A new bark-gnawing beetle (Coleoptera, Trogossitidae) from the middle Eocene of Europe, with a checklist of fossil Trogossitidae
Author
Schmied, Heiko
Author
Wappler, Torsten
Author
Č, Ji Ř Í Kolibá
text
Zootaxa
2009
1993
17
26
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.274671
de46898d-f662-46aa-ab26-7e75546f425d
1175-5326
274671
Ancyrona eocenica
sp. nov.
(Figs. 1A, B, C)
Cassidinae
gen. et sp. indet.
Wappler, 2003a
, pl. 13, fig. i, p. 110, fig. 75.
Holotype
:
PE_2000/475, LS, completely preserved, dorsal side visible. Deposited in the Eckfeld insect collection at the
NHMM
, Mainz.
Type
locality and horizon:
Eckfeld Maar near Manderscheid; middle Eocene, middle Lutetian,
ELMA
Geiseltalian, MP 13, 44.3 ± 0.4 Ma (
Mertz
et al.
2000
).
Description:
Body length 2.66 mm, width 1.63 mm, distance between eyes 0.34 mm, pronotal length 0.55 mm, pronotal width 1.41 mm (fragmentary length), elytral length 1.83 mm, width of compressed part of elytra 0.16 mm. Dorsal surface black-brown; head, pronotum, and elytra conspicuously and regularly punctate. Pubescence of body not visible.
Two small apical teeth oriented in horizontal axis, with one tooth visible on right mandible; frontoclypeal suture present; compound eyes large, exopthalmic, not emarginate (Fig. 1C). Pronotum transverse, twice as
FIGURE 1.
A, B, C:
Ancyrona eocenica
sp. nov.
(PE_2000/475, LS): (A)
Holotype
in dorsal view, (B) camera lucida drawing of the
holotype
, (C) detail of the head, showing details of the mandible (M) and fragmentary preserved parts of the first antennal segments (Ant). D:
Ancyrona vicina
Léveillé, 1899
“
Kamerun
, Col. Kraatz, Grouvelle det.” (DEI, ZALF); general habitus. E:
Ancyrona diversa
(Pic, 1921)
“
Korea
Prov. Gang-von, district On-dzong, Kum-gang san, near hotel Gon-song,
250 m
;
4 August1975
, leg. J. Papp et A. Vojnits”; general habitus. F:
Peltis ferruginea
(Linneaus, 1758)
(ZFMK, Bonn); detail of the head; black arrows indicating the distinctly extended corners of the pronotum. G:
A. diversa
(Pic, 1921)
; detail of head and pronotum. Scale bars: A–C,
1 mm
. E–G 0.5 mm.
wide as head, anterior margin weakly concave, anterior corners not distinctly projecting, posterolateral corners rounded, posterior margin straight and as wide as elytra. Scutellum small, semicircular. Elytral humeri evenly rounded. Elytra regularly punctate, with approximately ten rows of punctures and ten carinae. Dorsal lateral margins of elytra flattened along entire length of elytra.
Differential diagnosis:
The new species differs from recent species of
Ancyrona
in the following combination of characters: (1) minute body (2.66 mm), (2) anterior margin of pronotum weakly concave, (3) anterior corners of pronotum not distinctly developed, and (4) body broadly oval.
Etymology:
The specific epithet is taken from the Greek
eos,
referring to the Eocene age of the fossil.
Comments:
The diverse genus
Ancyrona
(~ 50 described and many undescribed species) is widespread, extending from Africa south of the Sahara across to
Madagascar
, and throughout southeast Asia to
Japan
and east Siberia, New
Guinea
, and northern
Australia
. One species (
A. japonica
Reitter, 1889
) also occurs in Europe (
Bulgaria
,
Hungary
, and
Slovakia
). Distribution records in South
America
(two species reported) are dubious and should be double-checked. Body size varies from
3 to 8 mm
; dorsal surface is covered by wax scales, thick setae, fine hairs, or is glabrous; anterior margin of pronotum is emarginate (concave), anterior corners are more or less projecting; eyes exopthalmic; joints of antennal club rounded to serrate; body rounded or weakly elongate.
Kolibáč (2007)
divided
Ancyrona
into five species groups based on common body habitus and distribution rather than phylogenetic affinities. Thus, there is inherent difficulty in classifying
A. eocenica
sp. nov.
in any of these groups due to a lack of sculpture and antennae in the fossil form.