Lophalia prolata Chemsak and Linsley, 1988
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14662132 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5671A77B-2ECB-445F-8F61-246A9E442CDE |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14662138 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038487F8-0243-FFAA-FF14-0FDCFB84FC8A |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Lophalia prolata Chemsak and Linsley, 1988 |
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Lophalia prolata Chemsak and Linsley, 1988 View in CoL
( Fig. 79–88 View Figures 79–88 )
Lophalia prolata Chemsak and Linsley 1988: 127 View in CoL ; Chemsak et al. 1992: 84 (cat.); Chemsak and Noguera 1993: 63 (dist.); Monné and Giesbert 1994: 146 (cat.); Monné 1994: 34 (cat.); Noguera and Chemsak 1996: 402 (dist.); Noguera et al. 2002: 624 (dist.); Zaragoza-Caballero and Pérez-Hernández 2017: 34 (holotype)
Materials examined. MEXICO: Jalisco: 5.2 km S El Tuito, HWY 200, 25 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (1 female, BKEC) ; 5.8 km S El Tuito, HWY200, 12 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (4 males, 1 female, BKEC) ; 6.9 km S. El Tuito, HWY200, 13 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (9 males, 4 females, BKEC) ; 13.8 km S El Tuito, HWY200, 31 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (8 males, 1 female, BKEC) ; Estación de Biología Chamela , 23 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (2 males, BKEC) ; 8 km N Melaque Jct. HWY200, 22 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (4 males, 1 female, BKEC) ; 8 km N Melaque Jct. HWY200, 14 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (3 males, 1 female, BKEC) ; 8 km NW Melaque , 16–23 Oct. 1986, J.A. Chemsak (paratypes: 1 male, 1 female, BKEC) ; 35.9 km NE Melaque, Jct. , HWY80, 29 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (8 males, 2 females, BKEC) ; 4.8 km S La Huerta , HWY80, 15 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (4 males, 3 females, BKEC) ; 4.8 km S La Huerta , HWY80, 24 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (1 females, BKEC) ; 25.1 km S La Huerta , HWY80, 15 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (1 female, BKEC) ; Microondas Puerto Los Mazos, Sierra de Manantlán , 15 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (1 male, BKEC) ; 21.6 km N St. Gabriel, Jct. 80/432, 28 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (3 males, 2 females, BKEC) ; 3.1 km NE San Gabriel , HWY432, 17 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (5 males, 2 females, BKEC) ; Planta La Mesa , 13.8 km NE San Gabriel, HWY432, 18 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (1 male, BKEC) ; Planta La Mesa , 22.7 km N Jct. HWY432, 28 Oct. 1995, B.K. Eya (1 male, 1 female, BKEC) ; Chapala , 1500 m, 9/ 10 Oct. 1996, G. Noguiera, (1 female, BKEC). Sinaloa: 30 km W El Palmito, 2–9 Oct. 1976, E. Giesbert (3 males, 1 female, FSCA) .
Discussion. According to Chemsak and Linsley (1988: 127–128), this species is moderate in size (12–19 mm), elongate, and slightly tapered posteriorly with “integument shining black.” “Head and prothorax are dark metallic greenish, and each elytron is provided with a narrow, glabrous, slightly elevated, longitudinal, yellowish vitta.” The front is short, and each side of middle above postclypeus is “a deep, transverse pit.” The vertex is finely, sparsely punctate, and glabrous in the middle between eyes. The antennae are “slender extending about two segments beyond elytra” in males and “slightly longer than body” in females with basal antennomeres II–V shining and outer antennomeres VI–XI opaque. The antennae are vaguely carinate on the outer surface of antennomeres IV–VIII, and on the inner surface of V–VIII. The “pronotum is slightly broader than long, sides broadly rounded,” and “disc shining, sparsely punctate, and medially glabrous” with “pubescence sparse and short.” The mesosternal “intercoxal process is strongly produced between coxae.” The “elytra are almost three times as long as broad” with “apices sinuate-truncate and outer angles strongly dentate.” The scutellum is “glabrous, elongate, acute, and narrowed posteriorly.”
Lophalia prolata Chemsak and Linsley has a front of the head that is convex and subvertical with deep transverse pits on each side above the postclypeus ( Chemsak and Linsley 1988: 129). The mid-cranial sulcus is narrow and vague extending arcuately from postclypeus over to the posterior margin of antennal tubercles. The sparsely punctate, metallic colored head and pronotum, and “elongate body form” combined with “the single vitta on each elytron will differentiate L. prolata from other species” in this genus. The species name “prolata ” is Latin for “extended” referring to the elongate body form of this species (WordSense 2024).
FSCA |
Florida State Collection of Arthropods, The Museum of Entomology |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Lophalia prolata Chemsak and Linsley, 1988
Eya, Bryan K. 2024 |
Lophalia prolata
Zaragoza-Caballero S & Perez-Hernandez CX 2017: 34 |
Noguera FA & Zaragoza-Caballero S & Chemsak JA & Rodriguez-Palafox A & Ramirez-Garcia E & Gonzalez-Soriano E & Ayala R. 2002: 624 |
Noguera FA & Chemsak JA 1996: 402 |
Monne MA & Giesbert EF 1994: 146 |
Chemsak JA & Noguera FA 1993: 63 |
Chemsak JA & Linsley EG & Noguera FA 1992: 84 |
Chemsak JA & Linsley EG 1988: 127 |