3.1. Species Accounts
3.1.1. Cis afer Fåhraeus, 1871
Cis afer Fåhraeus 1871: 671 [
21]. Type locality: Caffraria (=Kaffraria), currently Republic of South Africa: Eastern Cape Province (no specific locality); Ferrer 1997: 408 [
24] {lectotype designation}.
Host fungi: Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from Eastern Cape Province (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
21]. There is no further record in the literature, as far as we have traced. This species is a member of the
neserorum group.
3.1.2. Cis aster Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2017
Cis aster Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017: 340 [
11]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: KwaZulu-Natal Province, Twin Streams Nursery Forest.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species in the neserorum group (except for C. afer, C. bicaesariatus sp. n., C. caffer, C. makebae and C. masekelai) in males being devoid of concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis aster differs from C. afer in males with comparatively longer pronotal plates; from C. bicaesariatus sp. n. in a comparatively longer body and larger prosternal process; and from C. caffer in males possessing much closer plates on anterocephalic and anterior pronotal edges. It differs from C. makebae and C. masekelai in males with first abdominal ventrite devoid of a sex patch.
Host fungi:Hexagonia tenuis (Hook.) Fr. (Polyporaceae), one record and possibly being breeding record [
10].
Distribution. Ethiopian. Known from Twin Streams Nursery Forest (KwaZulu-Natal Province, Republic of South Africa).
Comments. The species is known only from the type series [
11]. In the original description, it was mentioned that the species cooccured with the morphospecies Cis sp. Q. However, it was collected alone (corrigendum to Souza-Gonçalves and Lopes-Andrade [
11]).
3.1.3. Cis bicaesariatus Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Type locality: “Die Hel Nature Reserve”, coordinates 25°31’ S 29°48’ E (near Loskop Dam, Mpumalanga Province).
Etymology: The species name derives from the Latin noun “bi”, which means “two”, and “caesariatus”, which means “covered by hairs”, “long-haired”, both in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the dual dorsal vestiture of the species.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species of the neserorum group (except for C. afer, C. aster, C. caffer, C. makebae and C. masekelai) in males being devoid of concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis bicaesariatus sp. n. differs from C. afer, C. aster and C. caffer in a comparatively shorter body and in males bearing anterocephalic plates curved upwards and with rounded apex. It differs from C. makebae and C. masekelai in males with first abdominal ventrite devoid of a sex patch.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 1(A–D)): Adult apparently not fully pigmented but in good condition, except for lacking three tarsi and for being covered in dust or fungus. Measurements in mm: TL 1.86, PL 0.66, PW 0.81, EL 1.20, EW 0.96, GD 0.71. Ratios: PL/PW 0.82, EL/EW 1.26, EL/PL 1.82, GD/EW 0.74, TL/EW 1.94.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum reddish dark brown (except for dust-covered areas, but visible elsewhere in paratypes); venter reddish dark brown (visible only at abdominal ventrites due to dust-covering, but visible elsewhere in paratypes); antennae yellowish brown with club dark brown, palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture distinctly dual, consisting of suberect bristles from distinct lengths, easily discernible in high magnifications (>50×); ventral vestiture consisting of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>50×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by less than one puncture-width, with short decumbent bristle (0.01–0.02 mm) in each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge produced and elevated forming two subrounded plates.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, left antennae measured): 0.05, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.06, 0.07, 0.10 (FL 0.11 mm, CL 0.22 mm, CL/FL 2.05).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 90 ommatidia; GW 0.18 mm.
Gula 0.55× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 1(D)) with coarse, deep, single punctation, devoid of impunctate median line; punctures separated from each other by one puncture-width or less; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture distinctly dual, consisting of moderately long (~0.05 mm) and short (0.02–0.03 mm) suberect yellowish bristles; anterior edge produced and elevated forming two subtriangular plates; lateral edges crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners barely angulate.
Scutellar shield triangular, bearing few punctures and apparently glabrous; BW 0.11 mm; SL 0.09 mm.
Elytra with non-seriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 3× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one megapuncture-width or less; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture distinctly dual, consisting of moderately long (0.05–0.06 mm) and short (0.02–0.03 mm) suberect yellowish bristles, both arising from micropunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with fine, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing a fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process parallel-sided, relatively narrow, as long as prosternum at midline, apex truncate.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-third of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with fine, shallow punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about one-third the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with fine, shallow punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing a fine yellowish decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0,26, 0.12, 0.10, 0.10, 0.11; first abdominal ventrite devoid of sex patch.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 1(F–I)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 1(F)) with posterior margin rounded, bearing short setae at middle and long at corners; anterio×r portion membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 1(H)) 9.3× as long as wide; widest near apex; subparallel-sided; apex bilobed; apical portion membranous and rounded (
Figure 1(H)), black arrows); anterior portion subtriangular.
Basal piece (
Figure 1(G)) triangular, as wide as long.
Penis (
Figure 1(I)) 1.4× as long as tegmen, 8.9× as long as wide; subparallel-sided; three acute angulations at apex (
Figure 1(I), red arrows); shortly rounded emargination at anterior portion.
Females (
Figure 1(E)): Anterior edge of head barely emarginate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but without pronotal and head plates and protibial tooth.
