PSYCHE. In 1924 (American Museum Novitates, No. 125) I published. Mass., and to my great surprise have found four new

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PSYCHE VOL. XLV JUNE--SEPTEMBER, 1938 Nos. 2-3 ADDITIONAL REMARKS ON WEST INDIAN GYRINID_ZE B,Y GEORG OCHS Frankfurt a. Main, Germany In 1924 (American Museum Novitates, No. 125) I published a paper on West Indian Gyrinidm and at that time believed that our knowledge of the family in that area was pretty complete. Recently, however, through the kindness of Dr. P. J. Darlington, Jr., I have studied a large collection of these beetles from the Antilles and Bahamas in the Museum of Comparative ZoSlogy at Harvard College, Cambridge, Mass., and to my great surprise have found four new forms (two species, one variety and one form) from Cuba and Haiti. Moreover, several new records can be added for different species on the different islands. I take this opportunity of offering my sincere thanks to Dr. Darlington for his kindness in enabling me to work on this interesting material. Gyrinus rugifer Rg. Hitherto known from Guadeloupe, Dominica, Puerto Rico and Haiti. Dr. Darlington has found the species in Cuba and Jamaica and added further records from Haiti. Haiti: La Selle Range, La Visite and vicinity, 5000-7000 feet, Sept. 16-23, 1934; Mr. La Hotte, N. E. foothills, 2000-4000 feet, Oct. 10-24, 1934; Mr. Trou d Eau, Nov. 19, 1934. Jamaica: Blue Mts., Whitfield Hall, near 4500 feet, Aug. 13-20, 1934; Cinchona ca. 5000 feet, Aug. 16, 1934; Ocho Rios, Aug. 20-24, 1934; Moneague, Aug. 26, 1934.

86 Psyche [June-Sept. Cuba: Santa Clara Prov., Matagua, 2000 feet, Oct. 14, 1927 (Wilson); Cienfuegos, Soledad, June, 1929; Trinidad Mrs., Buenos Aires, 2500-3500 feet, May 8-14, 1936; Trinidad Mts., San Blas and vicinity, 1000-3000 feet, May 9, 1936. Comparison with specimens from Guadeloupe, where the types came from, shows no essential differences in the series from the different localities. Generally male specimens are much smaller in size than the females, but in the series from La Hotte there are single females not surpassing the size of the males, and exceptionally (series from La Visite) males attain the maximum size of females. The punctuation of the elytra mentioned by Regimbart is generally visible only at the tip of the elytra (even under high power); the reticulate area on the elytra of the female varies in extent. The llth interval (between the 10th and llth series of punctures) is always smooth, as are also the basal and the apical portions of elytra to a greater or less extent;towards the suture the reticulation usually reaches the third series of punctures, and sometimes passes it. Dineutus (Cyclinus) americanus L. In the Cambridge collection are good series rom: CUBA: Soledad, Feb. 22, 1925 (Geo. Salt); Cienfuegos, Soledad, Oct. 27-28, 1926, Nov. 2, 1926, June, 1929, Aug. 2-12, 1934 (Darlington) Trinidad Mrs., Hanabanillo Falls, Apr. 30, 1936, and Buenos Aires, 2500-3500 t., May 8-14, 1936 (Darlington) Rangel Mrs., P. de R. Prov., about 1500 t., Aug. 24, 1936 (id.) eastern Oriente Prov., upper Ovando River, 1000-2000 ft., July 17-20, 1936 (id.) Oriente Prov., Maisi, July 17, 1936 (id.). JAMAICA: Mandeville (Thomas Barbour); Blue Mrs., near 4500 2t., Aug. 13-20, 1934 (Darlington) Ocho Rios, Aug. 20-24, 1934 (id.). HAITI: Grande Anse (P. R. Uhler) Jrmie (Dr. Weinland); La Hotte, N. E. foothills, 2000-4000 t., Oct. 10-24, 1934 (Darlington) S. W. Peninsula, Etang Lachaux, under 1000 t., Oct. 26-27, 1934 (id.). BAHAMAS: Andros Isl., Apr., 1905, 1 9, somewhat doubtul, perhaps not correctly labelled? From earlier determination work the ollowing records

