The Fourteenth Amithao Thomson, 1878 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Cetoniinae: Gymnetini): A Remarkable New Species from Ecuador
Author
Ratcliffe, Brett C.
text
The Coleopterists Bulletin
2017
2017-12-22
71
4
655
660
http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/0010-065x-71.4.655
journal article
10.1649/0010-065X-71.4.655
1938-4394
5377557
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:84C096F2-0331-41F9-968A-31EE6E6E52C5
Amithao cotopaxicus
Ratcliffe
,
new species
(
Figs. 1–4
)
Type Material.
Holotype
male labeled:“CUADOR” [
ECUADOR
] “
1800m
/ OTOPAXI” [
COTOPAXI
] / “
TONGA
” [
OTONGA
] / “
OCT 1993
/
ONORE
” [
G
.
ONORE
] // “
QCAZ
I / 224528
” and with my red
holotype
label
.
Allotype
female labeled: “
Ecuador
/
Cotopaxi
/
Las Pampas
/
x-1981
/ lg.
G
. Onore //
QCAZ
I / 224527
” and with my red
allotype
label
.
Paratypes
labeled: “
ECUADOR
COTOPAXI
/
SAN
FRANCISCO
DE
LAS
/ PAMPAS
1500 m
/
8DIC1993
GOnore //
QCAZ
I / 224530
” (
1 male
)
.
“
Ecuador
/
Rio Tocachi
/ Tocachi /
ix. 1981
/ lg.
G
. Onore” (
1 male
)
.
“
ECUADOR
Cotopaxi
/
Las Pampas
1325m
/
21Oct1995
LdelaTorre //
QCAZ
I / 224529
” (
1 female
)
.
“
ECUADOR
Cotopaxi
/
Las Pampas
1325m
/
18 APR1996
LdelaTorre // exlarvae3era edad
11FEB1995
/ expupae
19Dic1995
/ imago
18apr1996
QCAZ
I / 224521
” (
1 female
)
.
“
ECUADOR
Cotopaxi
/
Las Pampas
1325m
/
7OCT1995
LdelaTorre
// ex ovo
11DEC1994
/ ex larvae 1ra. edad:
7DEC1994
/ ex larvae 2da. edad.:
14DEC1994
/ ex larvae 3ra. edad:
14JAN1995
/ ex pupae:
8JUN1995
/ imago:
7OCT1995
/
QCAZ
I / 224525
” (
1 female
)
.
“
ECUADOR
Cotopaxi
/
Las Pampas
1325m
/
20OCT1995
LdelaTorre
// ex ovo
11DEC1994
/ exlarvae1raedad:
9DIC1994
/ ex larvae2daedad
23DIC1994
/ ex larvae3raedad
14JAN1995
/ expupae
3JUL1995
/ imago
20OCT1995
/
QCAZ
I / 224531
” (
1 female
)
.
“
Ecuador
/
Pichincha
/ El Cortijo
550m
/ 15-Dec-93 / lg.
S
. Burneo” (
1 female
)
. “
Ecuador
Tinalandia
/ nr.
Santo Domingo
de /
Los
Colorados /
Dec. 7 1981
/
E
.
I
. Schlinger” (
1 female
). “
ECUADOR
:
Pichincha
/ Prov.,
12 km
.
E
. Sta. / Domingo, Tinalandia / 2000’;
4-6-X-1988
/
S
. Dunkle” (
1 female
)
.
Holotype
and
allotype
are deposited at the
University
of
Nebraska State
Museum
,
Lincoln
,
NE
,
USA
(
UNSM
)
.
Paratypes
are deposited at the
Museo de Zoolog´ıa de la Pontificia Universidad Católica
del
Ecuador
,
Quito
,
Ecuador
(
QCAZ
) and the
Brett
C
.
Ratcliffe Collection
,
Lincoln
,
NE
,
USA
(
BCRC
)
.
Holotype
.
Male. Length
21.2 mm
; width across humeri
11.8 mm
.
Head:
Color velutinous black except for weakly shiny clypeal apex. Lateral margins of clypeus distinctly elevated. Surface of frons and clypeus with large, moderately dense punctures; punctures on frons with sparse, long, black setae. Clypeal apex broadly subtruncate, weakly emarginate. Eyes large, interocular width equals 4.0 transverse eye diameters. Antenna with 10 antennomeres, club distinctly longer than antennomeres 2–7.
Pronotum:
Color velutinous black. Surface with large, moderately dense punctures, punctures becoming sparse on center base. Sides with thick, complete marginal bead.
Elytra:
Color velutinous black and with slender, velutinous pale yellow band extending from behind humerus to elytral suture (
Fig. 1
). Surface with 2 weakly elevated, parallel costae terminating at weak apical umbone; moderate to large punctures on lateral third of black area and minute, sparse punctures on yellow area. Apices at suture subquadrate.