Variation: Females, measurements in mm (n = 4): TL 1.75–2.00 (1.87 ± 0.12), PL 0.53–0.65 (0.60 ± 0.06), PW 0.73–0.85 (0.79 ± 0.07), EL 1.20–1.35 (1.27 ± 0.07), EW 0.85–0.98 (0.91 ± 0.06), GD 0.65–0.78 (0.72 ± 0.06). Ratios: PL/PW 0.70–0.79 (0.76 ± 0.04), EL/EW 1.37–1.41 (1.39 ± 0.02), EL/PL 2.00–2.33 (2.12 ± 0.14), GD/EW 0.76–0.80 (0.79 ± 0.02), TL/EW 2.00–2.09 (2.05 ± 0.04).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC, dissected) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Die Hel Nature Res., nr. Loskop Dam, 25°31’ S 29°48’ E, 10.viii.2008, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus Trametes sp., BF# 147\NATIONAL COLL.OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis bicaesariatus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 5 ♀♀ as follows: 3 ♀♀ (2 CELC; 1 SANC) same data as the holotype; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: LIMP, Otter’ S Den 16 Km from Hoedspruit, 24°24’ S 30°49’ E, 18.vii.2008, D. van Heerden\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus versicolor, BF# 136\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: NW, Castle Gorge, Magaliesberg, 25°49’ S 27°35’ E, 21.iv.2002, O.C. Neser\Adults emerged from bracket fungus Phaeolus schweinitzii, BF# 13\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis bicaesariatus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Phaeolus schweinitzii (Fr.) Pat. (Fomitopsidaceae), one record; Trametes sp., one record; Trametes versicolor (L.) Lloyd (Polyporaceae), one record.
Distribution: Ethiopian, known from northern Mpumalanga, southeastern Limpopo and northeastern North West (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 13).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. mandelai, C. mpumalangaensis sp. n., the invasive species Ceracis tabellifer (Mellié, 1849) and the parasitoid Astichus micans Neser 2012 (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae: Entiinae).
3.1.4. Cis bimucronatus Motschoulsky, 1851
Cis bimucronatus Motschoulsky 1851: 655 [
25]. Type locality: Port Natal, currently Republic of South Africa: KwaZulu-Natal Province, Durban.
Host fungi: Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from Durban (KwaZulu-Natal Province, Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
25]. There is no further record in the literature, as far as we have traced. The description of this species is anecdotal and the type has probably been lost. It is doubtfully included in the
neserorum group.
3.1.5. Cis caffer Fåhraeus, 1871
Cis caffer Fåhraeus 1851: 670 [
21]. Type locality: Caffraria (=Kaffraria), currently Republic of South Africa: Eastern Cape Province (no specific locality); Ferrer 1997: 408 [
24] {lectotype designation}.
Host fungi: Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from Eastern Cape Province (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
21]. There is no further record in the literature, as far as we have traced. This species is a member of the
neserorum group.
3.1.6. Cis capensis Mellié, 1849
Cis capensis Mellié 1849: 254 [
22]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Western Cape Province, Cape of Good Hope.
Host fungi: Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from Cape of Good Hope (Western Cape Province, Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
22]. There is no further record in the literature, as far as we have traced. This species is a member of the
fuscipes group and may be even a synonym of
C. fuscipes properly, a hypothesis that shall be evaluated after careful examination of the type of
C. capensis.
3.1.7. Cis chinensis Lawrence, 1991
Cis chinensis Lawrence 1991: 288 [
29]. Type locality: China (no specific locality); Madenjian et al. 1993: 47 [
30] {found in fungi imported from China to USA, not free-living}; Jinachai et al. 2002 [
31] {record from Thailand}; Buder et al. 2008: 171 [
4] {GenBank access numbers: FM877940, FM877793, FM877874}; Jelínek 2008: 56 [
32] {listed among Palearctic species}; Lopes-Andrade 2008: 36 [
7] {record from Brazil}; Rose 2009: 282 [
33] {record from France and La Réunion}; Reibnitz & Kunz 2011: 45 [
34] {record from Baden-Württemberg, Germany, and Hungary}; Reibnitz 2012 [
35] {distribution}; Rose 2012: 346 [
36] {host-fungi and record from Launaguet, France}; Diéguez Fernandéz 2013: 104 [
37] {record from Spain}; Rose 2014: 1 [
38] {record from France}; Amini et al. 2016 [
39] {record from Iran}; Lawrence 2016: 42 [
3] {redescription and record from Australia}; Rose & Zagatti 2016: 292, 302, 304–305 [
40] {host-fungi in France}; Németh et al. 2017: 28 [
41] {record from Budapest, Hungary}; Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2018: 503 [
13] {record from Republic of South Africa and Northern Mariana Islands}.
Cis multidentatus (Pic 1917)
sensu Lohse & Reibnitz 1991: 104 [
42] {reported from Italy and Germany}; Jelínek 2008: 57 [
32] {records from Italy and Germany}; Lopes-Andrade 2008: 42 [
7] {reported from Malta}; Shugran et al. 2018: 42 [
43] {reported from Iraq}.
Plesiocis sp.
sensu Yan et al. 1998 [
44] {record from Shandong province, China}.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the multidentatus group. It differs from C. paraliacus in bearing elytral punctation single and lateral pronotal edges barely to completely visible from above.
Host fungi:Agaricus sp. (Agaricaceae), one record [
42];
Coprinus sp. (Agaricaceae), one record [
42];
Daedaleopsis nitida (Durieu et Mout.) Zmitr. et Malysheva (Polyporaceae), one record [
37];
Fomitopsis pinicola (Sw.) P. Karst. (Fomitopsidaceae), one record [
37];
Ganoderma lucidum (Ganodermataceae), seven records as pest of commercial dried fungi [
3,
29,
30,
31,
32,
42];
Gloeophyllum abietinum (Bull.) P. Karst. (Gloeophyllaceae), one record [
37];
Lactarius sp. (Russulaceae), one record [
41];
Pleurotus ostreatus (Jacq.) P. Kumm. (Pleurotaceae), one record [
41];
Russula sp. (Russulaceae), one record [
41];
Schizophyllum commune Fr. (Schizophyllaceae), one breeding record [
7];
Trametes sp. (Polyporaceae), one breeding record [
42];
Trametes gibbosa (Pers.) Fr., one record [
40].
