Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp.

Eucurtiopsis corbarai n. sp. (Fig. 5) HOLOTYPE. — “ VANUATU: Santo I., Cumberland Peninsula, Saratsi Range at 14.9626°S 166.6485°E. 600 m Flight intercept FL6B-5. 9-10 Nov 2006. A. K.Tishechkin AT648 / HOLOTYPE Eucurtiopsis corbarai sp. n. A. Tishechkin des. 2008”, ♀ point-mounted (MNHN)....

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Main Author: Tishechkin, Alexey K.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2009
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474965
https://zenodo.org/record/5474965
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5474965
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Coleoptera
Histeridae
Eucurtiopsis
Eucurtiopsis corbarai
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Coleoptera
Histeridae
Eucurtiopsis
Eucurtiopsis corbarai
Tishechkin, Alexey K.
Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Coleoptera
Histeridae
Eucurtiopsis
Eucurtiopsis corbarai
description Eucurtiopsis corbarai n. sp. (Fig. 5) HOLOTYPE. — “ VANUATU: Santo I., Cumberland Peninsula, Saratsi Range at 14.9626°S 166.6485°E. 600 m Flight intercept FL6B-5. 9-10 Nov 2006. A. K.Tishechkin AT648 / HOLOTYPE Eucurtiopsis corbarai sp. n. A. Tishechkin des. 2008”, ♀ point-mounted (MNHN). PARATYPES (3). — Same locality and date as the holotype, flight intercept trap, A. K. Tishechkin coll., 1 ♀ (coll. AKT). — Saratsi Range, 14.9657°S, 166.6521°E, 700 m, flight intercept trap, 30.XI-1.XII.2006, A. K.Tishechkin coll., 1 ♀ (MNHN). — Saratsi Range, 14.9667°S, 166.6560°E, 900 m, flight intercept trap, 16.XI.2006, A. K. Tishechkin coll., also bears the following label “DNA Extraction TAK-0003. May 2009 Baton Rouge”, 1 ♀ (MNHN). ETYMOLOGY. — Th e species honours Bruno Corbara of Université Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, a true leader of the IBISCA Team, in appreciation of his inspiring enthusiasm for bringing people together to study poorly known tropical insect communities and great moments of joint fieldwork across the globe. DESCRIPTION L: 1.36; W: 0.90; E/Pn L: 1.93; E/Pn W: 1.56; Pn W/L: 1.18; E L/W: 1.05; Pr/Py: 0.89; Sterna: 0.42, 0.08, 0.37; Tibiae: 0.36, 0.42, 0.46. Body (Fig. 5A) elongate, rufescent brown, with antennae and legs somewhat paler, prothorax substantially narrower than elytra. Frons (Fig. 5D) 1.5 times longer than wide, sides weakly arcuate, incised at antennal bases, narrowed anteriorly, covered with deep, dense, mostly elongate punctures, with two parallel, longitudinal rows consisting of four irregular blunt tubercles arranged into indistinct ridges, each tubercle with a cluster of long branched setae; labrum weakly convex, semicircular, with few setae, punctation similar to that on frons; mandibles strongly bent, with long narrow tips, with few setae and small punctures on smooth outer edges; maxillar palpi with three palpomeres, labial palpi with two palpomeres, mentum apparently present as separate sclerite, separating suture present at least in laterobasal areas; antennal scape elongate triangular, 1.4 times longer than wide, with inner edge weakly inwardly arcuate, its surface more or less flat, with apical angle bluntly rounded, disc densely punctuate throughout with oval punctures, with conspicuous long branched setae; antennal funicle and club (of female) about one-half, and three-quarters length of scape, respectively. Pronotum (Fig. 5A, C) with posterior margin shallowly obtusely angular, with sides unmargined, straight, faintly narrowed anteriorly; antennal cavities partially visible from above, with pronotal margin not elevated above; medial portion of pronotal margin unelevated, weakly arcuate; marginal striae visible from above only near base, then abruptly descend downwards to meet supracoxal striae, ascend again anteriorly towards antennal sockets; pronotal dorsum strongly convex, densely and deeply punctate throughout, with eight parallel, longitudinal rows of blunt tubercles arranged into indistinct ridges, two outer ridges on each side much less regularly linearly arranged than discal ridges, each ridge consisting of four or five tubercles, clumps of elongate branched setae present on every tubercle, several single setae present along lateral sides of pronotum. Prosternum (Fig. 5B) with anterior margin broadly concave, marginal stria represented by series of elongate wrinkles; prosternal disc