Taxonomic revision of the genus Parena Motschulsky, 1860 (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Lebiini, Metallicina)
Author
Shi, Hongliang
0000-0002-9989-5830
shihl@bjfu.edu.cn
Author
Liang, Hongbin
0000-0002-9989-5830
shihl@bjfu.edu.cn
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-05-18
5286
1
1
144
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5286.1.1
journal article
263342
10.11646/zootaxa.5286.1.1
67e7a105-1f62-414a-83d9-f758039eb726
1175-5326
7958937
F9834684-24D3-4795-B5EB-77B451DF856D
13.
Parena scutata
species group
This species group contains three species distributed in the Sub-Saharan African mainland and one species from
Madagascar
. This group is characterized by: postgenae without suborbital setae; elytra not metallic, uniformly reddish brown or with dark patches; elytral apices distinctly truncate, apical margin nearly straight, sutural angles more or less pointed, very faintly so in some species; elytra with or without microsculpture; antennomere 1 with the ventroapical seta only slightly shorter than the dorsoapical one; male genitalia with LL greater than LW, apex slightly bent dorsally; gonocoxite II of ovipositor quadrate, apex more or less emarginate.
This species group is most similar to the
P. plagiata
group in having postgenae without suborbital setae and a similar elytra color pattern (four species of these two groups have their elytra largely dark with a narrow red apical band). Although members of these two groups have similar external appearances, we divided them into different species groups based on differences in the following important aspects: shape of elytral apices, length of the apical setae of antennomere 1, and shape of the male genitalia and female ovipositor. Species of the
P. scutata
group have distinctly truncate elytral apices with the sutural angles more or less pointed, although very faint so in some species (
Figs 5B, 5C, 5D
). This character state is unique in the subgenus
Parena
, but presents in several species of the subgenus
Crossoglossa
. Moreover, in the
P. scutata
group, the ventroapical seta of antennomere 1 is only slightly shorter than the dorsoapical one (
Fig. 1D
), whereas, in all other species of this genus, the ventroapical seta is less than half the length of the dorsal-apical one (
Figs 1A, 1B, 1C
). In all studied species, the male genitalia and female ovipositor also have significant differences between these two groups. In the
P. scutata
group, the median lobe of aedeagus is slenderer and the apical lamella is much longer than in the
P. plagiata
group. In the
P. scutata
group, gonocoxite II of the ovipositor is nearly quadrate with its inner and outer margins equally in length, whereas in the
P. plagiata
group, gonocoxite II is strongly pointed near its inner apical angle with its inner margin much longer than the outer margin.