A new species of Anacaena Thomson, 1859 from South Africa (Coleoptera: Hydrophilidae)
Author
Bilton, David T.
Author
Komarek, Albrecht
text
Zootaxa
2016
4139
4
593
599
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4139.4.11
a437d8ad-06c0-44c8-aa82-5481f3ee2063
1175-5326
262470
24F51B0E-B04E-433B-B000-4A11814C5E9A
Anacaena namaqua
sp. nov.
(
Figs 1–3
)
Type
locality
.
South Africa
,
Northern Cape
,
Bokkeveld Plateau
,
Avontuur Reserve
, vernal pools on clay,
797 m
,
31 17 44.63S
// 19 0 1
23.84E
(
Fig. 3
B).
Type
material
.
Holotype
(male): “
6/x/2015
South Africa
NC//
Avontuur Reserve
– vernal pools// on clay
797m
31 17 44.63S
// 19 0 1
23.84E
D T Bilton leg.” (genitalia extracted and mounted on same card) and red
holotype
label (
AMG
)
.
Paratypes
(47):
South Africa
: 2 Ƌ,
3 ♀
same data as holotype (
AMG
,
CDTB
)
;
4 Ƌ,
1 ♀
“
6/x/2015
South Africa
NC//
Avontuur Reserve
– temporary// stream below
Fynbos Cottage
//
765m
31 16 14.67S
// 19 0 2
53.02E
D T Bilton leg.” (
NMW
,
CDTB
)
;
2 Ƌ,
1 ♀
“
6/x/2015
South Africa
NC//
Avontuur Reserve
– pools in drying// temporary stream
795m
31 17 38.92S
// 19 0 1
12.03E
D T Bilton leg.” (
CDTB
,
NMW
)
;
1 Ƌ,
1 ♀
“
6/x/2015
South Africa
NC//
Avontuur Reserve
– margins of//
Kromvlei
799m
31 18 15.58S
// 19 0 0
51.42E
D T Bilton leg.” (
NMPC
)
;
1 ♀
“
7/x/2015
South Africa
NC//
Bokkeveld Oorlogskloof
//
Reserve – Oorlogskloof River
// below//
Driefontein
31 30 51.60S
19 06//
48.11E
491 m
D T Bilton
leg.” (
CDTB
)
;
1 Ƌ,
1 ♀
“
8/x/2015
South Africa
NC//
Bokkeveld Oorlogskloof Reserve
// spring pool at
Groot Tuin
//
31°26’41.01”S
//
19°04’11.13”E
,
724m
D T Bilton
// leg.” (
AMG
)
;
2 ♀
“
18/ix/2010
South Africa
NC//
Seepage
on R27 road @//
Vanrhynspass
//
D T Bilton
leg.” (
CDTB
)
;
1 Ƌ,
4 ♀
“
26/ix/2011
South Africa
NC//
Seepage
on R27 road @//
Vanrhynspass
//
D T Bilton
leg.” (
CDTB
,
ISAM
)
;
1 Ƌ,
3 ♀
“
18/ix/2010
South Africa
NC//
Temporary
pool beside R27 road// ca.
2 km
E of Vanrhynspass
//
D T Bilton
leg.” (
TMSA
)
;
2 Ƌ “
20/ix/2014
South Africa
WC//
Gifberg
– stream over rocks// in
Gifberg Pass
//
D T Bilton
leg.” (
CDTB
,
SANC
)
;
3 Ƌ,
1 ♀
“
21/ix/2014
South Africa
WC//
Matsikammaberg
stream//
1 km
SE of Sewefontein
farm// permanent
D T Bilton
leg.” (
CDTB
,
OUMNH
)
;
3 Ƌ,
2 ♀
“
21/ix/2014
South Africa
WC//
Matsikammaberg
stream//
1 km
NW of Sewefontein
farm//
D T Bilton
leg.” (
AMG
)
;
2 Ƌ “
21/ ix/2014
South Africa
WC//
Matsikammaberg
seepage stream// over rock at head of
Elandskloof
//
D T Bilton
leg.” (
ISAM
)
;
1 Ƌ,
4 ♀
“
21/ix/2014
South Africa
WC//
Matsikammaberg
rockpools// on NE edge of plateau//
D T Bilton
leg.” (
CDTB
,
TMSA
).
All
with red
paratype
labels.
Description
. Size:
Holotype
: TL
3.15 mm
; EL 2.0 mm; EW
1.55 mm
; EI 1.29.
