Published August 27, 2018 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Acylophorus delphinus Fauvel 1905

Authors/Creators

Description

Acylophorus delphinus Fauvel, 1905

(Figs. 52–66, 175)

Acylophorus delphinus Fauvel, 1905: 181; Bernhauer and Schubert, 1914: 438; Jarrige, 1965: 141; Herman, 2001: 3028; Lott, 2010: 9 (characters, Figs.).

Type locality. Madagascar, Ambovombé, ca. 25 10' S, 46 05' E.

Type material examined. Holotype ♂: MADAGASCAR: “Ambovombé Madag.”, “ Acylophorus Nordmann ”, “ delphinus Fvl. ”, “R.I.Sc.N.B. 17.479 Coll. et det. A. Fauvel”, “ TYPE ”, “ HOLOTYPE Acylophorus delphinus Fauvel m# det. DA Lott, 2009” (IRSNB).

Additional material examined. MADAGASCAR: 2 ♂: NW Madagascar, Morondava distr., Kirindi Forest, 4.– 8.1.2002, J. Rolčík lgt. (JJRC); 1 ♀: Mahajanga prov., Mahajamba riv., Ampatika env., 10.– 12.12.1996, Ivo Jeniš lgt. (JJRC); 1 ♂: 60 km N Morondava, Kirindi, 100 m, 5.– 7.1.2004, S. Murzin & A. Shamaev leg. (JJRC).

Redescription (n=5). Body length 6.8–7.6 mm (M= 7.2 mm, HT= 7.2 mm), forebody length 3.0– 3.2 mm (M= 3.1 mm, HT= 3.2 mm). Body (Fig. 52) brown, apical margins of abdominal segment reddish, abdominal tergites markedly iridescent; antennae brown with base of first two segments and segment 11 light reddish; legs reddish yellow, maxillary palpi reddish yellow, last segment brown.

Head subrounded (Fig. 53), about as long as wide (L/W=0.97–1.04, M=1.00, HT=1.01), slightly widened behind eyes, with two pairs of interocular setae. Temples markedly shorter than eyes (LT/LE=0.63–0.69, M=0.65, HT=0.67). Dorsal side of head shining, without micropunctures. Dense pale grey pubescence behind eyes. Four postocular setae visible on each side, additional seta on hind margin of eye absent. Left mandible with two sharp teeth, right mandible with three sharp teeth (Fig. 54). Maxillary palpi with terminal segment wide and long, pubescent, asymmetric, markedly wider and much longer than glabrous penultimate segment which is triangular (Fig. 55). First segment of antenna nearly as long as next four; segments 1 to 7 elongate, segment 5 markedly elongate (R=1.58–1.69, M=1.62, HT=1.69), segment 8 about as long as wide, segment 9 slightly transverse, segment 10 markedly transverse (R=0.68–0.82, M=0.75, HT=0.82).

Pronotum markedly transverse (R=1.14–1.21, M=1.16, HT=1.12), markedly widened behind with sides slightly rounded, widest in basal half (Fig. 53), shining, without micropunctures. One pair of dorsal setae and one pair of lateral setae. Marginal setae short. Elytra transverse (R=1.43–1.52, M=1.47, HT=1.52) with short, pale, but not shining pubescence arising from dense aspirate punctures. Apical fringe of bristles slightly longer than pubescence on other parts of the elytra. Abdominal tergites with relativelly short, moderately dense pubescence, arising from aspirate punctures more coarse and sparser than on elytra.

Meso- and metatarsi with empodial setae longer than claws (similar as in Figs. 9, 10).

Male (n=5). Sternite 9 long and narrow (Fig. 64), apex of tergite 10 narrowly rounded, with very long apical setae (Fig. 63). Aedeagus (Figs. 56–62) 0.81–0.87 mm long (M = 0.84 mm, HT = 0.87 mm). Parameres bilobed, lobes widely separated, apically slightly widened, sensory pegs confusedly arranged at the very apex (Fig. 62). Median lobe of aedeagus markedly overreaching paramere, apex rounded (Figs. 58–60, 62).

Female. Tergite 10 pointed apically (Fig. 65), valves as in Fig. 66.

Differential diagnosis. Acylophorus delphinus is similar to A. orientalis Fauvel, 1907 from continental Africa, but can be distinguished by the pale terminal segment of the maxillary palpi, the longer additional postocular seta on the hind margin of the eye and the shape of the aedeagus.

Distribution. The species is known only from South and South-west Madagascar (Fig. 175).

Bionomics. Nothing is known about the bionomics of the new species.

Discussion. The unique male type from Ambovombe was studied by Jarrige (1965, wrongly reported as a female) and Lott (2010). Additional material is from south-western part of Madagascar.

Notes

Published as part of Janák, Jiří, 2018, Revision of the genus Acylophorus Nordmann, 1837 from Madagascar and Mascarene Islands (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylininae: Acylophorina), pp. 151-191 in Zootaxa 4462 (2) on page 164, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4462.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/1441457

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
JJRC
Event date
1996-12-12
Verbatim event date
1996-12-12/2004-01-07
Scientific name authorship
Fauvel
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Coleoptera
Family
Staphylinidae
Genus
Acylophorus
Species
delphinus
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Taxonomic concept label
Acylophorus delphinus Fauvel, 1905 sec. Janák, 2018

References

  • Fauvel, A. (1905) Staphylinides exotiques nouveaux. 3 e Partie. Revue d'Entomologie, 24, 113 - 147.
  • Bernhauer, M. & Schubert, K. (1914) Staphylinidae IV. In: Junk, W. & Schenkling, S. (Eds.), Coleopterorum Catalogus. 5 (57). Junk, Berlin, pp. 289 - 408.
  • Jarrige, J. (1965) Les Acylophorus malgaches (Col. Staphylinidae). Bullettin de la Societ entomologique de France, 70, 139 - 143.
  • Herman (2001) Catalog of the Staphylinidae (Insecta: Coleoptera). 1758 to the end of the second millennium. VI. Staphylinine group (part 3). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 265, 3021 - 3840.
  • Lott, D. A. (2010) The species of Acylophorus Nordmann (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylininae) in continental sub- Saharan Africa. Zootaxa, 2401, 1 - 51.