A new species of Uvarus Guignot, 1939 (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae: Hydroporinae: Bidessini) from Florida, USA
Author
Epler, J. H.
text
Insecta Mundi
2020
2020-02-28
752
1
4
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.3702979
4e5e09e4-b479-4630-91fe-2be8b2e04c7b
1942-1354
3702979
DFFA138D-C0C3-4B4F-B7B0-DC36B0B46BB4
Uvarus sinofelihelianthus
Epler
,
new species
Uvarus
sp. 1
Epler 2010
:
5.116
,
5.119
(in key; distribution
)
Diagnosis.
This species is most similar to
U. suburbanus
(Fall)
as redescribed by
Larson et al. (2000)
. Both taxa lack a subhumeral lateral carina but
U. sinofelihelianthus
differs in the shape of the much stouter and broader median lobe of the male genitalia.
Description.
(
n
=
5 ♂♂
,
1♀
). Total length
1.72–1.80 mm
; width
0.92–0.98 mm
; length/width 1.84–1.88; head width
0.52–0.58 mm
; interocular distance
0.28–0.30 mm
; pronotum length
0.28–0.30 mm
, width
0.78–0.80 mm
; pronotal plica length
0.12–0.16 mm
; elytron length
1.18–1.24 mm
; elytron plica length
0.12–0.22 mm
.
Head reddish-brown above, yellow to reddish-brown posterior of eyes; yellow ventrally. Palpi yellow with apical infuscation; antennae yellow to pale brownish-yellow. Pronotum dorsally yellow with medial darker area along posterior margin, ventrally yellow. Elytron dark reddish-brown with slightly paler maculation in subhumeral area and subapically, yellow along lateral humeral area (
Fig. 2
) or dark yellow-brown with weak stripe, and punctures darkened (
Fig. 3
). Venter pale reddish-brown, epipleuron mostly yellowish, darker posteriorly; abdominal sternites reddish-brown. Fore and middle legs yellow/ pale brown; hind legs light reddish-brown, tarsi paler.
Body elongate-oval, widest at about basal 1/3 of elytra (
Fig. 1
). Head microreticulate, with sparse fine punctures anterior to an imaginary line drawn through the posterior margin of the eyes, head behind this line smooth, shining. Clypeus convex, with a pair of shallow, semi-triangular frontal impressions that give suggestion of a low medial ridge and small rounded lip along anterior margin. Pronotum shining, non-reticulate, with sparse small punctures and narrow lateral bead; with basal plicae that extend slightly more than half length of pronotum at same level, apically turning mediad. Elytron shining, with moderate punctation, slightly denser towards apex; each puncture bearing a seta that is subequal in length to distance between punctures; with basal plica that is longer or subequal to pronotal plica; elytron lateral margin posterior to humeral area smoothly rounded, without carina or ridge. Epipleuron shining, mostly impunctate, with <10 minute punctures mostly near ventrolateral margin. Metasternum, metacoxae and abdominal sternites with very fine, sparse punctures bearing very thin setae subequal to or slightly longer than space between punctures; metasternum with shallow impression at base of anteromedial process (
Fig. 9
).
Male genitalia with lateral lobes two-segmented (
Fig. 5
); median lobe stout, with broad convex apex (
Fig. 6, 7
).
Type material.
HOLOTYPE
(deposited in
FSCA
),
♂
,
USA
:
FLORIDA
:
Union Co.
,
New River
near
Lake Butler
at
State Road
100,
29°59′53″N
,
82°16′27″W
[
NEW 009
],
5-v-2003
, leg.
Bob Giambrone.
PARATYPES
(
4♂♂
,
1♀
):
FLORIDA
:
Alachua Co.
,
Santa Fe River
at
Worthington Springs
,
29°55′18″N
,
82°25′34″W
[
SFR 030
],
4-iii-1996
, leg.
Bob Giambrone
,
1 ♀
(
FSCA
)
;
Columbia Co.
,
Santa Fe River
at
O’Leno State Park
,
29°54′51″N
,
82°34′48″W
[
SFR 040
],
12-iv-2016
, leg.
Efrain Tavarez
,
1 ♂
(
FSCA
)
;
Hardee Co.
,
Peace River
at
Heard
Bridge Road
, north of
Wauchula
,
27.57631
,
−81.80447
[PRMP-10],
10-v-2019
, leg.
Sheri A. Huelster
,
Stephanie Healey
,
1 ♂
(
JHE
)
;
Manatee Co.
, Myakka R at
Wauchula
bridge,
12-x-1983
, leg.
R.P. Rutter
,
1 ♂
(
JHE
)
;
Union Co.
,
New River
near
Lake Butler
at
State Road
100,
29°59′53″N
,
82°16′27″W
[
NEW 009
],
1-viii-2002
, leg.
Bob Giambrone
,
1 ♂
(
JHE
)
.
Etymology.
From
sino
– relating to
China
;
felis
– cat;
helianthus
– sunflower. Named for
China
Cat Sunflower, a musical composition by Robert Hunter and Jerry Garcia.
Comments.
To date the species is known only from
Florida
, but its occurrence in the New and Santa Fe Rivers in the Suwannee River Basin of northern
Florida
indicates it might be found elsewhere on the southeastern Coastal Plain; other specimens were collected further south, in the Myakka and Peace River drainages. All specimens were collected from the margins of small rivers by dipnet.
Elytral plica length was longer than pronotal plica length in three males, and equal in two males and the single female. The faint maculation of the elytra varies from a weakly banded pattern (
Fig. 2
) to a single faint stripe (
Fig. 3
); both “variants” exhibit a similar weak longitudinal stripe. This maculation is apparent only when the elytron is lifted up or removed.
Epler (2010)
reviewed the species of
Uvarus
known from Florida; he provided keys for southeastern species and habitus photographs of all Florida species and an additional species that may occur
in Florida,
U.
suburbanus (Fall). One unknown species was keyed as “
Uvarus
sp. 1”, here described as
U. sinofelihelianthus
. In
Larson et al
. (
2000
)
it will key to
U. suburbanus
(Fall), a species they (ibid.:
133
)
redescribed from “type specimens from Staten Island, New York, Talbot Co., Maryland ... and specimens from Louisiana
”.
Epler
(2010)
examined a series of
U. suburbanus
in the FSCA determined by F.N.
Young and considered that a specimen from College Park, Maryland, fit the species as redescribed by
Larson et al.
(
2000
). Figures of this specimen and its genitalia are included here (
Fig. 4
,
8
).
The two species are similar in appearance, both lacking the weak to well developed subhumeral lateral carina found in other members of the granarius group. They are best separated by the stouter median lobe of the male genitalia in
U. sinofelihelianthus
(
Fig. 6–7
). In general form,
U. sinofelihelianthus
is slightly slimmer and elytral punctation appears to be slightly denser than that of
U. suburbanus
, but more material of both taxa needs to be examined.