Pygidium:
Color dull black with sparse, yellow punctures on each lateral margin. Surface densely, concentrically rugose, setigerous; setae short, dense, black.
Venter:
Metasternum and metacoxae weakly shiny black with large, dense, yellow and black punctures. Mesometasternal process, in lateral view, short, parallel to ventral axis of body, apex bluntly rounded (
Fig. 2
). Abdominal ventrites weakly shiny black and with slender, yellow line along anterior margin either side of middle of sternites 2–5. Surface with large, moderately dense punctures on lateral thirds of sternites 1–5; central third with a few sparse punctures; longitudinal depression at center extending through sternites 1–5. Setae of mentum and procoxae black.
Legs:
Protibia slender, with single, apical tooth.
Parameres:
Form short, apices subacutely rounded, and curved inwards towards one another (
Fig. 3
). Basal piece longer than parameres (
Fig. 4
).
Fig. 1.
Amithao cotopaxicus
, dorsal habitus.
Allotype
.
Female. Length
24.5 mm
; width across humeri
13.6 mm
. Differs from the
holotype
in the following respects:
Head:
Surface of both frons and clypeus with sparse, long, black setae. Clypeal apex subtruncate, broadly, shallowly emarginate. Eyes large, interocular width equals 4.0 transverse eye diameters.
Elytra:
Velutinous pale yellow band on lateral margin broken into flecks and spots on median edge.
Venter:
Color entirely shiny black. Metasternum and metacoxae weakly shiny black with large, dense, yellow and black punctures. Abdominal ventrites lacking longitudinal depression at center.
Legs:
Protibia broad, tridentate.
Figs. 2–5.
Amithao
species.
2
)
Short, blunt mesometasternal process (lateral view) of
A. cotopaxicus
;
3)
Caudal view and
4)
Lateral view of parameres of
A. cotopaxicus
;
5)
Example of slender, attenuate, mesometasternal process (lateral view) as seen in
A. haematopus
.
Variation.
Males (
2 paratypes
).Length
20.1–20.7 mm
; width across humeri
11.7–11.8 mm
. The
paratypes
do not significantly differ from the
holotype
. Females (
7 paratypes
). Length
20.7–25.3 mm
; width across humeri 12.3–14.0 mm. As
allotype
except in the following respects:
Head:
Interocular width equals 4.0–4.5 transverse eye diameters.
Venter:
Abdominal ventrite 5 with slender, yellow line along anterior margin either side of middle in
2 specimens
.
Etymology.
The gender of
Amithao
is masculine (see Etymology in Ratcliffe 2013), and the specific epithet is an adjectival descriptor derived from the name
Cotopaxi
, a province name and a prominent stratovolcano in
Ecuador
. Most of the specimens in the
type
series came from the province of
Cotopaxi
.
Distribution.
Amithao cotopaxicus
is known from
Ecuador
(
Fig. 6
).
Locality Records
. Eleven specimens deposited at QCAZ, UNSM, and BCRC.
ECUADOR
(11).
COTOPAXI
(7): Las Pampas, Otonga.
PICHINCHA
(1): El Cortijo.
SANTO DOMINGO DE LOS TSÁCHILAS
(3). Santo Domingo de los Colorados, Tinalandia (
12 km
E. Santo Domingo de los Colorados), Toachi.
Temporal Distribution.
April (1), September (1), October (6), December (3).
Diagnosis.
Only four species of
Amithao
have a velutinous dorsal surface, whereas all other species are shiny.
Amithao incertus
(Gory and Percheron)
is a small species (less than
17 mm
) that occurs only on Hispaniola in the West Indies.
Amithao lafertei
(Thomson)
is black with numerous, small, yellowish white speckles (punctures) on the pronotum and elytra and found in
Panama
and
Colombia
.
Amithao marginicollis
(Burmeister)
is another small species (also less than
17 mm
) that is found in
Mexico
and distinctively marked with cretaceous bands and spots as in no other species of
Amithao
. Only
A. cotopaxicus
is velutinous black with a distinctive, slender, pale yellow band along the lateral margin of each elytron, which makes it remarkably different from other species in the genus.
Aside from the width and dentation of the protibiae, males and females of
A. cotopaxicus
differ little from each other. Even the two apical spurs of the metatibiae are similarly acute in both sexes, where normally the spurs of females in other species are bluntly rounded.
Fig. 6.
Distribution map for
Amithao cotopaxicus
.
Natural History.
Little is known of the life history of
A. cotopaxicus
. Label data indicate that
two adults
were reared from the egg stage. One specimen molted from the first instar on 7 December, the second instar on 14 December, the third instar on 14 January, and emerged from the pupa on 8 June for a development time of six months. A second specimen molted from the first instar on 9 December, the second instar on 23 December, the third instar on 14 January, and emerged from the pupa on 3 July for a development time of just over six months. These data for laboratory-reared specimens may or may not reflect development times under natural conditions.