Petrodessus conatus sp. n., a new genus and species of Bidessini from hygropetric habitats in tropical Australia (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae: Hydroporinae)
Author
Miller, Kelly B.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3242
62
67
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.280499
521deefb-6cc9-4fae-8548-4c8ee2e7fb7b
1175-5326
280499
Petrodessus
n. gen.
(
Figs 1–14
)
Type
species.
Petrodessus conatus
sp. n.
, by monotypy.
Diagnosis and description.
This genus differs from others in the tribe by the combination of: 1) transverse occipital line absent (
Fig. 1
), 2) basal pronotal striae present, basally deeply impressed with a shallow, transverse groove connecting the striae (
Fig. 1
), 3) basal elytral stria present, basally deeply impressed (
Fig. 1
), 4) elytral sutural stria absent, 5) anterior clypeal margin strongly flattened, anteriorly produced, with broad anterior margin (
Fig. 1
), 6) elytron without longitudinal carinae (
Fig. 1
), 7) epipleuron without transverse carina at humeral angle, 8) lateral lobes of aedeagus two-segmented (Figs 5,6), and 9) protibia broadly triangular, heavily spinous (
Fig. 2
). Individuals have relatively few natatory setae on the legs, which are robust and spinous, in general (Figs 2,3).
FIGURES 1–7.
Petrodessus conatus
sp. n.
1) Dorsal habitus. 2) Left proleg, anterior aspect. 3) Left metaleg, anterior aspect. 4) Male median lobe, right lateral aspect. 5) Male right lateral lobe, right lateral aspect. 6) Male median lobe and right lateral lobe, ventral aspect. 7) Female genitalia, ventral aspect. Scale bar = 1.0 mm for 1–3 only.
Etymology.
The genus name is formed from a combination of
petro
, Greek for “rock”, and
dessus
, a common root in other genus names in this tribe to signify the rock-surface habitat of the single member of the genus. The gender of the name is masculine.
Distribution.
Petrodessus
n. gen.
is known from the following newly described species from Tully Gorge and Paluma Range National Parks in the Misty Mountains and Paluma Mountain Range of
Australia
(
Fig. 8
).
FIGURE 8.
Petrodessus conatus
sp. n.
, distribution.
Discussion.
This genus keys to couplet
14 in
Biström’s (1988) key to the
Bidessini
genera of the world where it does not fit either choice,
Microdessus
Young, 1967
or
Uvarus
Guignot, 1939
. It can be easily distinguished from each of these taxa by the prominently flattened and produced anterior clypeal margin (
Fig. 1
).
Balke and Ribera (2004)
pointed out the problems with using the transverse occipital line as a diagnostic character for genera within
Bidessini
contending that it exhibits considerable homoplasy in the group. Presence or absence of this feature appears in an early couplet (#4) in Biström’s (1988) key. When
Petrodessus
n. gen.
is run through that part of the key with taxa that have an occipital line present, it keys out to
Neoclypeodytes
Young, 1967
, a Nearctic group.
Petrodessus
n. gen.
bears some resemblance to
Neoclypeodytes
and also
Clypeodytes
Régimbart, 1894
,
Leiodytes
Guignot, 1936
and
Borneodessus
Balke, Hendrich, Mazzoldi & Biström, 2002
. From
Clypeodytes
,
Petrodessus
n. gen.
differs in the lack of a transverse epipleural carina at the humeral angle, the lack of any longitudinal carinae on the elytra, and the lack of a transverse occipital line. The genus differs from
Leiodytes
in lacking rows of punctures on the medial portion of the metasternum. From
Borneodessus
,
Petrodessus
n. gen.
differs especially in the lack of the basal elytral striae in the former taxon. The similarity to
Neoclypeodytes
in characters is more pronounced, though
Neoclypeodytes
itself has taxa with character combinations making discrete definition of that genus problematic, as well (
Miller, 2001
), and
Petrodessus
n. gen.
is superficially quite different. Rather than expanding
Neoclypeodytes
to include this new species, which lacks one of the few consistent features within
Neoclypeodytes
(the transverse occipital line), it seems best to put this species in its own genus until a more thoroughgoing clarification of the genus-level classification in the large and problematic
Bidessini
can be established.