Distribution: Cosmopolitan. Known from east and southeast Asia, northeastern USA, southeastern Brazil, southern, western and eastern Europe, Caucasus, Western Indian Ocean and southern Africa (southern Western Cape, Republic of South Africa). Recorded as pest of the fungus
Ganoderma lucidum (known as Reishi in Japan and Ling Zhi in China) in east and Southeast Asia [
29,
30,
31] and Australia [
3].
Comments: This species was collected together with
C. pickeri and the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer [
13].
3.1.8. Cis delagoensis Pic, 1916
Cis delagoensis Pic 1916: 14 [
23]. Type locality: Mozambique: Delagoa Bay (=Maputo Bay).
Host fungi: Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from Maputo Bay (Mozambique).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
23]. There is no further record in the literature, as far as we have traced. There are identified specimens in the Natural History Museum (NHM) (pictures examined by us) from Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone and Uganda, but we are not sure they are conspecific. This species is a member of the
neserorum group.
3.1.9. Cis foveocephalus Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Type locality: “Mooihoek Farm” (near Wakkerstroom), coordinates 27°13’ S 30°32’ E (Pixley Ka Seme Local Municipality, Gert Sibande District, Mpumalanga Province).
Etymology: The species name is derived from the Latin noun “foveolae”, which means “small pit”, and the latinized Greek noun “kephale”, which means “head”, both in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the sex patch present on the head of males.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the pacificus group. It differs from all other southern African species of the pacificus group in males bearing a sex patch in vertex as well as in first abdominal ventrite.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 2(A–D)): Adult fully pigmented and in good conditions, except for lacking one leg, five tarsi and both antennae. Measurements in mm: TL 1.75, PL 0.60, PW 0.76, EL 1.15, EW 0.83, GD 0.62. Ratios: PL/PW 0.78, EL/EW 1.39, EL/PL 1.93, GD/EW 0.75, TL/EW 2.11.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum and venter reddish dark brown; palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of short suberect bristles, easily discernible in high magnifications (>50×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>50×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less, with short decumbent bristle (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; vertex bearing setose sex patch with transverse diameter of 0.06 mm; anterocephalic edge bearing two small triangular tubercles.
Antennae with ten antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, left antennae measured in a paratype): 0.05, 0.04, 0.05, 0.04, 0.03, 0.03, 0.02, 0.05, 0.05, 0.06 (FL 0.15 mm, CL 0.15 mm, CL/FL 1.00).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 60 ommatidia; GW 0.15 mm.
Gula 0.43× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 2(D)) with irregularly distributed, dual punctation, devoid of impunctate median line; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by two megapuncture-widths or less; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of short suberect yellowish bristles (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures; anterior edge rounded; lateral edges crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield triangular, bearing few punctures and few bristles; BW 0.07 mm; SL 0.06 mm.
Elytra with non-seriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by two megapuncture-widths or less; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture single, consisting of short suberect yellowish bristles (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing a fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave and barely carinate; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, about 0.9× as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-third of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about two-fifths the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing a fine decumbent yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.27, 0.11, 0.09, 0.08, 0.10; first abdominal ventrite bearing margined, circular, setose sex patch posterad of center, with transverse diameter of 0.05 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 2(F–I)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 2(F)) with posterior margin emarginate, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at acute corners; anterior portion membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 2(H)) 3.8× as long as wide, widest near apex; subparallel-sided but more or less sinuate; one rounded emargination in each side forming three lobes at apex, the lateral ones short and acute (
Figure 2(H), big black arrows) and the mid one long, somewhat arrow-shaped and covered by sensillae (
Figure 2(I), small black arrow); anterior portion triangular.
Basal piece (
Figure 2(G)) oval, 1.3× as long as wide.
Penis (
Figure 2(I)) 0.9× as long as tegmen, 5.3× as long as wide; subparallel-sided and bearing sensillae near to membranous apex; anterior portion rounded.
