Amblycerus falcorostrus Ribeiro-Costa & Morse, 2025

Ribeiro-Costa, Cibele Stramare & Morse, Geoffrey E., 2025, Circumscription of the sclerolobii group of Amblycerus Thunberg (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae, Bruchinae) with descriptions of four new species and a revision of the species groups of the genus, ZooKeys 1252, pp. 35-67 : 35-67

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1252.144951

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D4A0E586-2B90-4546-A719-6B79C3938CE5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17161904

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6DD3AA83-690C-52D7-92A4-70FD203A9B15

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Amblycerus falcorostrus Ribeiro-Costa & Morse
status

sp. nov.

Amblycerus falcorostrus Ribeiro-Costa & Morse sp. nov.

Fig. 3 A – G View Figure 3 , Table 1 View Table 1

Type material.

Holotype • Deposited in INPA, male, with labels: Brasil: Amazonas \ AM 010, Km 26 \ Reserva Ducke \ 29 - VIII- 1978 [white label, printed in black except date handwritten]; armadilha \ de Malaise [white label, printed in black]; INPA [white label with black margin, printed in black]; Amblycerus \ sp. 2 \ Ribeiro-Costa, C. S. det. 2009 [white label with black margin, handwritten except name of identifier and date printed in black]; HOLOTYPE \ Amblycerus falcorostrus \ Ribeiro-Costa & Morse [white label with red margin, printed in black] .

Diagnosis.

The main character to distinguish A. falcorostrus Ribeiro-Costa & Morse , sp. nov. from others in the group is the presence in the internal sac of male genitalia of a single, strongly curved tooth-shaped sclerite on both sides at AR (Fig. 3 F View Figure 3 ).

Description.

The description of A. falcorostrus Ribeiro-Costa & Morse , sp. nov. is similar to A. truncatus Ribeiro-Costa , sp. nov. except by the following characters.

Dimensions: BL: 6.60 mm, BW: 3.80 mm ( n = 1).

Integument color: Dark brown in following areas: vertex, apex of clypeus, labrum, pronotum, elytra, pygidium, abdominal ventrites, first femur and middle leg. Black on part of head, antennomeres, metanepisternum, metasternum, and hind leg.

Vestiture: Ventral region with whitish pubescence except abdominal ventrites with yellowish pubescence.

Head: Frontal carina absent, finely punctate or smooth on midline. Ocular index: 5.3; ocular sinus 0.05 of the eye length in lateral view. Prothorax: Pronotum with carinae bordering the basal lobe and laterally. Mesothorax and metathorax: Scutellum about as long as wide with tridentate apex, all teeth the same size. Elytron 1.4 × longer than wide. Metanepisteral sulcus with the vertical axis reaching the margin of metepisternum. Metaventrite with median sulcus extending laterally more than a half of its length. Hind femur ~ 2.72 × longer than wide. Hind tibia lateral spur ~ 2 × the length of median spur. First tarsomere ~ 1.38 × the length of lateral spur and 2.61 × the length of median spur. Abdomen: Pygidium rounded at apex in male, female unknown. Last ventrite almost the same length as ventrite IV, male apex not visible. Male terminalia: Tergite 8 gently emarginate at apex. Median lobe ~ 5.34 × its widest at apical region; dorsal valve 0.88 × wider than long; ventral valve 1.28 × wider than long. Armature of internal sac, AR with one strongly curved tooth-shaped sclerite in both sides. MR with a pair of winding, laminar sclerites, outer margin serrate along its middle apical 0.7 length; wishbone-shaped sclerite 0.63 as long as the laminar sclerites length, straight, apex enlarged, subtruncate and serrate in lateral view. Tegmen with lateral lobes cleft 1 / 16 of their length.

Etymology.

The specific name is a new Latin adjective in the nominative case meaning “ with a falcon-like beak ”. It refers to the form of the AR sclerite in the internal sac of the male genitalia.

Distribution.

Brazil (Amazonas-Manaus).

Host plants.

Not known.

INPA

Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Chrysomelidae

SubFamily

Bruchinae

Genus

Amblycerus