Three new Oriental species of Thaumastopeus Kraatz, 1885 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Cetoniinae)

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Studies and reports of District Museum Prague-East Taxonomical Series 4 (1-2): 111-118, 2008 Three new Oriental species of Thaumastopeus Kraatz, 1885 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Cetoniinae) Stanislav JÁKL Lamačova 861, CZ-158 00, Praha 5 - Hlubočepy, Czech Republic e- mail: stanley.jakl@seznam.cz Taxonomy, new species, Coleoptera, Cetoniinae, Thaumastopeus, Oriental region Abstract. Thaumastopeus clavatus sp. n. from Roti Island (W of Timor), T. jampeanus sp. n. from Jampea Island (S of Sulawesi) and T. inexpectatus glabratus ssp. n. from Leyte Island (Philippines) are described, illustrated and compared. Presented are also notes on distribution and taxonomy of the T. nigritus species group; and notes on morphology and illustrations of habitus and genitalia of T. saleijeri Schauer, 1939. INTRODUCTION Indonesia and the Philippines are thought to be the centre of origin and dispersal of the cetoniine genus Thaumastopeus Kraatz, 1885. This study concentrates on small, black, shiny species of the T. nigritus species group. The distribution of this group encompasses Nepal, India, Sri Lanka, southeastern China, countries of Southeast Asia, Indonesia and the Philippines, with the highest number of species in the two archipelagoes. In Indonesia the species change dramatically from island to island at the Wallace line. All populations within the Wallacea, i.e. west of the line, belong to T. nigritus Fröhlich, 1792, which, however, has the character of a group rather than a single species. For example populations of Java and Bali differ from those of Bawean Island, populations of Belitung are significantly different from those of Sumatra, and populations of islands west of Sumatra (Nias, Siberut, Simeuleue, Tanahmasa) also differ from each other. The same is the case in the Philippines, Andaman Islands and Nicobar islands. The situation is very complex and its better understanding will probably require molecular analyses. This study concentrates on species east of the Great Sunda Islands. I had a chance to study over 600 specimens from various islands of the Lesser Sunda, many parts of Sulawesi and also islands south of Sulawesi. Since specimens from Roti and Jampea islands do not belong to any hitherto named species, I decided to describe them as new. All specimens of T. tristis Ritsema, 1880 that I am aware of come from Sumba Island, which makes Java as the type locality of this species highly suspect. Specimens from Alor Island (first record) belong to T. floresianus Heller, 1899. Specimens from Moa Island (E of Timor) belong to both species inhabiting Timor, T. timoriensis Wallace, 1867 and T. brunneipennis J. Thomson, 1879. Specimens from Buton Island (S of SE Sulawesi) belong to T. francki Antoine, 2000, although they exhibit minor differences especially in elytral punctation and shape of parameres. Specimens from Selayar Island belong to T. saleijeri Schauer, 1939 that is very similar to T. francki Antoine, 2000, from which it can be distinguished based on the two just noted characters. 111

The situation is somewhat different in the Philippines, where some islands are inhabited by two sympatric, small, black Thaumastopeus species. Until recently this was the case of Luzon and Mindanao islands. Examination of specimens from Leyte Island reveals two species, T. nigritus Fröhlich, 1792 and T. inexpectatus Mikšic, 1977. The latter differs in some external characteristics from the nominotypical form and represents a new subspecies of T. inexpectatus. HISTORY Cetonia nigrita Fröhlich, 1792 started the history of the genus. Thaumastopeus was established by Kraatz in 1885 and Thaumastopeus nigritus (Fröhlich, 1792) as a type species was designated. The last two revisions (Mikšic, 1977; Allard, 1995) recognised 21 species and five subspecies. Since then two species and two subspecies have been added (Rigout & Allard, 1997; Antoine, 2000). MATERIAL AND METHODS Specimen sizes exclude head and pygidium. Types are provided with printed red labels that give the name of the taxon, HOLOTYPUS or PARATYPUS, sex symbol and St. Jákl det. 2007. Genitalia of most available males were dissected. All specimens are deposited in the author s collection. DESCRIPTIONS Thaumastopeus clavatus sp. n. (Figs 1-5) Type material. Holotype ( ): Indonesia, Lesser Sundas, ROTI ISL., 10. 1993 (W of Timor), 0-50 m, local collectors lgt. Paratypes: (nos. 1-3, ): the same as holotype; (no. 4, ): the same as holotype. Description. Holotype length 18.4 mm, maximum humeral width 9.1 mm. Black, glabrous, narrow, flat and elongated species. Head black, shiny, widest approximately at three-quarters of length. Frons coarsely punctate except for midsection. Clypeus with dense longitudinal wrinkles. Antennae blackish, bearing ochre pilosity. Pronotum black, shiny, disc very finely punctate, anterolateral margins densely striolate. Margins complete, anterolaterally less visibly so but without obvious interruption. Basal lobe very finely punctate. Elytra black, shiny, parallel-sided and elongate. Punctation sparse, limited to three short and vague lines in front of humeral calli. Posterior half of elytra laterally striolate and below apical calli wrinkled. Rest of elytra glabrous. Humeral and apical calli flattened. Sutural ridge sharp. Suture flat, terminalia drawn out into points. Pygidium black, matte, with dense concentric wrinkles. 112