Females (
Figure 2(E)): Anterior edge of head truncate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of cephalic tubercles, abdominal and cephalic sex patch, and protibial tooth.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 9, including the holotype): TL 1.43–1.83 (1.65 ± 0.13), PL 0.48–0.65 (0.56 ± 0.06), PW 0.58–0.78 (0.67 ± 0.08), EL 0.95–1.23 (1.09 ± 0.08), EW 0.65–0.88 (0.76 ± 0.07), GD 0.48–0.62 (0.54 ± 0.05). Ratios: PL/PW 0.77–0.96 (0.83 ± 0.07), EL/EW 1.31–1.53 (1.44 ± 0.07), EL/PL 1.77–2.15 (1.58 ± 0.13), GD/EW 0.63–0.77 (0.71 ± 0.04), TL/EW 2.06–2.29 (2.17 ± 0.08). Females, measurements in mm (n = 6): TL 1.30–1.78 (1.61 ± 0.10), PL 0.50–0.55 (0.52 ± 0.02), PW 0.60–0.68 (0.64 ± 0.03), EL 1.00–1.23 (1.10 ± 0.08), EW 0.70–0.78 (0.76 ± 0.03), GD 0.58–0.63 (0.58 ± 0.02). Ratios: PL/PW 0.74–0.88 (0.81 ± 0.05), EL/EW 1.33–1.58 (1.45 ± 0.09), EL/PL 2.00–2.23 (2.12 ± 0.10), GD/EW 0.74–0.82 (0.77 ± 0.04), TL/EW 2.00–2.29 (2.13 ± 0.13).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008. O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Stereum ostrea, BF# 138\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis foveocephalus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 11 ♂♂ and 11 ♀♀ as follows: 6 ♂♂ (2 CELC, dissected; 4 SANC) and 4 ♀♀ (2 CELC; 2 SANC) same data as the holotype; 2 ♂♂ (1 CELC; 1 SANC) and 6 ♀♀ (2 CELC; 4 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus, BF# 107\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: NW, Groblerskloof, nr. Buffelspoort Dam, 25°51’ S 27°26’ E, 07.viii.2008, S. Neser\Ex bracket fungus Trametes cingulata, BF# 146”; 1 ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: NATAL, Cathedral Peak Forestry Area, 28°55’ S 29°14’ E, 10.xi.1981, SJv Tonder & C Kok \ NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: NW, Cave Kloof, Magaliesberg, nr. Bufflspoort Dam, 25°51’ S 27°26’ E, 24.vii.2008, S. Neser\Ex bracket fungus, BF# 103\Ex bracket fungus Ganoderma applanatum, BF# 103\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis foveocephalus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat., one record; Stereum ostrea (Blume & T. Nees) Fr., one breeding record; Tramates cingulata Berk., one record.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from southeastern Mpumalanga, northeastern North West and western KwaZulu-Natal (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 14).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. mpumalangaensis sp. n., C. tessariplacus sp. n., the invasive species Cer. tabellifer and the parasitoid A. naiadis Neser, 2012.
3.1.10. Cis fuscipes Mellié, 1849
Cis fuscipes Mellié 1849: 271, pl. 10, Figure 4(A) [
22]. Type locality: USA: Massachusetts, Boston; Lawrence 1967: 1–14 [
45] {synonyms, distribution and biology}; Lawrence 1971: 460 [
6] {distribution and host fungi at North America}; Jelínek 2008: 57 [
32] {listed among Paleartic species}; Lawrence 2016: 53 [
3] {redescription and record from Australia}; Lopes-Andrade et al. 2016: 347 [
46] {record from New Brunswick, Canada}.
Cis atripennis Mellié 1849: 258 [
22]; Lawrence 1967: 11 [
45] {synonym}.
Cis chevrolatii Mellié 1849: 249 [
22]; Lawrence 1967: 11 [
45] {synonym}.
Cis dubius Mellié 1849: 273 [
22]; Lawrence 1967: 11 [
45] {synonym}.
Cis carolinae Casey 1898: 78 [
47]; Lawrence 1967: 11 [
45] {synonym}.
Cis impressa Casey 1898: 79 [
47]; Lawrence 1967: 11 [
45] {synonym}.
Cis pallens Casey 1898: 78 [
47]; Lawrence 1967: 11 [
45] {synonym}.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the fuscipes group. It differs from C. capensis in males bearing truncate or weakly convex anterocephalic edge and anterior pronotal edge rounded, but only female C. fuscipes have been recorded from southern Africa. It differs from females of C. capensis in the anteriormost portion of head visible when see from above.
Additional material: 6 ♀♀ as follows: 5 ♀♀ (2 CELC, dissected; 3 SANC, one dissected) “SOUTH AFRICA WCape, Garden of Eden Indig. Forest, nr. Knysna, 34°02’ S 23°12’ E, 1.iii.1991, AJ Hendricks\Emerged from log on forest floor of Olea capensis macrocarpa OLEACEAE, UA679\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus, BF# 129\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus versicolor, BF# 129\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”. All additionally labeled “Cis fuscipes Mellié, 1849; I. Souza-Gonçalves & C. Lopes-Andrade det.”.
Host fungi:Bjerkandera adusta (Willd.) P. Kasrt. (Merulliaceae), one breeding record [
6];
Cerioporus squamosus (Huds.) Quél. (Polyporaceae), one breeding record [
6,
45];
Daedalea ambigua Berk. (Fomitopsidaceae), one record [
6];
Fomitopsis pinicola (Sw.) P. Karst., one record [
6];
Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat., one record [
6];
Ganoderma brownii (Murrill) Gilb. (Ganodermataceae), one breeding record [
6,
45];
Lenzites betulinus (L.) Fr. (Polyporaceae), 12 records, three being breeding records [
6];
Perenniporia fraxinophila (Peck) Ryvarden, one record [
6,
45];
Phellinus gilvus (Schwein.) Pat. (Hymenochaetaceae), one record [
45];
Poronidulus conchifer (Schwein.) Murrill (Polyporaceae), three records, two being breeding records [
6,
45];
Trametes hirsuta (Wulfen) Lloyd, 14 records, 10 being breeding records [
6,
45];
Trametes pubescens (Schumach.) Pilát (Polyporaceae), five records, one being breeding record [
6];
Trametes suaveolens (L.) Fr. (Polyporaceae), one record [
45];
Trametes subectypa (Murrill) Gilb. & Ryvarden (Polyporaceae), one record [
6];
Trametes versicolor (L.) Lloyd, 93 records, 48 being breeding records [
3,
6,
45].
