Research Article |
Corresponding author: Zi-Wei Yin ( pselaphinae@gmail.com ) Academic editor: Volker Assing
© 2020 Zi-Wei Yin.
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Yin Z-W (2020) Two new species of Ancystrocerus Raffray from the Oriental region (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Pselaphinae). ZooKeys 958: 29-34. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.958.54196
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Two new species of the genus Ancystrocerus Raffray, A. lueliangi sp. nov. (China: Yunnan) and A. philippinus sp. nov. (Philippines: Mindanao), are described, illustrated, and distinguished from related congeners.
ant-loving beetle, biodiversity, China, Philippines, taxonomy
The genus Ancystrocerus Raffray of the pselaphine tribe Tmesiphorini currently comprises ten species distributed in Indonesia (4 species), Singapore (3 species), Malaysia (2 species, 1 shared with Singapore), India (1 species), and China (1 species) (see
In the present paper, two new species occurring in China (Yunnan) and the Philippines (Mindanao) are described, one of which was sifted from a leaf litter sample in a broad-leaved forest.
The type material of the new species described in this paper is deposited in the Insect Collection of Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai, China (SNUC). The text of the specimen label is quoted verbatim in quotation marks (‘’).
Male genital parts (tergite and sternite VIII, and aedeagus) were dissected, and are preserved in Euparal on a plastic slide pinned beneath the specimen. The habitus images were taken using a Canon 5D Mark III camera in conjunction with a Canon MP-E 65 mm f/2.8 1–5× Macro Lens, and a Canon MT-24EX Macro Twin Lite Flash was used as the light source. Images of the external characters were taken using a Leica DMC5400 color CMOS camera in conjunction with a Leica M205 C stereomicroscope. Images of the aedeagi were produced using a Canon G9 camera mounted to an Olympus CX31 microscope under transmitted light. Zerene Stacker (version 1.04) was used for image stacking. Line drawings were made using Adobe Illustrator CC 2018. All images were optimized and grouped into plates using Adobe Photoshop CC 2018.
The abdominal tergites and sternites are numbered following
Holotype: China: ♂, ‘China: Yunnan, Yingjiang Co. (盈江县), Tongbiguan N. R. (铜壁关自然保护区), 24.6136444N, 97.5851155E, 1255 m, 28.viii.2019, Liang Lü leg.’ (SNUC).
Male. Length 2.4 mm (combined length of head, pronotum, elytra and abdomen). Head and pronotum roughly punctate. Antennomeres 4 and 5 subequal in length, 9 and 10 expanded laterally, apex of antennomeres 9 and base of antennomeres 10 obliquely constricted, each with one bunch of bristles. Pronotum with small, conical discal spine. Tergites 1 and 2 (IV and V) with median carina extending through entire tergal length. Aedeagus relatively more slender, median lobe symmetrical in dorso-ventral view; endophallus with single long sclerite and two pairs of short sclerites; parameres each elongate and with two long apical setae.
Male (Fig.
Female. Unknown.
Males of the new species can be readily separated from A. chinensis and all other congeners by the roughly punctate head and pronotum, and the different shape of antennomeres 9–10 and structure of the aedeagus. Ancystrocerus chinensis from Hainan has finely punctate head and pronotum, the antennomeres 9 and 10 more elongate, and aedeagus much more robust and with a large projection at the apex of the median lobe.
China: Yunnan.
The single male was sifted from a leaf litter sample in a shady broad-leaved forest.
The new species is named after Liang Lü, collector of the holotype.
Holotype: Philippines: ♂, ‘Philippines: Alamada, North Corabato, Mindanao, i.2019, local collector’ (SNUC).
Male. Length 2.6 mm (combined length of head, pronotum, elytra and abdomen). Head and pronotum finely punctate. Antennomeres 4 longer than 5, antennomeres 9 expanded and projected laterally, 10 hardly so, lateral margin of antennomeres 9 and 10 with one bunch of bristles. Pronotum with small, conical discal spine. Tergite 1 (IV) with median carina extending through entire tergal length, tergite 2 lacking such carina. Aedeagus relatively stout, median lobe symmetrical in dorso-ventral view; endophallus with several short and two elongate sclerites; parameres each elongate and with two long apical setae.
Male (Fig.
Female. Unknown.
Males of the new species can be readily separated from all congeners by the presence of very dense hairs along the postocular margins, the unique shape of antennomeres 9 and 10, and the structure of the aedeagal endophallus. The elongate antennomeres 9 and 10 of A. philippinus are somewhat similar to those of A. chinensis, however, the antennomeres 9 are much less expanded in the new species and the aedeagus is totally different in form and structure. Ancystrocerus philippinus further differs by tergite 1 with a complete median carina, which in A. chinensis is short and extending posteriorly only to less than half of tergal length.
The antennomeres 10 of A. irregularis Raffray, A. sumatrensis Raffray, A. rugicollis Raffray, and A. punctatus Raffray all bear one bunch of bristles on the lateral surface. In addition to the form of the aedeagal median lobe, the unique structure of the endophallus, and the different proportions of antennomeres 9–11, A. philippinus can be readily separated from the former three species by the presence of a thin bunch of bristles also on antennomeres 9, and from A. punctatus by the smooth mesal margin of antennomeres 10 (strongly protuberant in A. punctatus).
Philippines: Mindanao.
Unknown.
The specific epithet refers to the Philippines, where the type locality of the new species is located.
My friend Liang Lü (Hebei Normal University, Hebei, China) collected the single male of A. lueliangi and kindly donated the specimen to SNUC. Rostislav Bekchiev (National Museum of Natural History, Sofia, Bulgaria) provided valuable unpublished notes on Ancystrocerus types which helped me to compare the new species with the known ones. Comments from Peter Hlaváč (Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Czech) and Christopher Carlton (Louisiana State Arthropod Museum, USA) improved the paper. The present study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31872965), and the ‘Phosphorus’ Science Foundation, Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Commission, China (19QA1406600).