Paratypes
: Ƌs BL 2.5–3.0 mm; EL
1.5–2.15 mm
; EW
1.4–1.5 mm
.
♀
s BL
2.5–2.9 mm
; EL
1.55–2.25 mm
; EW
1.5–1.75 mm
.
Colour: Dorsum (
Fig. 1
) with labrum, clypeus and frons black, lighter margins or preocular patches absent. Pronotum dark brown to almost black, with distinct, broad, yellow lateral margins. Elytra spotted in appearance; ground colour yellowish brown, with a distinct dark brown spot around each irregular puncture, confluent in some places; a larger dark brown patch present in humeral region. Scutellum dark brown to black. Maxillary palpi with palpomeres 2–3 dark yellow; palpomere 4 entirely infuscated. Basal portions of femora dark brown, rest of legs paler. Underside of head largely dark brown to black. Pronotal and abdominal ventrites dark brown to black; pronotal hypomera and elytral epipleurs pale brown.
Head: Clypeus large, with blunt anterolateral angles and slightly concave anterior margin; lateral margin longer than longitudinal diameter of compound eyes. Clypeus and frons shining, without microreticulation and with strong, irregular, distinctly impressed punctures, spaced on average 2–3 puncture-widths apart. Frontoclypeal suture not visible. Compound eyes large, very slightly protruding, not emarginate anteriorly; dorsal and ventral portion equally sized. Antennae with eight antennomeres. Maxillary palpi moderately slender, half as long as maximum width of clypeus; palpomere 2 distinctly inflated. Palpomeres 2:3:4 =
0.12 mm
:
0.09 mm
:
0.16 mm
. Labial palpi moderately slender, elongate, slightly longer than lateral margin of mentum.
FIGURE 1.
Dorsal habitus of
Anacaena namaqua
sp. nov.
, holotype. Scale bar = 1 mm.
FIGURE 2.
Anacaena namaqua
sp. nov.
A) venter of paratype; B) aedeagus of paratype. Scale bars = 1 mm & 0.2 mm, respectively.
Pronotum: Transverse, highly arched, broadest at posterior angles. Anterior and posterior angles broadly rounded; anterior angles protuding. Anterior margin arcuate over central 0.5; posterior margin arcuate. All margins with narrow bead. Lateral margins without evident setae. Surface shining, without microreticulation; punctures as on head.
Elytra: Elongate oval, broadest behind middle; subparallel over anterior 0.7 then evenly rounded to apex; weakly emarginate around suture. Lateral margins without setae. Humeral region without evident callosity. Sutural stria present on posterior 2/3 of elytra. Upper surface shining, without microreticulation. Punctures as on head and pronotum; series absent.
Venter: Mentum flat with convex lateral margins; distinctly depressed anteriorly, anterior margin slightly emarginated. Surface shining, without microreticulation and with sparse setiferous punctures. Prosternum slightly tectiform, without median carina. Mesoventrite flat, without evident process. Abdominal ventrites entirely pubescent; ventrite 5 not emarginate apically.
Legs: Procoxae without spine-like setae. Profemora (
Fig. 2
A) pubescent on proximal 2/3 of ventral face with slightly oblique hairline; mesofemora (
Fig. 2
A) pubescent on proximal 2/3 of ventral face with straight hairline; metafemoral pubescence (
Fig. 2
A) reduced to a narrow strip over mesal half of anterior margin and on proximal portion, adjacent to metatrochanter. Metatibia with strong spines on lateral face; distal spurs slender, longer mesal spur reaching midway along tarsomere 2 (
Fig. 1
). Metatarsus slightly shorter than metatibia.
Aedeagus: Phallobase longer than parameres, longer than wide, evenly converging to the distinct, large, knoblike manubrium. Ventral face of phallobase largely unpigmented, borderline between unpigmented and pigmented part of ventral face reaching manubrium. Parameres with sigmoidal mesal margins and evenly rounded lateral margins, slightly inflated at their blunt apices. Ventral bases of parameres fused. Dorsal bases curved, not distinctly reaching into phallobase. Median lobe wide, short, widening from the base to approximately halfway along its length, then narrowing to relatively wide, blunt apex. Apex of median lobe reaching apex of parameres or slightly shorter; corona in apical position. Basal apophyses as long as main piece of median lobe, with distinct extension into phallobase, pointing mesad. Base of median lobe distinctly connected with parameres by a very blunt tooth (
Fig. 2
B). Aedeagal length
0.44–0.45 mm
.
Female: Not significantly different from males.