Distribution: Cosmopolitan. Known from the Holarctic kingdom, widely distributed in North America. Females have been previpously recorded from Australia, Cuba, Hawaii, Madeira and New Zealand, where they were probably introduced [
3]. The additional material was collected in southeastern Mpumalanga and southern Western Cape (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 15).
Comments: This species was collected together with
C. mooihoekite,
C. neserorum,
C. parvisetosus sp. n.,
C. pickeri, the morphospecies
Cis sp. S,
Cis sp. Y and the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer in South Africa. Only females of
C. fuscipes were collected by the staff of SANC (
Figure 3(A–D)), suggesting that this species may be represented only by parthenogenetic populations in Republic of South Africa.
3.1.11. Cis grobbelaarae Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Type locality: “Die Hel Nature Reserve”, coordinates 25°31’ S 29°48’ E (near Loskop Dam, Mpumalanga Province).
Etymology: The new species is named in honor of the South African taxonomist Elizabeth Grobbelaar, who collected all paratypes from D’Nyala Nature Reserve. The species name is Latinized from “Grobbelaar” using the feminine suffix in the genitive singular (-ae).
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the comptus group. It differs from all other southern African species (except for C. makrosoma sp. n.) by the pattern of the dual elytral punctation, consisting of megapunctures forming more or less regular longitudinal rows, in-between rows filled with micropunctures bearing short bristles. It differs from C. makrosoma sp. n. in males with anterocephalic edge bearing small angulations, less elongated and more convex body, and a comparatively shorter and slightly tumid prosternum.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 4(A–D)): Adult fully pigmented and in good conditions. Measurements in mm: TL 1.78, PL 0.57, PW 0.71, EL 1.20, EW 0.82, GD 0.62. Ratios: PL/PW 0.80, EL/EW 1.46, EL/PL 2.10, GD/EW 0.75, TL/EW 2.16.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum and venter reddish dark brown; antennae, palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of moderately short suberect bristles, easily discernible in low magnifications (<50×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in low magnifications (<50×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less, with short decumbent bristle (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge with four small angulations (barely discernible).
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, left antennae measured): 0.07, 0.04, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.04, 0.04, 0.06 (FL 0.13 mm, CL 0.15 mm, CL/FL 1.10).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 60 ommatidia; GW 0.16 mm.
Gula 0.38× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 4(D)) with coarse, deep, single punctation, devoid of impunctate median line; punctures distributed irregularly, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of moderately short suberect yellowish bristles (0.03–0.04 mm); anterior edge rounded; lateral edges crenulate, explanate and completely visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield triangular, bearing few punctures and apparently glabrous; BW 0.14 mm; SL 0.08 mm.
Elytra with seriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one megapuncture-width or less, forming more or less longitudinal rows, in-between rows filled with micropunctures; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture single, consisting of moderately short suberect yellowish bristles (0.03–0.04 mm) arising from micropunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing a fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae slightly tumid; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-fourth of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about 0.5× the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing a fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.24, 0.10, 0.09, 0.09, 0.12; first abdominal ventrite bearing unmargined, small, almost glabrous, sex patch anterad of center, with transverse diameter of 0.04 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 4(F–I)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 4(F)) with the posterior margin barely emarginate, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at rounded corners; anterior portion membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 4(H)) 1.9× as long as wide, widest at apex; sides expanding from basal third to apex; apex with one deep emargination in each side and with acute angulations at corners (
Figure 4(H), black arrows); anterior portion rounded.
Basal piece (
Figure 4(G)) semicircular, 1.6× as wide as long.
Penis (
Figure 4(I)) 0.6× as long as tegmen, 3× as long as wide; sides expanding until basal two-thirds and then converging to apex; apical portion membranous and with sclerotization at middle, apex truncate (
Figure 4(I), red arrows); anterior portion with broadly rounded, deep emargination.
Females (
Figure 4(E)): Anterior edge of head truncate and edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of abdominal sex patch and protibial tooth.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 8, including the holotype): TL 1.38–1.93 (1.73 ± 0.17), PL 0.43–0.63 (0.56 ± 0.06), PW 0.60–0.80 (0.70 ± 0.06), EL 0.95–1.33 (1.18 ± 0.11), EW 0.68–0.88 (0.80 ± 0.07), GD 0.53–0.70 (0.59 ± 0.06). Ratios: PL/PW 0.71–0.86 (0.80 ± 0.06), EL/EW 1.41–1.65 (1.48 ± 0.08), EL/PL 2.00–2.29 (2.12 ± 0.10), GD/EW 0.69–0.90 (0.75 ± 0.07), TL/EW 2.03–2.45 (2.18 ± 0.14). In small males, the angulations at the anterocephalic edge are barely distinguishable. In large males, there are four angulations at the anterocephalic edge (two at corners and two at middle). Females, measurements in mm (n = 7): TL 1.68–2.08 (1.88 ± 0.14), PL 0.53–0.68 (0.60 ± 0.06), PW 0.65–0.85 (0.76 ± 0.07), EL 1.15–1.40 (1.28 ± 0.09), EW 0.75–0.95 (0.88 ± 0.28), GD 0.58–0.75 (0.67 ± 0.06). Ratios: PL/PW 0.74–0.81 (0.79 ± 0.03), EL/EW 1.39–1.53 (1.46 ± 0.06), EL/PL 1.92–2.33 (2.14 ± 0.07), GD/EW 0.72–0.79 (0.76 ± 0.02), TL/EW 2.03–2.23 (2.14 ± 0.07).