Australian Marsh Beetles (Coleoptera: Scirtidae) 4. Two new genera, Austrocyphon and Tasmanocyphon
Author
Zwick, Peter
text
Zootaxa
2013
3706
1
1
74
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3706.1.1
a9befad7-4b65-4998-8e82-a00f933fdecb
1175-5326
284605
486DF839-3C97-4B16-9E2D-9E06F4D85F8F
Austrocyphon bidens
,
sp. n.
(
Figs. 28–31
)
Type
material
.
TAS
:
Holotype
: ♂,
41.50S
148.03E
TAS
Pelion Hut
3 km
S Mt.Oakleigh,
860m
,
30.Nov.1990
–
8.Jan.1991
, Malaise 2, closed forest (
ANIC
).
Paratypes
:
1♂
, Henty R. Tasmania J.Armstrong (
ANIC
);
1♂
, L. Margaret Tasmania J.Armstrong (AMS K249517);
2 ♂
,
TAS
Raglan Creek
20 km
E Gormaston
29/11/00
, C.H.S.Watts; 1 presumed ♀ with same data, no
type
status (
SAMA
).
Additional material studied
.
TAS
: From series of specimens originally mounted in groups on cards and labelled as
syntypes
of an intended new species by J. Armstrong: Tasmania Lake Margaret J.Armstrong:
5♂
(MV),
25♂
, 21 probable ♀ (
ANIC
).
5♂
, Tasmania Henty River, J.Armstrong (
ANIC
). Arthur Plains SW Tas,
6.3.65
,
3♂
;
8.2.65
,
8 specimens
including males (MV).
Habitus.
BL
1.9–2.2 mm
, BL/BW about 1.9. Dark brown, no elytral pattern.
Male
. T9 with strong apodemes and sharply curved caudal claws. Plate bare, about twice as long as wide at base, apex truncate. S9 exceptional, caudally ending in long acute sclerotized tips, plate with a few inconspicuous setae and anteriorly a pale middle strip.
Penis not flanged, waisted. Transverse bridge near middle, trigonium about 1/3 total width, apex finely spinulose, centema simple. Membranous foramen barely larger than the trigonium it surrounds.
Tegmen a slender U-shaped structure with thin, sharply pointed parameres.
Female
(presumed). Ovipositor not distinctive. During dissection an elongate oval object was found inside the genital duct of some specimens, perhaps a spermatophore. It has one short tubular end, the other end is flat, with longitudinal folds. See also account of
A. doctus
.
Etymology
. The sharply bidentate sternite 9 resembles the characteristic seeds of genus
Bidens
(Latin, with two teeth;
Asteraceae
). A noun in apposition.
Notes
. Endemic to Tasmania. Males are immediately recognized by the two sharp points of S9 which often project from the abdominal tip, for example in most males glued in groups on cards by J. Armstrong. These were identified without further dissection.