evenly convex, keel elevated between procoxae, flattened, slightly expanded posteriorly, emarginate at apex, disc densely punctate throughout, punctures primarily elongate, short branched setae scattered throughout the prothorax surface. Scutellum (Fig. 5A) tiny, sunk below the elytralpronotal plane, very poorly visible. Elytra (Fig. 5A, C) with sides weakly arcuate, widest around anterior trichome process; humeral trichome prominent, elevated, longitudinally oriented, anterior process rising almost vertically at base till transverse ridge, weakly obliquely rising thereafter, surface of its anterior part weakly convex with slight transverse concavity in the middle; posterior process less robust, evenly rising towards anterior one, its surface evenly convex; trichome with setae only along apical edges of processes,shallowly excavate beneath setose fringe, width of the fringe more than one-third of elytral width, trichome gap wide,about one-seventh of elytra length, fringe setae long and densely packed; dorsum of elytral disc with punctation occupying most of posterior half (although only few punctures present at lateral margins near posterior one-fourth) and a small cluster of punctures around scutellum with a single row of punctures extending to the middle of anterior elytral margin, no punctation present on and between trichome elevations except of mentioned prescutellar cluster; punctures deep and elongate, sparsely spaced, branched setae present throughout, being larger and clustered into separate clumps or looser groups in punctated areas and smaller and evenly distributed across smooth surfaces; sutural stria thin, but distinct, abbreviate in posterior onethird; epipleuron smooth and glabrous, with sparsely scattered short branched setae; marginal epipleural stria distinct, elevated above metafemur, continuous with complete marginal elytral stria; no traces of accessory epipleural stria present. Mesoventrite (Fig. 5B) wide, short, weakly convex, bluntly projecting at middle, no traces of marginal stria present, surface with dense, deep, elongate punctures; mesometaventral suture and median suture of metaventrite finely impressed, complete, but inconspicuous, lateral stiae of metaventrite present, elevated, enclosing largely impunctate depression for mesotibiae in repose; disc of metaventrite punctate throughout, primarily with circular punctures, with larger, denser and more elongate along anterior and lateral margins; first abdominal ventrite similarly punctate, punctures being on average larger and denser than on disc of metaventrite, with postmetacoxal line originating at metacoxa, extended directly posteriorly close to edge of sternite, curving laterad, terminating freely just before reaching epipleuron; surfaces of meso- and metaventrite and first abdominal ventrite with scattered short inconspicuous branched setae. Profemora (Fig. 5B, C) with dense punctures in basal two-thirds, becoming impunctate toward apex, with posterior margins obtusely angular in basal third, meso- and metafemora impunctate, their margins arcuate, metafemora much more robust than mesofemora; protibia with prominent angle at basal one-third of outer margins, meso- and metatibiae with outer margins more bluntly angulate, around midpoint; all tibiae longitudinally convex, meso- and metatibia with longitudinal sulci along inner edge; tarsi weakly compressed laterally about 0.6-0.7 times length of corresponding tibiae; tarsal claws simple, divergent, almost straight, about 0.4 times length of corresponding apical tarsomere. Propygidium twice as wide as midline length, weakly convex; pygidium nearly as long as wide, weakly convex; both with punctures and setae as on the posterior half of elytral disc. : Published as part of Tishechkin, Alexey K., 2009, Discovery of Chlamydopsinae (Insecta, Coleoptera, Histeridae) in Vanuatu with the description of eight new species from Espiritu Santo Island, pp. 661-690 in Zoosystema 31 (3) on pages 668-670, DOI: 10.5252/z2009n3a13, http://zenodo.org/record/5398808
format Text
author Tishechkin, Alexey K.
author_facet Tishechkin, Alexey K.
author_sort Tishechkin, Alexey K.
title Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp.
title_short Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp.
title_full Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp.
title_fullStr Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp.
