Revision of the genus Thyreocephalus and description of Afrus gen. nov. of Africa south of the Sahara (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylininae)
Author
Janák, Jiří
Author
Bordoni, Arnaldo
text
Zootaxa
2015
4038
1
1
94
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4038.1.1
066e84f1-206b-40cb-a615-2126696b813d
1175-5326
289876
1B62B78C-AA59-4417-A4FC-1CC9CED745E0
Thyreocephalus meridioafricanus
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 86
,
97–103
)
Type
locality.
South Africa
, Durban.
Type
material.
Holotype
♂:
SOUTH AFRICA
: KwaZulu-Natal: “Durban, Glenwood,
25.10.80
”, “National coll. of Insects”, “
Holotypus
Thyreocephalus meridioafricanus
sp. nov.
, Janák & Bordoni det. 2015”. (
SANC
), Pretoria,
South Africa
, Collected by A.C.M. Courtois. Donated by Courtois, 2006” (
SANC
).
Paratype
(sex indet., apex of abdomen missing): same data as
holotype
, but “
Paratypus
Thyreocephalus meridionalis
sp. nov.
, Janák & Bordoni det. 2015” (
JJRC
).
Description.
Body length
16.5 mm
; length from anterior margin of head to posterior margin of elytra:
8.5 mm
. Black or dark brown with reddish elytra, abdomen brown with apical part of segment 7, complete segment 8 and genital segment light reddish (
Fig. 102
). Shiny. Head and pronotum with micro-punctation. Head and pronotum and related punctation as in
Figs. 97
,
103
. Labrum as in
Fig. 98
. Elytra as long as pronotum and wider than pronotum, slightly dilated posteriad, with rounded humeral angles. Surface with fine punctation, arranged in three series, one near suture, one median and one lateral. Abdomen with evident transverse micro-striation and deep, rather dense punctation, arranged in more series on each segment.
Male
. Temples rather finely and densely punctate. Tergite 10 and sternite 9 of male genital segment as in
Figs. 99, 100
. Aedeagus very large (
Fig. 101
) ovoid,
3.4 mm
long, with very short median lobe, symmetrical parameres and short tube-like inner sac.
Female. Unknown.
Differential diagnosis.
Thyreocephalus meridioafricanus
sp. nov.
differs from the similar
T. nairobiensis
in temples without longitudinal impression and mainly in much larger and different shaped aedeagus with very short apical lobe and short parameres.
Etymology.
This species is named after
South Africa
.
Distribution.
The species is known only from KwaZulu-Natal Province in
South Africa
(
Fig. 86
).