1938] West Indian Gyrinidte 87 are to be added: Cuba: Prov. Pinar del Rio, Sierra del Rosario, Rio LaB Pozas near la Mulatta (Bierig don., in coll. Ochs). Jamaica: Rio Gohre Canal, 1895 (Carnegie Museum); Castleton Gardens, 500 t., Jan. 4, 1913 (W. Harris coll., U. S. Nat. Mus.). Puerto Rico: Desengano, Apr., 1924 (Cornell Univ. Coll.) Aguadilla, Jan., 1899 (Aug. Busck coll., U. S. Nat. Museum). Haiti: Suzanne, 1925 (Homann coll., U. S. Nat. Museum). I cannot find essential differences in the specimens o the different series. The species seems to be constant over its range rom Guadeloupe to Cuba and Jamaica. Dineutus (Cyclinus) carolinus Lec. subsp, mutchleri Ochs. Hitherto recorded only rom Nassau (Bahamas). The Cambridge collection contains the ollowing series: New. Providence Is. (-Nassau) July, 1904 (Barber) Andros Is., Apr., 1905; and a single 2emale rom Cat. I., Arthurs Town, July 5, 1935 (W. J. Clench). Dineutus (s. str.) longimanus Oliv. In the Cambridge collection rom: HAITI: Furcy (W. M. Mann); Mr. Basil, to 4700 t., Sept. 9, 1934 (Darlington) Trou Caiman, Sept. 15-20, 1934 (id.) Mt. La Hotte, N. E. oothills, 2000-4000 t., Oct. 10-24, 1934 (id.) Mr. La Hotte, Desbarrire, near 4000 t., Oct. 12-14, 1934 (id.) Miragoane, Oct. 30-Nov. 2, 1934 (id.). Dineutus longimanus, subsp, cubensis Ochs 1926 CUBA: Upper Yara Valley, taken on a shallow river, Oct. 18-28 (L. C. Scaramuzza) Cienuegos, Soledad, June, 1929 (Darlington) Trinidad Mrs., June, 1929 (id.) Trinidad Mrs., Hanabanillo Falls, April 30, 1936 (id.) Trinidad Mts., Buenos Aires, 2500-3500 t., May 8-14, 1936 (id.) Rangel Mrs., P. de R. Prov., about 1500 2t., Aug. 24, 1936 (id.) Pico Turquino, S. side, 1500 t., June 25, 1936 (id.) Oriente Prov., Cobre Range, Loma del Gato, about 3000 t., July 3-7, 1936 (id.) eastern Oriente Prov., upper Ovando River, 1000-2000 t., July 17-20, 1936 (id.) eastern Oriente Prov., Mts. N. o Imias, 3000-4000 it., July 25-28, 1936 (id.). In my collection through the kindness of Mr. Bierig, Habana, rom the

88 Psyche [June-Sept. Province of Pinar del Rio: Sitio de Inferno and San Vicente, in mountain streams; Sierra del Rosario, Rio las Pozas near la Mulatta. Dineutus longimanus subsp, jamaicensis subsp, nov. Good series in the Cambridge collection show hat specimens from Jamaica are somewhat different from those of Haiti, Puerto Rico and Cuba. They are characterized by rufous anterior legs, testaceous undersurface, upper surface with silky lustre, anterior tibiae of the male with double incurvation. Type $ and numerous paratypes in the Cambridge collection (Type No. 23,058) from Jamaica, Blue Mrs., near 4500 ft., Aug. 13-20, 1934 (Darlington), further specimens from Ocho Rios, Aug. 20-24, 1934 (id.); Kingston, Feb. 14, 1928 (id.); Mandeville (A. E. Wight); Castleton, Botanical Garden (Petrunkevitch). In the males of the Jamaican series the oedeagus is subparallel, about 2/ as wide as the lateral lobes in their basal part, apical fifth finely acuminate; sometimes (immature or shrivelled), narrower and slightly attenuated in the middle of the length. In the Haitian specimens the oedeagus is slightly attenuated from the base in basal third, thence subparallel, slender, about 1/3 as wide as the lateral lobes, apical fourth acuminate. In the Cuban and Puerto Rican specimens the male genitalia are still somewhat different, as described by me (1924, l.c.) in several individuals, however, we meet with abnormal features approaching those of the other races. Also the other racial characters are not constant in every case, but generally the different subspecies are to be distinguished as follows" incurvation upper of anterior anterior legs under surface surface tibiae o" Haiti dark rufous testaceous metallic simple Puerto Rico rufous testaceous metallic simple Jamaica rufous testaceous silky double Cuba brownish infuscated silky double Hatch (1930, Publ. Univ. Oklahoma Biol. Surv. 2, pp. 18-21) placed this species in the subgenus Cyclinus. I should,