title_sort eucurtiopsis corbarai tishechkin 2009, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2009
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474965
https://zenodo.org/record/5474965
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.497,-64.497,66.501,66.501)
ENVELOPE(-106.451,-106.451,55.600,55.600)
geographic Cumberland Peninsula
Santo Island
geographic_facet Cumberland Peninsula
Santo Island
genre Cumberland Peninsula
genre_facet Cumberland Peninsula
op_relation http://zenodo.org/record/5398808
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http://publication.plazi.org/id/506B631ADC4EFFCDFF9EFFAF1D25034F
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5398822
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474964
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op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474965
https://doi.org/10.5252/z2009n3a13
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5474965 2023-05-15T15:59:40+02:00 Eucurtiopsis corbarai Tishechkin 2009, n. sp. Tishechkin, Alexey K. 2009 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474965 https://zenodo.org/record/5474965 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/5398808 http://publication.plazi.org/id/506B631ADC4EFFCDFF9EFFAF1D25034F https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5252/z2009n3a13 http://zenodo.org/record/5398808 http://publication.plazi.org/id/506B631ADC4EFFCDFF9EFFAF1D25034F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5398822 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474964 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Coleoptera Histeridae Eucurtiopsis Eucurtiopsis corbarai Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2009 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474965 https://doi.org/10.5252/z2009n3a13 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5398822 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5474964 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Eucurtiopsis corbarai n. sp. (Fig. 5) HOLOTYPE. — “ VANUATU: Santo I., Cumberland Peninsula, Saratsi Range at 14.9626°S 166.6485°E. 600 m Flight intercept FL6B-5. 9-10 Nov 2006. A. K.Tishechkin AT648 / HOLOTYPE Eucurtiopsis corbarai sp. n. A. Tishechkin des. 2008”, ♀ point-mounted (MNHN). PARATYPES (3). — Same locality and date as the holotype, flight intercept trap, A. K. Tishechkin coll., 1 ♀ (coll. AKT). — Saratsi Range, 14.9657°S, 166.6521°E, 700 m, flight intercept trap, 30.XI-1.XII.2006, A. K.Tishechkin coll., 1 ♀ (MNHN). — Saratsi Range, 14.9667°S, 166.6560°E, 900 m, flight intercept trap, 16.XI.2006, A. K. Tishechkin coll., also bears the following label “DNA Extraction TAK-0003. May 2009 Baton Rouge”, 1 ♀ (MNHN). ETYMOLOGY. — Th e species honours Bruno Corbara of Université Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, a true leader of the IBISCA Team, in appreciation of his inspiring enthusiasm for bringing people together to study poorly known tropical insect communities and great moments of joint fieldwork across the globe. DESCRIPTION L: 1.36; W: 0.90; E/Pn L: 1.93; E/Pn W: 1.56; Pn W/L: 1.18; E L/W: 1.05; Pr/Py: 0.89; Sterna: 0.42, 0.08, 0.37; Tibiae: 0.36, 0.42, 0.46. Body (Fig. 5A) elongate, rufescent brown, with antennae and legs somewhat paler, prothorax substantially narrower than elytra. Frons (Fig. 5D) 1.5 times longer than wide, sides weakly arcuate, incised at antennal bases, narrowed anteriorly, covered with deep, dense, mostly elongate punctures, with two parallel, longitudinal rows consisting of four irregular blunt tubercles arranged into indistinct ridges, each tubercle with a cluster of long branched setae; labrum weakly convex, semicircular, with few setae, punctation similar to that on frons; mandibles strongly bent, with long narrow tips, with few setae and small punctures on smooth outer edges; maxillar palpi with three palpomeres, labial palpi with two palpomeres, mentum apparently present as separate sclerite, separating suture present at least in laterobasal areas; antennal scape elongate triangular, 1.4 times longer than wide, with inner edge weakly inwardly arcuate, its surface more or less flat, with apical angle bluntly rounded, disc densely punctuate throughout with oval punctures, with conspicuous long branched setae; antennal funicle and club (of female) about one-half, and three-quarters length of scape, respectively. Pronotum (Fig. 5A, C) with posterior margin shallowly obtusely angular, with sides unmargined, straight, faintly narrowed anteriorly; antennal cavities partially visible from above, with pronotal margin not elevated above; medial portion of pronotal margin unelevated, weakly arcuate; marginal striae visible from above only near base, then abruptly descend downwards to meet supracoxal striae, ascend again