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Die Hel Nature Res., nr. Loskop Dam, 25°31’ S 29°48’ E, 10.viii.2008, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex unidentified bracket fungus, BF# 122\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis grobbelaarae Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 22 ♂♂ and 14 ♀♀ as follows: 4 ♂♂ (1 CELC, dissected; 3 SANC) and 4 ♀♀ (1 CELC; 3 SANC) same data as the holotype; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Die Hel Nature Res., nr. Loskop Dam, 25°31’ S 29°48’ E, 10.viii.2008, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus Trametes meyenii, BF# 163\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 7 ♂♂ (2 CELC, one dissected; 5 SANC) and 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Die Hel Nature Res., nr. Loskop Dam, 25°31’ S 29°48’ E, 10.viii.2008, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus, BF# 120\Ex bracket fungus Coriolopsis polyzona, BF# 120\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 6 ♂♂ (2 CELC; 4 SANC) and 5 ♀♀ (2 CELC; 3 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Die Hel Nature Res., nr. Loskop Dam, 25°31’ S 29°48’ E, 10.viii.2008, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus, BF# 119\Ex bracket fungus Trametes sp., BF# 119\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 4 ♂♂ (2 CELC, one dissected; 2 SANC) and 3 ♀♀ (1 CELC; 2 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: TvL, D’Nyala Nature Res., near Ellisras, 23.45S 27.49E, 850 m, 29.ix.1989, E. Grobbelaar\Collected from bracket fungus body\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, S. Afr.”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis grobbelaarae Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Trametes sp. (Polyporaceae), one record; Trametes meyenii (Klotzsch) Lloyd (Polyporaceae), one record; Trametes polyzona (Pers.) Ryvarden (Polyporaceae), one record.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from northern Mpumalanga and northwestern Limpopo (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 14).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. neserorum, C. makebae, C. masekelai, C. mandelai, C. mooihoekite, the morphospecies Cis sp. Y, the invasive species Cer. tabellifer and the parasitoid A. micans.
3.1.12. Cis lacinipennis Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Type locality: “Strathedene Farm” (near Nottingham Road), coordinates 29°21’ S 30°01’ E (uMngeni Local Municipality, uMgungundlovu District, KwaZulu-Natal Province).
Etymology: The species name derives from the Latin noun “lacina”, which means “flap”, and “penis”, both in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the shape of the penis of this species, which bears a flap in each side of base.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the westerncapensis group. It differs from C. westerncapensis sp. n. in bearing slightly shorter and seriate vestiture (0.02–0.03 mm), darker dorsal coloration and a comparatively narrower body.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 5(A–D)): Adult fully pigmented and in good conditions, except for lacking one tarsus. Measurements in mm: TL 1.25, PL 0.40, PW 0.50, EL 0.85, EW 0.56, GD 0.48. Ratios: PL/PW 0.81, EL/EW 1.53, EL/PL 2.11, GD/EW 0.86, TL/EW 2.26.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum and venter reddish dark brown; antennae yellowish brown with club dark brown, palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of moderately short suberect bristles, easily discernible in high magnifications (>75×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>75×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less, with decumbent (~0.02 mm) minute bristle arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge truncate.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, left antennae measured): 0.05, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.03, 0.03, 0.04 (FL 0.10 mm, CL 0.11 mm, CL/FL 1.07).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 50 ommatidia; GW 0.11 mm.
Gula 0.46× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 5(D)) with irregularly distributed, dual punctation bearing an impunctate median line beginning around three punctures-width of base until disc; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one megapuncture-width or less; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of moderately short suberect yellowish bristles (0.02–0.03 mm) arising from megapunctures; anterior edge rounded; lateral edges barely crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield triangular, bearing few punctures and few bristles; BW 0.07 mm; SL 0.05 mm.
Elytra with subseriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by two megapuncture-widths or less; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture seriate, single, consisting of moderately short suberect yellowish bristles (0.02–0.03 mm) arising from megapunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing one fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave and barely carinate; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, about 0.9× as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-fourth of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about one-third the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing one fine decumbent yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.18, 0.07, 0.05, 0.06, 0.08; first abdominal ventrite bearing unmargined, large, circular setose sex patch at middle, with transverse diameter of 0.07 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 5(F–H)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 5(F)) with posterior margin barely emarginate, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at subacute corners; anterior portion membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 5(G)) 1.7× as long as wide, widest at apical third; sides expanding from basal third to apex; apex with rounded emargination and two small tubercles at middle (
Figure 5(G), black arrows); anterior portion triangular.
Penis (
Figure 5(H)) as long as tegmen, 2.4× as long as wide; subparallel-sided; apex rounded; flaps (
Figure 5(H), red arrows) and rounded emargination at anterior portion.
