Description of a new genus of Elaphidiini with two new species (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Cerambycinae)
Author
Santos-Silva, Antonio
Author
Galileo, Maria Helena M.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4247
3
346
350
journal article
33346
10.11646/zootaxa.4247.3.11
a884a6a0-b724-4f40-8e8d-4e17db57dc6c
1175-5326
438608
D328F490-66D9-4422-9F94-D88E96D6C379
Lingafelterellus
gen. nov.
Type species
:
Lingafelterellus clarkei
sp. nov.
Etymology
. The genus is named for Steven W. Lingafelter, for his contribution to knowledge of
Elaphidiini
(“Lingafelter” with the Latin suffix “ellus” = small, relating to the small size of the
type
species. Masculine gender.
Diagnosis.
The finely granulated eyes, antennomeres III–VI with short spine at inner apex, prothorax unarmed laterally, procoxal cavities closed behind and closed and angulate laterally, and elytra coarsely and abundantly punctate distinguish this genus.
Description
. Frons finely, abundantly punctate, depressed toward coronal suture (widely V-shaped). Fronto-clypeal sulcus well-marked. Postclypeus shiny, smooth, strongly projected centrally toward frons (triangularly shaped).Coronal suture distinct from clypeus nearly to area between antennal tubercles and upper eye lobes. Eyes finely granulated; lower eye lobes about 1.5 times longer than gena; distance between upper eye lobes nearly equal to entire length of one lobe (from lower eye lobes to its apex); upper eye lobes gradually and distinctly narrowed toward apex (subacute). Genal apex rounded. Last maxillary palpomere in male somewhat flattened dorsoventrally, slightly widened at midlength, with apex truncate; cylindrical, fusiform in female. Last labial palpomere in male as last maxillary palpomere in female subfusiform, with apex narrowly truncate. Antennae 11- segmented, almost reaching distal third of elytra; scape gradually enlarged toward apex, slightly longer than antennomere III, with dorsally asperities on distal third (mainly in males); antennomeres III–VI (
Figs 5–6
) with short spine at inner apex. Prothorax cylindrical, longer than wide, laterally unarmed. Prosternal process centrally very narrow (laminiform). Width of mesosternal process about 1/3 of mesocoxa. Procoxal cavities from distinctly closed to open behind (variable including intraspecifically), and angulate laterally. Pronotum with short, decumbent, moderately abundant setae on basal quarter, with long, erect, sparse setae on remaining surface; without tubercles or gibbosities. Elytra parallel-sided; apex from rounded to slightly truncate (outer angle always rounded; sutural angle unarmed); coarsely, abundantly punctate throughout; with long, erect, sparse setae. Femora pedunculate-clavate (profemora less so). Metatarsomere I slightly longer than II–III together.
Remarks.
Two of the characters of
Elaphidiini
pointed out by
Lingafelter (1998)
are present in the new genera: antennomeres with spine at apex and narrow metepisternum with longitudinal keel. However, the last palpomeres is not notably enlarged toward apex, although they are expanded. This latter character was also listed by
Martins & Galileo (2005)
as a character of the tribe. However, the shape of the last maxillary and labial palpomeres is quite variable in
Elaphidiini
. Frequently males have the last palpomeres distinctly securiform, while in females of the same species they are fusiform. Furthermore, even in males of the same genera the shape of the last palpomere could be strongly securiform, slightly securiform or very slightly widened toward apex.
Lingafelterellus
belongs to a small group of
Elaphidiini
genera with eyes finely granulated (
Lingafelter 1998
):
Championa
Bates, 1880
(currently in
incertae sedis
,
Lingafelter 1998
);
Sphaerionillum
Bates, 1885
;
Tropimerus
Giesbert, 1987
;
Stenosphenus
Haldeman, 1847
; and
Ironeus
Bates, 1872
. It differs from
Championa
mainly by the absence of transverse ridges on pronotal disc. It differs from
Tropimerus
,
Stenosphenus
and
Ironeus
by the procoxal cavities closed behind (open in those genera). It can be separated from
Sphaerionillum
primarily by the cylindrical prothorax (distinctly widened laterally in
Sphaerionillum
) and the coarsely and abundantly punctate elytra (finely and sparsely punctate in
Sphaerionillum
).
Martins & Galileo (2005)
considered the eyes in
Pseudomallocera
Zajciw, 1961
as finely granulated, while Lingafelter (1971) considered them coarsely granulated. We find the eyes in
Pseudomallocera
to be distinctly finely granulated, and the gena almost as long as the lower eye lobe.
Pseudomallocera
is notably different from
Lingafelterellus
(pubescence, elytral punctures, shape of the legs, etc.) (see photographs at
Bezark 2017
).
Lingafelterellus
can be included in the alternative of couplet “28” from
Martins & Galileo (2005)
(translated; modified):
28(27). Antennomere III with long blunt spine
......................................................................................................
Psyrassa
Pascoe, 1866
- Antennomere III with short acute spine................................................................................................................................... 28’ 28’(28).Antennomere III longer than scape; pronotum with central tubercle; apex of metafemora nearly reaching elytral apex.............
.......................................................................................................................................................Iauca
Martins & Galileo, 2000 - Antennomere III shorter than scape; pronotum without central tubercle; apex of metafemora ending well short of from elytral
apex
.......................................................................................................................................................
Lingafelterellus
gen. nov.
And it can be included in the alternative of couplet “87” or “88” from
Lingafelter (1998)
(modified):
87(86). Posterior procoxal cavities open .............................................................................................................................................. 88 - Posterior procoxal cavities closed............................................................................................................................................ 87’ 87’(87). Median pronotal callus present; elytra with pattern of large, pale maculations................................
Sphaerionillum
Bates, 1885
- Median pronotal callus absent; elytra without large, pale maculation
..................................................
Lingafelterellus
gen.
nov.
88(87). Elytral apex rounded, at most subtruncate, without spine........................................................................................................ 88’ - Elytral apex from truncate to spinose at apices.......................................................................................................................... 89 88’(88).Elytral apex distinctly elongate and tapering toward apex ......................................................................
Tropimerus
Bates, 1885
- Elytral apex not elongate and tapering toward apex............................................................................
Lingafelterellus
gen. nov.