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Other literature type . 2017
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ZENODO
Other literature type . 2017
License: CC 0
Data sources: Datacite
ZENODO
Other literature type . 2017
License: CC 0
Data sources: Datacite
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Hypotelus melanodelta Bortoluzzi & Caron, sp. nov.

Authors: Bortoluzzi, Sidnei; Caron, Edilson; Ribeiro-Costa, Cibele S.;

Hypotelus melanodelta Bortoluzzi & Caron, sp. nov.

Abstract

Hypotelus melanodelta Bortoluzzi & Caron sp. nov. (Figs. 13, 79, 91) Type material. Holotype deposited in FMNH, female (photo, Fig. 13) [damaged specimen: without right antennomeres 3–11. Dissected, body glued on white card; abdominal segments 8 to 10 and spermatheca fixed on acetate plastic card and covered with Canada balsam], with labels: (1) “ Columbia occ./ Cali, Fassl ” [old white label, printed in black]; (2) “ Chicago NHMus/ M.Bernhauer / Collection ” [old white label, printed in black]; (3) “ micans Shp.?[?]/var/det. Bernh. ” [old white label, handwritten, last line printed in black]; (4) “ HOLOTYPE / Hypotelus melanodelta / Bortoluzzi & Caron ” [red label, printed in black]. Diagnosis. Hypotelus melanodelta sp. nov. may be distinguished from other species of Hypotelus by the large darker V-shaped area on the elytra and antennomeres 5–10 wider than long (Fig. 13); sternite 8 with posterior margin sinuous (Fig. 79). Description. BL: 2.8 mm, BW: 0.7 mm. Body slightly convex; dorsal surface glossy; brownish, except elytra yellowish (with basal darker area forming somewhat an inverted triangle reaching the middle of elytral suture) (Fig. 13); legs reddish yellow. Dorsal integument of head and pronotum with dispersed fine punctures and undulate microstriae only on margins; elytra with dispersed fine punctures and only one longitudinal finely punctate stria close to elytral suture. Female. Head. Supra-antennal area slightly prominent. Antennae reaching humeral angle; antennomeres 2 and 3 of equal length, antennomere 4 shortest and 5–10 wider than long; 11 longer than the preceding antennomeres. Thorax. Pronotum wider than long (PW/PL=1.2); anterior angles rounded and slightly prominent; apical half with somewhat parallel sides and basal half gradually narrowing toward the base; with complete internal midlongitudinal ridge and slight longitudinal median sulcus only on basal half; one pair of conspicuous setae on anterior margin. Elytra somewhat longer than wide (EL/BW=1.2), not covering abdominal tergite 3. Abdomen. Abdominal tergite 8 with posterior margin rounded; sternite 8 with posterior margin sinuous and with short setae (Fig. 79); tergite 10 with lateral and posterior margins weakly pigmented, with short fringes and four setae on each side at apex; bursa copulatrix as H. pusillus; ovipositor consisting of a pair of weakly pigmented hemisternites and a pair of more apical coxites, and with many long setae on apex; spermatheca as Fig. 91. Male. Unknown. Geographical records. Colombia. Biological notes. No data. Remarks. We received a single specimen (female) from FMNH identified previously as H. micans by Bernhauer, which we consider here as a new species, since the antennomeres 2 and 3 are the same length, in contrast to H. micans that antennomere 3 much shorter than 2 (Sharp 1876, original description), besides the large darker area on elytra. Etymology. The specific name refers to the dark color pattern of elytra and it is a compound name: Greek adjective melan - (black, dark), the connective vowel o, and the Greek noun delta (shaped like a triangle). It is a noun in apposition.

Published as part of Bortoluzzi, Sidnei, Caron, Edilson & Ribeiro-Costa, Cibele S., 2017, Revision and phylogeny of Hypotelus Erichson: a Neotropical genus of minute rove beetles (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Piestinae), pp. 451-487 in Zootaxa 4273 (4) on page 474, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4273.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/803644

Keywords

Coleoptera, Hypotelus melanodelta, Insecta, Arthropoda, Hypotelus, Animalia, Biodiversity, Staphylinidae, Taxonomy

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This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network.
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This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).
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