Females (
Figure 5(36)): Anterior edge of head truncate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of abdominal sex patch and protibial tooth.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 12, including the holotype): TL 1.15–1.38 (1.29 ± 0.07), PL 0.38–0.45 (0.41 ± 0.02), PW 0.43–0.53 (0.48 ± 0.04), EL 0.78–0.95 (0.88 ± 0.09), EW 0.50–0.63 (0.58 ± 0.04), GD 0.40–0.53 (0.47 ± 0.04). Ratios: PL/PW 0.80–0.94 (0.85 ± 0.04), EL/EW 1.41–1.71 (1.54 ± 0.11), EL/PL 2.06–2.40 (2.18 ± 0.12), GD/EW 0.73–0.95 (0.82 ± 0.06), TL/EW 2.09–2.50 (2.25 ± 0.14). Females, measurements in mm (n = 11): TL 1.15–1.50 (1.32 ± 0.11), PL 0.38–0.50 (0.42 ± 0.04), PW 0.45–0.65 (0.51 ± 0.06), EL 0.78–1.00 (0.90 ± 0.07), EW 0.55–0.70 (0.61 ± 0.05), GD 0.45–0.58 (0.51 ± 0.04). Ratios: PL/PW 0.75–0.89 (0.83 ± 0.04), EL/EW 1.35–1.59 (1.47 ± 0.07), EL/PL 2.00–2.33 (2.14 ± 0.13), GD/EW 0.78–0.91 (0.84 ± 0.04), TL/EW 2.00–2.27 (2.16 ± 0.08).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: KZN, Strathdene Farm, nr. Nottingham Rd., 29°21’ S 30°01’ E, 13.vii.2008, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, BF# 124\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis lacinipennis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 18 ♂♂ and 19 ♀♀ as follows: 8 ♂♂ (3 CELC, 2 dissected; 5 SANC) and 12 ♀♀ (4 CELC; 8 SANC) same data as the holotype; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (SANC) “Grootvadersbos, J.K. Grobler, 22.8.1956, Ac.X.846 \ NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, S. Afr.”; 5 ♂♂ (1 CELC, dissected; 4 ANIC) and 2 ♀♀ (1 CELC; 1 ANIC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 Km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.79, S. & J. Peck \ Ber 28, 29.XII.79, Podocarp forest rotted wood w/fungi, 1500 m”; 2 ♂♂ and 1 ♀ (ANIC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 Km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.79, S. & J. Peck\Ber 5, 14.XII.79, Podocarp forest rotted wood, bark, fungi, 1500 m”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (CELC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 Km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.79, S. & J. Peck\Ber 6, 15.XII.79, Podocarp forest litter, mossy, boulder bases, 1500m”; 1 ♀ (1 ANIC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.79, S. & J. Peck\Ber 1, 10.XII.79, sifted moss, Podocarp forest, 1500m”; 1 ♀ (ANIC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.79, S. & J. Peck\Rainbow Gorge, Podocarp For., 1500 m, malaise traps 8, 13.XII.79”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis lacinipennis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi: Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from western KwaZulu-Natal and northern Free State (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 13).
Comments. This species was collected together with the invasive species Cer. tabellifer.
3.1.13. Cis makebae Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2017
Cis makebae Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017: 341 [
11]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Limpopo Province, Sekororo Kloof.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species of the nesesorum group (except for C. afer, C. aster, C. bicaesariatus sp. n., C. caffer and C. masekelai) in males being devoid of concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis makebae differs from C. afer, C. aster, C. bicaesariatus sp. n. and C. caffer in males bearing comparatively shorter anterocephalic and pronotal plates.
Host fungi:Trametes cingulata Berk. (Polyporaceae), two breeding records (Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017).
Distribution. Ethiopian. Known from northeastern KwaZulu-Natal and southeastern Limpopo (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
11]. This species was collected together with
C. grobbelaarae sp. n.,
C. makrosoma sp. n.,
C. mandelai and the parasitoid
A. micans [
11].
3.1.14. Cis makrosoma Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Cis sp. G and
Cis sp. O in Neser [
9].
Type locality: “Nelspruit”, coordinates 25°29’ S 30°59’ E (Mbombela Municipality, Ehlanzeni District, Mpumalanga Province).
Etymology: The species name derives from the Greek adjective “makros”, which means “long”, and the Greek noun “soma”, which means “body”, both in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the body shape of this species.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the makrosoma group. It differs from all other southern African species (except for C. grobbelaarae sp. n.) by the pattern of the dual elytral punctation, consisting of megapunctures forming more or less regular longitudinal rows, in-between rows filled with micropunctures bearing short bristles. It differs from C. grobbelaarae sp. n. in males with anterocephalic edge truncate, a very elongated and flattened body, and moderately long and flattened prosternum.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 6(A–D)): Adult fully pigmented and in good conditions, except for lacking the left antenna and four legs. Measurements in mm: TL 1.88, PL 0.64, PW 0.74, EL 1.24, EW 0.78, GD 0.52. Ratios: PL/PW 0.87, EL/EW 1.59, EL/PL 1.92, GD/EW 0.66, TL/EW 2.41.
Body very elongate, flattened, dorsum and venter reddish dark brown; antennae, palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of short suberect bristles, easily discernible in low magnifications (<50×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae, easily discernible in low magnifications (<50×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less, with decumbent minute bristle (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge truncate.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, right antennae measured): 0.05, 0.05, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.04, 0.04, 0.05 (FL 0.13 mm, CL 0.12 mm, CL/FL 0.95).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 60 ommatidia; GW 0.15 mm.
Gula 0.44× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 6(D)) with coarse, deep, single punctation, bearing an impunctate median line beginning around four puncture-widths of base until disc; punctures distributed irregularly, separated from each other by one to two puncture-widths; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of suberect yellowish short bristles (~0.01 mm); anterior edge rounded; lateral edges crenulate, barely explanate and completely visible when seen from above; anterior corners barely angulate.
Scutellar shield subtriangular, bearing few punctures and few bristles; BW 0.12 mm; SL 0.06 mm.