19381 West Indian Gyrinidx 89 however, pre2er to put it with Dineutus s. str., as the large size and the highly developed anterior legs of the males show more affinity with the representatives of the latter subgenus. Hatch, among many other erroneous suppositions, in his publications on the Gyrinidse, adds in the same paper the statement that spinous elytral apexes are a character entirely lacking in Dineutus s. str. He overlooks the fact that in several species rom the Madagascar and the. Ethiopian region we meet with such a condition, so the spinose elytral apex does not exclude. D. longimanus from the subgenus Dineutus s. str. Moreover, in D. truncatus Sharp rom Central America, we can recognize the truncature of D. longimanus in a moderate orm. A proiemoral tooth, the presence of which is denied by Hatch or the species, is weakly intimated in large males of D. longimanus. Gyretes vulneratus Aub Of this species, which hitherto was represented only by a *ew specimens in old collections (i.a. Mus. Berlin, Bremen, Senckenberg; types in coll. Dejean), the Cambridge Museum possesses a considerable series, all rom Haiti. The specimens in a series from Furcy (W. M. Mann) agree rather well with the ancient ones seen by me, which are perhaps *rom the same region as Aub s types. All emales are very strongly reticulate on the disc of pronotum and elytra, and on the sides oi the latter there are two abbreviate ridges with a short longitudinal depression between them. _ Gyretes vulneratus, forma laevicollis forma nov. In several series taken in Haiti by Mr. Darlington, most of the 2emales have the disc o pronotum and elytra smooth (reticulation very fine) as in the males, and on the sides of elytra there is no noticeable ridge or depression; only the tips of elytra show a strong reticulation. Type and several paratypes (type no. M. C. Z. 23,059) *rom Mt. La Hotte, N. E. oothills, 2000-4000 t., Oct. 10-24, 1934; urther specimens irom Mr. La Hotte, Desbarrires, near 4000 t., Oct. 12-14, 1934 and Tardieu, 3000 t., Oct. 14, 1934; Camp Perrin, near 1000 t., Oct. 8-27, 1934; Ennery, near 1000 ft., Sept. 6-11, 1934.

90 Psyche [June-Sept. In the last mentioned series there are, besides smooth females, also reticulate female specimens approaching the typical female form with ridges and lateral depression on the elytra. In all these series the size is on the average a little less than in the specimens from Furcy, a yellowish longitudinal spot is more evident on the pygidium, and in the males the anterior tibiae and tarsi are less strongly developed. The male genitalia in G. vulneratus are of a very singular form: the oedeagus i.s very short and broad, the apical part bent upwards, bottonlike, and joined to the base by a keeled longitudinal ridge. Chevrolat (1863, Ann. Soc. Ent. France (4) 3, p. 203) mentions G. vulneratus from Cuba; perhaps he confused it with the following species. Gyretes darlingtoni sp. nov. Length 5-5.5 mm. Oval, hardly elongate, posteriorly attenuate, very convex. Surface shining, black, slightly brassy; lateral margin brownish, very narrow on prothorax and at base of elytra, much wider and more yellowish towards apex of latter; pygidium yellowish, with two short black longitudinal stripes at the base; body beneath rufous, anal segment and epipleurae yellowish. Labrum rufous or yellowish, transverse, anteriorly rounded and brightly ciliated, surface slightly reticulated, posteriorly at the sides deeply punctured and bristly. Clypeus well defined, with dispersed punctures, a narrow anterior margin smooth, posteriorly strongly reticulate, with short transverse meshes. Reticulation less strongly impressed on the head anteriorly and becoming still more superficial towards the vertex, nearly invisible on the prothorax and very fine and most transverse on the elytra; in the there is a longitudinal area of strongly impressed nearly round meshes on the last 2/ of each elytron, on which longitudinal striae are sometimes indistinctly marked. Tomentous border of the prothorax reaching opposite middle of eye anteriorly, obliquely narrowed and hardly half as wide posteriorly; still narrower on the base of elytra, regularly and moderately broadened from the humeral part for about 2/ of the length of elytra, thence more strongly bent inwards and reaching the trunca-

