences
.
Quéinnec
et al.
(2021)
collected most specimens of the
type
series under clay at the base of a small cliff. The additional specimens of
T. reebae
were collected under stones and sifted from the humus-rich soil under dense vegetation alongside small streams, and no specimens were found on open pastures and in dry bushland areas. For the vertical distribution altitudes of
3500 to 3900 m
were noted (see also
Quéinnec
et al.
2021
). Based on these data, the new species can be considered hygrophilic and cold-adapted.