Variation: Some variation in elytral colour pattern, some
paratypes
either paler (sometimes due to tenerality) or darker than the
holotype
, but mottling always evident.
Etymology
. Named in reference to the
Namaqua
District of the
Northern Cape
, where many of the known localities are situated. The name is a noun in apposition.
FIGURE 3.
Anacaena namaqua
sp. nov.
localities. A) South Africa, Northern Cape, Avontuur Reserve – margins of Kromvlei, 799m; B) South Africa, Northern Cape, Avontuur Reserve – vernal pools on clay, 797m. Photos D T Bilton.
Distribution and ecology
.
A. namaqua
sp. nov.
is known to date from a number of localities, comprising both running and standing waters (e.g.
Fig. 3
), all of which are on the Bokkeveld Plateau close to Nieuwoudtville, or on the nearby Gifberg/Matsikammaberg massif. These mountains form part of the southern and southeastern borders of Namaqualand, being at the point where the fynbos biome meets the succulent karoo (
Cowling & Pearce 1999
; van
Wyk & Smith 2001
;
Manning & Goldblatt 2012
). The Bokkeveld has reliable winter rains and is much wetter than surrounding areas of Namaqualand. As a consequence the region is home to a diverse flora, including many endemic geophytes (van
Wyk & Smith 2001
), and supports a range of largely temporary aquatic habitats. The Gifberg/Matsikammaberg forms a southwesterly outlier from this plateau, and is a striking inselberg, reaching just over
1,000 m
in altitude, with
700 m
high sandstone cliffs towering over the dry Knersvlakte. It represents a mesic island in an otherwise semi-arid landscape, annual rainfall being up to
550 mm
, contrasting with as little as
50 mm
per year on the plains below. The Matsikammaberg also supports a rich flora, 10% of which is regionally, and 4% locally endemic (
Helme 2004
).
Differential diagnosis and key to South African
Anacaena
. The new species is most similar structurally to
A. capensis
Hebauer, 1999
,
A. glabriventris
Komarek, 2004
,
A. reducta
Komarek, 2004
and
A. tenella
Hebauer, 1999
, sharing the following features with these South African species: eight antennomeres, no preocular patches on clypeus, flat mesoventrite, colouration of the pronotum (dark brown to black with broad yellow lateral margins), absence of serial elytral punctures, reduced metafemoral pubescence and a similar aedeagus.
Anacaena namaqua
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
A. reducta
and
A. tenella
on its larger body size (2.5–3.15 vs. <
2.5 mm
), from
A. capensis
on its distinctly impressed dorsal punctures and from
A. glabiventris
on the entirely pubescent abdominal ventrites and short, inflated parameres. The aedeagus is most similar to that of
A. reducta
. In addition the new species differs from all Afrotropical
Anacaena
in having distinctly speckled elytra, a colour pattern present in all specimens examined to date. The new species can be distinguished from other South African
Anacaena
as follows:
1 Habitus strongly convex; antennae with nine antennomeres; elytra with ten series of punctures in addition to irregular puncta- tion on intervals (species originally described as
Grodum
Hansen, 1999
)......................................... 2
- Habitus moderately convex; antennae with eight antennomeres; elytra with irregular punctation; serial punctures absent... 3
2 Interval punctures very fine, less than half diameter of serial punctures; hind wings rudimentary.....
striata
(
Hansen, 1999
)
- Interval punctures moderately coarse, about half diameter of serial punctures; hind wings well developed................................................................................................
endroedyi
(
Hansen, 1999
)
3 Elytra light brown speckled with darker brown spots and patches..................................
namaqua
sp. nov.
- Elytra unicolorous dark brown or black, lacking obvious mottling.............................................. 4
4 Total length greater than
2.5 mm
; pronotal punctures moderately coarse or coarse................................... 5
- Total length less than
2.5 mm
; pronotal punctures relatively fine................................................ 6
5 Pronotum and elytra black; elytral punctures coarse, shallow; abdominal ventrites entirely pubescent......................................................................................................
capensis
Hebauer, 1999
- Pronotum and elytra dark brown; elytral punctures moderately coarse, rather deep; abdominal ventrites partly glabrous...................................................................................
glabriventris
Komarek, 2004
6 Punctures on pronotum and elytra coarser; pronotum and elytra typically similar shades of brown; aedeagus characteristic......................................................................................
reducta
Komarek, 2004
- Punctures on pronotum and elytra finer; pronotum typically black, darker than the browner elytra; aedeagus characteristic.......................................................................................
tenella
Hebauer, 1999