Two new species ofCaciaNewman (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Lamiinae) from the Mindoro Biogeographic Region of the Philippines
Author
Medina, Milton Norman
Author
Cabras, Analyn
Author
Barševskis, Arvīds
text
Baltic Journal of Coleopterology
2023
23
2
241
248
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-024-09640-2
journal article
10.59893/bjc.23(2).010
1407-8619
13203359
Cacia (Cacia) aeschyae
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 2A
)
HOLOTYPE
male:
PHILIPPINES
–
Southern Luzon
,
Oriental Mindoro
/
Puerto Gallera
/
vi.2017
, loc. collector leg. /
MMCP
, printed on red card. Type specimen will be deposited at the Philippine National Museum (
PNM
).
Description. Measurements:
Holotype
male: LB (LH+LP+LE): mm. LH:
1.5 mm
. WH:
2.5 mm
. LG: 1.0 mm. LL:
0.5 mm
. WL:
0.5 mm
. LP: 2.0 mm. WP: 3.0 mm. LE: 8.0 mm. WEH: 4.0 mm.
Teguments
head, prothorax, and elytradark brownish; underside of the body, antennae, and legs are light brownish.
Head
broader than long; vertex, frons, and genae densely covered with yellowish recumbent pubescence; frons with deep puncturations arranged in random; longitudinal line visible from base to apex; vertex with thick band of yellowish pubescence from base up to margin between frons; genae wider than long; eyes dark brown as long as wide; apical margin of head slightly concave, lined with long erect yellowish setae; clypeus light brownish, lustrous, glabrous; labrum broader than long, densely covered with semi-erect yellowish setae; mandibles lustrous, dark brownish, basal half with puncturations, with lateral depression, and covered with semi-erect yellowish setae. Scape slightly robust towards apex with cicatrix, covered with fined recumbent yellowish pubescence with moderate erect long yellowish setae. Antennomeres III to XI cylindrical, covered with fine recumbent yellowish pubescence, underside with numerous long erect yellowish setae; Antennomere III longer than IV and V combined; antennomeres VI to XI of the same length.
Fig. 2. Genitalia of
Cacia (Ipocregyes) katrinae
sp. nov.
: A-C. Whole system of genitalia, A. Lateral aspect, B. Ventral aspect, C. Dorsal aspect. D-F. Aedeagus, D. Dorsal aspect, E. Ventral aspect, F. Lateral aspect. G. Tegmen.
245 Femora robust; femora, tibia, and tarsi covered with fine recumbent yellowish pubescence with few short erect yellowish setae. Claws simple.
Mesosternum
quadrangular, with fine recumbent setae; mesepimeron, mesepisternum, metepisternum, metasternum, and abdominal ventrites densely covered with recumbent yellowish pubescence; mesepimeron slightly wider than long; metepisternum rectangular; ventrite I as broad as ventrite V; ventrite I broader than ventrites II, III, and IV individually.
Fig. 3. Habitus of
Cacia (Cacia) aeschyae
sp. nov.
: A. Dorsal aspect, B. Ventral aspect, C. Lateral, D. Frons.
Pronotum and Propleuron
with deep puncturations; pronotal disc slightly raised, broadest at the middle; prothorax densely covered with recumbent yellowish pubescence with few erect yellowish setae arranged in random. Elytra twice longer than wide, with dense puncturations from base towards post-median, finer towards apex. Humeri angled and slightly raised. Elytra broadest at humeri tapering towards apex, with three transverse bands of recumbent yellowish pubescence: a transverse band at the base and humeri, a pre-median band from margin to suture, and thick postmedi- an band towards apex. Elytral margin lined with long erect yellowish setae from the lateral side of humeri to apex. Scutellum triangular covered with recumbent yellowish setae.
Procoxa and metacoxa
are robust, raised, and covered with fine recumbent pubescence with few erect yellowish setae.
246
Genitalia.
Aedeagus (3.0 mm) recurved when viewed laterally, broadest at pre-median, tapering towards apex, apex slightly blunt; tegmen (
3.5 mm
) longer than aedeagus, parameres four times longer than wide (1.0 mm,
0.25 mm
), parallel-sided not meeting from base to apex; apex of parameres lined with long soft erect yellowish setae.
Adult female
. Unknown.
Differential diagnosis
. This new species belongs to
Cacia
sēnsū strictō
for having an apical spine at antennomere III, and no apical spines in IV and VI. This species is close to
C. trimaculata
Breuning, 1947
for having three bands of whitish pubescence at the elytra but can be easily differentiated based on the pronotal bands (
C. aeschyae
sp. nov.
fully covered with yellowish pubescence vs. thick median longitudinal band of whitish pubescence in
C. trimaculata
). Both species also differ in terms of elytral bands (thinner bands in
C. aeschyae
sp. nov.
vs. thick circular bands in
C. triomaculata
).
Cacia aeschyae
sp. nov.
is distinct for having a body tapering towards apex more robust in
C. triomaculata
. Finally, antennomere VI of
C. triomaculata
covered with whitish pubescence, absent in
C. aeschyae
sp. nov.
This new species also differs from
Cacia estrellae
Hüdepohl, 1989
which can be found in the same biogeographic region for having a muchtapered body form and no two-toned femora.
Etymology
. The new species is named after Aeschy Rose Medina, the daughter of the first author.
Distribution
.
Philippines
(Southern Luzon,
Oriental Mindoro
, Baco).