1938] West Indian Gyrinide 91 ture obliquely at about its inner third; in the tomentous border of elytra regularly broadened to about 3/ of the length of elytra, the last part of the border therefore a little narrower than in the 3, reaching the truncature less obliquely and slightly convexly curved. Truncature oi elytra moderately oblique in the 3, more oblique and slightly concave in the,. exterior angle a little projecting, briefly denticulate, sutural angle broadly rounded, more produced in the Anterior tibim of the 3 dilated towards the apex, exterior apical angle rounded; anterior tarsi moderately dilated, narrower than the tibim, slightly attenuate towards the apex. In the the anterior tibim are less dilated, the tarsi narrower, subparallel..zedeagus pale yellow, long and slender, about as wide as the lateral lobes, subparallel basally, attenuate in about apical third, apex finely acuminate. Habitat: Cuba, eastern Oriente, Mrs. N. o Imias, 3000-4000 t., July 25-28, 1936 (Darlington). Type 3 and Allotype 9 (Type no. M. C. Z. 23,060) in the Museum of Comparative ZoSlogy at Harvard College, Cambridge, Mass.); paratypes 9 3 3, 8. Further specimens, 1 3 1, rom eastern Oriente, upper Ovando river, 1000-2000 t., July 17-20, 1936 (Darlington) agree with the typical specimens. A small series however (4, 1 ) from the Cobre Range, Oriente Prov., about 3000 ft., July 3-7, 1936 (Darlington) differ by the pygidium being nearly totally black, only the tip yellow (--a. pygidialis nov., type no. M. C. Z. 23,061). Also these specimen.s are a little larger in size, and in the longitudinal striae are more distinctly marked on the reticulate portion of the elytra. The new species differs from Gyretes cubensis Rg., the only species of Gyretes hitherto known from Cuba, by its larger size, broader, less elongate and less vaulted body, yellowish labrum and tip of pygidium, brighter coloured undersurface, sutural angle of elytra and apical exterior angle of anterior tibiae rounded. Somewhat resembles G. vulneratus Aub from Haiti, but a little.smaller in size and differing by the somewhat narrower tomentous border of elytra, the yellow tip of pygidium, rounded exterior apical angle of anterior tibiae, the latter less broadened in the 3, with narrower anterior tarsi. The

92 Psyche [June-Sept. of the new species is easily distinguished from the typical female form of G. vulneratus by the lack of strong reticulation on the disc of pronotum and the anterior part of elytra, longitudinal.striae are less distinctly marked on the latter and the lateral impression is wanting. The smooth female form of G. vulneratus differs rom the. of the new species by the lack of any strong reticulation on the elytra except at the tip, darker pygidium, and broader tomentous border o the elytra. Male genitalia are quite different in the two species. Gyretes nigrilabris sp. nov. Length 6.25 mm. Broadly oval, posteriorly attenuated, moderately convex. Surface shining, black, slightly brassy; lateral margin brownish and very narrow on the prothorax and at base of elytra, moderately enlarged and more yellowish toward apex of latter; pygidium black; body beneath ferruginous, epipleura yellowish. Labrum black, transverse, anterior margin flatly rounded and with yellow cilia, surface reticulated, base at the sides with some deep punctures bearing bristles. Clypeus well separated, anterior margin dark rufous, reticulated, with dispersed punctures. Reticulation on labrum and clypeus only slightly impressed, with short transverse meshes; strongly impressed on the head anteriorly, meshes becoming rounded and less impressed towards vertex and on disc of prothorax; head and prothorax with dispersed punctures; elytra not punctured, reticulation fine and very transverse in the 3, much more strongly impressed in the 9, with short meshes. Tomentous border of prothorax reaching opposite middle of eye anteriorly, diminishing to about 2/ of the anterior width towards the base and continued on the elytra, on the latter slightly and regularly enlarged (a little more in the towards the apex, shortly before the latter the inner outline, which is flatly concave, is curved convexly, thus reaching the truncature nearly perpendicularly. Truncature. of elytra oblique and concave in both sexes, outer angle sharp, sutural angle dehiscent, obtusely rounded, more produced in the Anterior tibiae of the 3 dilated towards apex, exterior apical angle nearly rectangular, briefly rounded; anterior tarsi moderately dilated, narrower than the tibiae, strongly attenuated

1938] West Indian Gyrinid 93 towards apex. In the the anterior tibiae are less dilated, the front tarsi narrow, subparallel..zedeagus dark yellow, lateral lobes iniuscated apically, median lobe a little broader than the lateral ones, subparallel, slightly enlarged at the beginning oi the short triangular acumination o2 the apex, tip obtusely rounded. Habitat: Haiti, Furcy (W. M. Mann). Type 3 and Allotype (type No. 23,062) in the Museum oi Comparative ZoSlogy at Harvard College, Cambridge, (Mass.). A little larger than G. vulneratus Aub, with which it was associated and which it resembles very much. Easily distinguishe.d, however, by the black labrum, darker undersurface, and body more attenuated posteriorly. Anterior tibiae in the 3 less triangularly dilated, exterior apical angle leas pronounced, ront tarsi narrower and more attenuated, genitalia quite different. In the the prothorax is not strongly reticulate, elytra without lateral depression.

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