Abdomen black, shiny, with deep medial furrow. Each sternite with one transverse line of punctae. Metasternum shiny and glabrous at the centre, laterally striolate. Mesometasternal process long and sharply pointed. Legs unique in the group. All tibiae and tarsi elongated, protibiae unidentate. Protarsal claws longer than last tarsal segment. Genitalia. Parameres resemble T. timoriensis Wallace, 1867, but differ in being narrowest at three-quarters of length and widening from that point towards apex (Figs 4-5). Variation. Paratypes Nos. 2 and 3 have more developed elytral punctation. Size 15.5-18.4 mm. Sexual dimorphismus. Body length 19.5 mm, more robust and broader, with legs notelongated and protibia tridentate. Punctation and striolation similar to males. Differential diagnosis. Closest species are T. timoriensis Wallace, 1867 and T. brunneipennis Thomson, 1879. Both species are found in Timor and recently were discovered also in Moa Island. T. clavatus differs from both in the characters given in the table below (for males only). T. clavatus sp. n. T. timoriensis T. brunneipennis form of body body narrow, elongated body normal, not elongated elytra elytral punctation vague elytral punctation vague legs aedeagus tibiae, tarsi elongated, protibiae unidentate parameres narrowest at 3/4 of length tibiae, tarsi not elongated, protibiae tridentate parameres narrowest at apex body normal, not elongated elytral punctation well developed tibiae, tarsi not elongated, protibiae 1-2 dentate parameres narrowest at apex Also all other species of the genus occurring in the Lesser Sundas (T. floresianus Heller, 1899, T. lombokianus Miyake & Yamaya, 1995 and T. tristis Ritsema, 1880) differ from T. clavatus sp. n. by 2-3 dentate protibia (males), stronger elytral punctation, non-elongate tibia and tarsi (males) and different shape of the parameres. Etymology. Named for the unusual shape of the legs, unique in the genus. Distribution. Indonesia, Lesser Sundas, Roti Island (W of Timor). Thaumastopeus jampeanus sp. n. (Figs 6-10) Type material. Holotype ( ): Indonesia, Jampea Island (cca 150 km S of Sulawesi ), native collector leg. Paratypes: (no. 1, ): the same as holotype; (nos. 2-3, ): the same as holotype. Description. Holotype length 20.6 mm, maximum humeral width 11.0 mm. Black, shiny, broad. 113

1 6 2 7 3 8 4 9 5 10 Figs 1-10. Thaumastopeus clavatus sp. n.: 1- habitus dorsal aspect; 2- habitus lateral aspect; 3- habitus ventral aspect; 4- aedeagus; 5- aedeagus lateral aspect. Thaumastopeus jampeanus sp. n.: 6- habitus dorsal aspect; 7habitus lateral aspect; 8- habitus ventral aspect; 9- aedeagus; 10- aedeagus lateral aspect. Head black, opaque, punctate and rugose. Shapes of punctate irregular, punctate less dense on disk. Clypeus widest at three quarters of length. Pronotum black, shiny, disk finely punctate. Basal lobe with very fine punctation. Lateral punctation more rugose, diameters of punctures larger, anterolateral margins wrinkled. Elytra black, shiny, oval, wider than in other Sulawesi species. Elytral ridge absent, humeral and apical calli obsolete. Postscutellar area and area along elytral suture glabrous, only with few irregular, small punctate. Anterior half laterally with rugose punctation, posterior half laterally with wrinkles. Apex wrinkled, apical calli glabrous. Pygidium black, opaque, with concentric striolation. Abdomen black, shiny. Medial furrow very shallow, each sternite with two rows of semicircular punctae. 114