anteriorly towards antennal sockets; pronotal dorsum strongly convex, densely and deeply punctate throughout, with eight parallel, longitudinal rows of blunt tubercles arranged into indistinct ridges, two outer ridges on each side much less regularly linearly arranged than discal ridges, each ridge consisting of four or five tubercles, clumps of elongate branched setae present on every tubercle, several single setae present along lateral sides of pronotum. Prosternum (Fig. 5B) with anterior margin broadly concave, marginal stria represented by series of elongate wrinkles; prosternal disc evenly convex, keel elevated between procoxae, flattened, slightly expanded posteriorly, emarginate at apex, disc densely punctate throughout, punctures primarily elongate, short branched setae scattered throughout the prothorax surface. Scutellum (Fig. 5A) tiny, sunk below the elytralpronotal plane, very poorly visible. Elytra (Fig. 5A, C) with sides weakly arcuate, widest around anterior trichome process; humeral trichome prominent, elevated, longitudinally oriented, anterior process rising almost vertically at base till transverse ridge, weakly obliquely rising thereafter, surface of its anterior part weakly convex with slight transverse concavity in the middle; posterior process less robust, evenly rising towards anterior one, its surface evenly convex; trichome with setae only along apical edges of processes,shallowly excavate beneath setose fringe, width of the fringe more than one-third of elytral width, trichome gap wide,about one-seventh of elytra length, fringe setae long and densely packed; dorsum of elytral disc with punctation occupying most of posterior half (although only few punctures present at lateral margins near posterior one-fourth) and a small cluster of punctures around scutellum with a single row of punctures extending to the middle of anterior elytral margin, no punctation present on and between trichome elevations except of mentioned prescutellar cluster; punctures deep and elongate, sparsely spaced, branched setae present throughout, being larger and clustered into separate clumps or looser groups in punctated areas and smaller and evenly distributed across smooth surfaces; sutural stria thin, but distinct, abbreviate in posterior onethird; epipleuron smooth and glabrous, with sparsely scattered short branched setae; marginal epipleural stria distinct, elevated above metafemur, continuous with complete marginal elytral stria; no traces of accessory epipleural stria present. Mesoventrite (Fig. 5B) wide, short, weakly convex, bluntly projecting at middle, no traces of marginal stria present, surface with dense, deep, elongate punctures; mesometaventral suture and median suture of metaventrite finely impressed, complete, but inconspicuous, lateral stiae of metaventrite present, elevated, enclosing largely impunctate depression for mesotibiae in repose; disc of metaventrite punctate throughout, primarily with circular punctures, with larger, denser and more elongate along anterior and lateral margins; first abdominal ventrite similarly punctate, punctures being on average larger and denser than on disc of metaventrite, with postmetacoxal line originating at metacoxa, extended directly posteriorly close to edge of sternite, curving laterad, terminating freely just before reaching epipleuron; surfaces of meso- and metaventrite and first abdominal ventrite with scattered short inconspicuous branched setae. Profemora (Fig. 5B, C) with dense punctures in basal two-thirds, becoming impunctate toward apex, with posterior margins obtusely angular in basal third, meso- and metafemora impunctate, their margins arcuate, metafemora much more robust than mesofemora; protibia with prominent angle at basal one-third of outer margins, meso- and metatibiae with outer margins more bluntly angulate, around midpoint; all tibiae longitudinally convex, meso- and metatibia with longitudinal sulci along inner edge; tarsi weakly compressed laterally about 0.6-0.7 times length of corresponding tibiae; tarsal claws simple, divergent, almost straight, about 0.4 times length of corresponding apical tarsomere. Propygidium twice as wide as midline length, weakly convex; pygidium nearly as long as wide, weakly convex; both with punctures and setae as on the posterior half of elytral disc. : Published as part of Tishechkin, Alexey K., 2009, Discovery of Chlamydopsinae (Insecta, Coleoptera, Histeridae) in Vanuatu with the description of eight new species from Espiritu Santo Island, pp. 661-690 in Zoosystema 31 (3) on pages 668-670, DOI: 10.5252/z2009n3a13, http://zenodo.org/record/5398808 Text Cumberland Peninsula DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Cumberland Peninsula ENVELOPE(-64.497,-64.497,66.501,66.501) Santo Island ENVELOPE(-106.451,-106.451,55.600,55.600)