Published February 1, 2018 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Brachylepis turmensis Sehnal 2018, new species

Description

Brachylepis turmensis Sehnal, new species (Figs. 1C, 1F, 2G–H, 3C, 3F, 3I, 4C)

Type locality. Ethiopia, Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region, Turmi.

Type material. Holotype: “ETHIOPIA—Hamer or. Turmi near 950 m. | 04°58´31˝ N 036°30´53˝E | 9.- 11.4.2016 | Vladimír Major leg. [printed] || RSCV | Richard SEHNAL | collection | Velenice | Czech Republic [printed]”. Holotype is deposited in Národní muzeum Praha, Czech Republic.

Description of holotype. Body length 24.5 mm (without pygidium). Body elongate, posteriorly slightly dilated. Dorsal surface and abdomen dark brown, legs partly lighter, antenna bicolorous, elytra pruinose (Fig. 1C).

Clypeus 2.8x wider than long, with anterior angles broadly rounded and anterior margin strongly upturned and bisinuate; surface deeply and densely punctate, with smooth facets between punctures; posterolaterally oriented, pointed, semierect scale originating from centre of each puncture; some medial scales narrower than others, frontoclypeal suture weakly indicated. Frons deeply and densely punctate, with a scale originating from each puncture; scales near midline point laterally toward a longitudinal bulge in each half of frons, forming a bisinuate pattern (Fig. 1C). Labrum bilobed, anterior angles obtuse but distinct, macrosetae longest at edge of clypeus and around eye canthus. Eye canthus long, with macrosetae in two orderly rows; anterior conical setae short, posterior conical setae 2x shorter than clypeal scales. Antenna bicolorous, with nine antennomeres; antennal shaft reddish brown, antennal club yellow. Club with three antennomeres, straight, same length as antennal shaft (antennomeres 1–4 combined), apex of club with irregular, fine, short macrosetae with sensilla pits (Fig. 3I). Terminal maxillary palpomere widest at midlength, apically truncate, with a terminal tubercle on inner, more angular side, and dorsally with a large oval alutaceous area widening toward apex.

Pronotum weekly convex, approximately octagonal (Fig. 1C), 2x wider than long, widest in posterior third. Lateral margins crenulate, with a pale brown straight seta issuing from each crenulation. Surface deeply and densely punctate; spaces between them smooth and shiny; each puncture bearing a pointed scale. Scales forming groups oriented mostly toward midline (Fig. 1F).

Scutellum wider than long, triangular, evenly punctate in anterior half, with scales similar to those on pronotum (Fig. 1C).

Elytra convex, elytron 1.25x longer than wide, without true striae and intervals, instead only indistinct broad, slightly elevated or lowered strips indicated by relative density of squamation, with oblique crests nearly glabrous. Part of elytron between terminal bulge and apex short, steeply inclined. Spaces between punctures and scales finely rugate and shiny. Lateral margins with short setae.

Macropterous. All femora shiny, irregularly punctate, with yellowish-white scales and reddish-brown long setae. Protibia tridentate; inner terminal spur at level of proximal tooth (Fig. 3F). Meso- and metatibiae expanded distally, densely covered by broad scales and long setae, with one curved spur apically and one oblique interrupted carina externally (Fig. 3C). Distal edge with a row of short, stout setae of equal length, terminal calcars stout, long, lower calcar little shorter than upper; pro-, meso- and metatarsomeres without patches of short, dense setae; all tarsomeres ventrally covered by sparse setae. Claws bifid, with ventrobasal teeth.

Abdominal ventrites reddish brown, shiny, finely punctate, densely covered by oval white scales.

Pygidium slightly concave, shallowly punctate, with yellowish-white, caudally oriented scales becoming finer toward posterior margin.

Male genitalia (Figs. 2G–I). Aedeagus symmetrical, conical in dorsal view. Phallobase in lateral view dorsally as well as ventrally doubly undulate, dorsally at apex terminating in a distinct hook. Each paramere with a double tooth, medially teeth meet and in frontoventral view form a horizontal number 8 (Fig. 2I).

Sexual dimorphism. Female unknown.

Geographic distribution. Ethiopia, Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples’ Region, Turmi. The species is known only from the type locality.

Differential diagnosis. Brachylepis turmensis new species is the third representative of the genus Brachylepis. It can be distinguished from the previously described species by the following characters: length <25.0 mm, pronotal scales oval, toward base weakly overlapping margins of punctures (Fig. 1F); antennal club yellow and shorter than reddish-brown antennal shaft; shape of the aedeagus (Fig. 3I).

Etymology. Derived from the name of the type locality, Turmi.

Notes

Published as part of Sehnal, Richard, 2018, A new species of Brachylepis Kolbe, 1894 from Tanzania (Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae: Leucopholini), pp. 291-295 in Zootaxa 4377 (2) on pages 291-293, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4377.2.9, http://zenodo.org/record/1163969

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
RSCV
Event date
2016-11-04
Family
Scarabaeidae
Genus
Brachylepis
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Coleoptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Sehnal
Species
turmensis
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2016-11-04
Taxonomic concept label
Brachylepis turmensis Sehnal, 2018