Contribution to the knowledge of the genus Singilis Rambur, 1837 of Africa (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Lebiini). Part IV
Author
Anichtchenko, Alexander
text
Zootaxa
2016
4158
2
183
202
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4158.2.2
7ac39c12-7f35-4280-b730-45090dacb715
1175-5326
265436
BB925626-D81B-457C-98C1-AC44EB10219A
Singilis
(s. str.)
parvulus
sp. n.
(
Figs. 18
,
33
,
34
)
Type
material.
ZIMBABWE
:
Holotype
,
♂
—"
Nyanga N.P.
|
18°17'S
/
32°43'E
|
5
–
9.XII.1993
1650 m
ü.N. | leg.
J. Deckert
"
. Paratype, 1 ♀, idem. (MNHUB).
Diagnosis.
It is the smallest of all known species of
Singilis
. Besides that, it is easily distinguished from all species by perfectly smooth head and pronotum. Despite the strange appearance, all its main characters such as structure of mouthparts and stylomere, correspond to the generic criteria.
Description.
Length
3.4–3.6 mm
. Uniformly yellow (
Fig. 18
).
Head impunctate, with strong, almost isodiametric microsculpture throughout. Eyes moderately large and bulging. Temples short, smooth, without microsculpture.
Pronotum cordiform, 1.23 times as wide as head, 1.46 times as wide as long, widest in front of marginal setae. Anterior margin straight, anterior angles effaced, sides regularly rounded, strongly sinuate before rectangular posterior angles. Disc impunctate. Lateral margin narrow, explanate in basal half. Basal grooves shallow, flat. Microsculpture almost isodiametric.
Elytra convex and subovate, 1.42 times as long as wide, widest in the apical third, with very subtle polygonal microsculpture. Striae shallow and weakly punctate, shortened at humerus. All intervals almost flat throughout.
Claws with 4 teeth. Abdominal sterna shiny, with only 4–6 extremely tiny, barely visible setae. Propleuron, mes- and metepisterna smooth.
Aedeagus (
Fig. 33
). Aedeagal median lobe stout, eudorsal surface slightly curved, apex broad. Internal sac without spines.
Name derivation.
The species name is a Latin adjective,
parvulus
, -
a
, -
um
(= little, slight); named in reference to the small body size.
Distribution.
Zimbabwe
(
Fig. 34
).