Metasternum black, shiny, disk finely punctate, lateral portions striolate, posterolateral margins more densely striolate. Mesometasternal process short, robust, protruding downwards. Prosternum and mentum densely wrinkled, covered with blackish pilosity. Legs black, shiny. Protibia tridentate, proximal tooth obtuse and small. Genitalia (Figs 9-10). Parameres short and broad, apical hook resembles T. lombokianus Miyake & Yamaya, 1995 and T. floresianus Heller, 1899. Variation. Male paratype No. 1 identical but smaller, 18.8 mm length. Sexual dimorphismus. Females more parallel-sided and broader, with protibia more robust and tridentate, all three teeth sharp, and punctation of head, pronotum and elytra coarser. Size 18.8-19.0 mm. Differential diagnosis. T. jampeanus sp. n. appears to be closer to species of the Lesser Sundas than to those of Sulawesi and nearby islands. Closest relatives are T. lombokianus Miyake & Yamaya, 1995 and T. floresianus Heller, 1899. Especially with T. lombokianus it shares several characters, but differs from both species by more reduced punctation, namely elytral, more robust mesometasternal process and differently shaped parameres. Etymology. Named after the island to which it appears to be confined. Distribution. Indonesia, Tanah Jampea island group, Jampea Island. Thaumastopeus inexpectatus glabratus ssp. n. (Figs 11-15) Type material. Holotype ( ): Phillippines, Leyte Isl., v.2005, MT. BALOLACUE, local collectors lgt. Paratype: (1 ): the same as holotype. Description. Holotype length 18.5 mm, maximum humeral width 10.3 mm. Oval, glabrous, shiny. Head black, shiny, laterally punctate, on disk with only a few indistinct punctures. Clypeal ridge well developed, glabrous. Lateral facets discrete but not wide. Pronotum with disk and basal angles impunctate, lateral margins finely and longitudinally punctate. Lateral margins bordered throughout length. Elytra black, very shiny, impunctate except for narrow lateral parts and apex. Posterior half down to apex laterally with transverse fine, dense striolation; between suture and apical calli striolation fine, dense and longitudinal. Elytral ridge not well marked. Humeral calli indistinct, apical calli well developed. Elytral suture below level of elytral surface, only at two-thirds of length slightly elevated. Apex of each elytron not protruding, rounded. Pygidium black, shiny, impunctate. Medial furrow not developed. Metasternum shiny, with a few circular punctures. Mesometasternal process narrow, rather length, protruding forward, with apex pointed and directed upwards. Legs. Tibiae and tarsi elongated, gracile. Protibia tridentate, all teeth sharp. Genitalia (Figs 14-15) similar to nominal subspecies but terminal lobes obtusely rounded. Sexual dimorphismus. In female lateral punctation of pronotum and striolation of elytral apex coarser. Other aspects of sexual dimorphism not expressed. Body length 18.0 mm. 115

Differential diagnosis. Compared with specimens of nominal subspecies from Luzon, specimens from Leyte Island differ by the impunctate elytra (the nominal subspecies has a few vague striolate lines on each elytron), finer lateral striolation in posterior half of elytra, and rounded lobes of parameres. Etymology. Named for the glabrous and impunctate elytra. Distribution. Philippines, Leyte Island, Mt. Balolacue. 11 16 12 17 13 18 14 19 15 20 Figs 11-20. Thaumastopeus inexpectatus glabratus ssp.n.: 11- habitus dorsal aspect; 12- habitus lateral aspect; 13habitus ventral aspect; 14- aedeagus; 15- aedeagus lateral aspect. Thaumastopeus saleijeri Schauer, 1939: 16- habitus dorsal aspect; 17- habitus lateral aspect; 18- habitus ventral aspect; 19- aedeagus; 20- aedeagus lateral aspect. 116

Thaumastopeus saleijeri Schauer, 1939 (Figs 16-20) Because of confusion and doubts about the existence of this species, I give a brief characterisation with illustrations of the habitus and genitalia. Remarks. The habitus and shape of the parameres place T. saleijeri Schauer, 1939 near T. minetti Rigout, 1997 and T. francki Antoine, 2000, both from Sulawesi. The main characteristics that appear to separate it from the two species are the oval shape and green metallic lustre. T. minetti and T. francki are bluish and nearly parallel-sided. Elytral striolate lines of the two Sulawesi species are vague but still visible, whereas in T. saleijeri they are almost invisible. Examination of the mesometasternal process in hundreds of specimens of these three species reveals a great deal of variation but no clearcut differences in shape and size. The shape of the parameres could possibly be used to distinguish T. saleijeri (Figs 19-20), however, caution is in place because the degree of variation in all three species is high. Therefore, the question of validity of these three taxa is perhaps best left open. REFERENCES ALLARD V. 1995: Schizorhinini 2. The beetles of the world. Vol. 24. Sciences Nat, Venette. 128 pp. ANTOINE Ph. 2000: Quelques nouvelles ou peu connues de la famille des Cetoniidae - IX ( Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae). Coleopteres 7 (2): 7-22 MIKŠIC R. 1977: Monographie der Cetoniinae der palaarctischen und orientalischen Region. 2. Sarajevo: Forstinstitut in Sarajevo, 400 pp. RIGOUT J. & ALLARD V. 1997: Schizorhinini 3. Les Coleopteres du Monde, Vol. 12. Sciences Nat., Venette. 136 pp. SCHAUER G. 1939. Die Cetoniden der Saleijer Inseln. Entomologische Rundschau 25: 273-277. 117

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