Elytra with seriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one megapuncture-width or less, forming more or less longitudinal rows, in-between rows filled with micropunctures; interspaces, smooth and shiny; vestiture single, consisting of short suberect yellowish bristles (~0.01 mm) arising from micropunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing one fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae flattened, moderately long; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, about 0.9× as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-third of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about one-third the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing one fine decumbent yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.33, 0.11, 0.10. 0.08, 0.11; first abdominal ventrite bearing a margined, large, circular, setose sex patch at center, with transverse diameter of 0.07 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 6(F–H)) with
sternite VIII (laid in bad position during dissection and not shown in figures) with posterior margin almost straight, bearing short setae at middle and long at rounded corners; anterior portion membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 6(G)) 2.0× as long as wide, widest at apical third; sides expanding to apical third; one shallow emargination in each side at apex, forming acute angulation (
Figure 6(G), small black arrows) and with rounded corners (
Figure 6(G), big black arrows); anterior portion subtriangular.
Basal piece (
Figure 6(F)) semicircular, 1.6× as wide as long.
Penis (
Figure 6(H)) 0.6× as long as tegmen, 3.0× as long as wide; subparallel-sided; apex rounded and with one excavation in each side (
Figure 6(H), red arrows); shortly rounded emargination at anterior portion.
Females (
Figure 6(E)): Tenerals. Anterior edge of head truncate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of abdominal sex patch and protibial tooth.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 4, including the holotype): TL 1.89–1.92 (1.77 ± 0.21), PL 0.49–0.66 (0.59 ± 0.08), PW 0.57–0.74 (0.68 ± 0.08), EL 0.96–1.27 (1.17 ± 0.14), EW 0.68–0.79 (0.75 ± 0.05), GD 0.41–0.54 (0.50 ± 0.06). Ratios: PL/PW 0.86–0.89 (0.87 ± 0.01), EL/EW 1.42–1.66 (1.57 ± 0.10), EL/PL 1.92–2.08 (1.98 ± 0.07), GD/EW 0.61–0.73 (0.67 ± 0.05), TL/EW 2.15–2.46 (2.36 ± 0.15). Females, measurements in mm (n = 3): TL 1.55–1.73 (1.63 ± 0.09), PL 0.53–0.68 (0.59 ± 0.08), PW 0.60–0.65 (0.63 ± 0.03), EL 0.98–1.10 (1.04 ± 0.06), EW 0.65–0.68 (0.67 ± 0.01), GD 0.43–0.48 (0.45 ± 0.03). Ratios: PL/PW 0.81–1.08 (0.95 ± 0.14), EL/EW 1.50–1.63 (1.56 ± 0.07), EL/PL 1.56–2.10 (1.78 ± 0.20), GD/EW 0.65–0.70 (0.67 ± 0.03), TL/EW 2.38–2.56 (2.45 ± 0.09).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Nelspruit, 25°29’ S 30°59’ E, 14.viii.2009, D. van Heerden\Ex bracket fungus, #178, on Acacia sieberiana var. woodii\Ex bracket fungus Trametes sp., BF# 178\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, S. Afr.\Cis makrosoma Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 3 ♂♂ and 3 ♀♀ as follows: 2 ♂♂ (1 CELC, dissected; 1 SANC) same data as the holotype; 1 ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: LIMP, Sekororo Kloof nr. Penge, 24°25’ S 30°27’ E, 27.vii.2008, S. Neser\Ex bracket fungus Trametes cingulata, BF# 155\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 3 ♀♀ (1 CELC; 2 SANC) “N.K. Wildtuin, G.A. Hepburn, 24.3.1960, Ac.X.950\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, S. Afr.”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis makrosoma Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Trametes sp., one record; Trametes cingulata Berk. (Polyporaceae), one record.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern Mpumalanga and southeastern Limpopo (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 13).
Comments: This species was collected with C. makebae, C. mandelai, C. urbanae, the invasive species Cer. tabellifer and the parasitoid A. micans.
3.1.15. Cis mandelai Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2017
Cis mandelai Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017: 344 [
11]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: North Western Province, Marethwane.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species of the neserorum group (except for C. neserorum, C. stalsi, C. testaceus, and C. urbanae) in males bearing a concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis mandelai differs from C. neserorum and C. stalsi by its prosternal process, which is conspicuously narrow near the base and gradually expanded to a rounded apex. It differs from C. urbanae in the less robust body and males with comparatively shorter pronotal plates; and from C. testaceus in bearing head covered by pronotum when seen from above and comparatively shorter pronotal plates with straight sides.
Host fungi:Ganoderma sp. (Ganodermataceae), one breeding record.
Trametes sp. one breeding record; and
Trametes cingulate Berk., one breeding record [
11].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern North West, western Gauteng, eastern Mpumalanga and northern Limpopo (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
11]. It was collected together with
C. bicaesariatus sp. n.,
C. grobelaarae sp. n.,
C. makebae,
C. paraliacus,
C. parvisetosus sp. n.,
C. neserorum,
C. westerncapensis sp. n., the morphospecies
Cis sp. Y and
Orthocis sp. A, the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer and the parasitoid
A. micans [
11].
3.1.16. Cis masekelai Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2017
Cis masekelai Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017: 347 [
11]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Mpumalanga Province, Die Hel Nature Reserve.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species of the neserorum group (except for C. afer, C. aster, C. bicaesariatus sp. n., C. caffer and C. makebae) in males being devoid of concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis masekelai differs from C. afer, C. aster, C. bicaesariatus sp. n., C. caffer and C. makebae in males with anterior pronotal edge with a shallow emargination forming two very close short projections.
Host fungi:Trametes meyenii (Klotzsch) Lloyd, two record, one being a breeding record [
11].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern North West, northern Limpopo and eastern Mpumalanga (Republic of South Africa) [
11].
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
10]. The records provided here (Figure 15) are corrections for that provided by Souza-Gonçalves and Lopes-Andrade [
11]. In that paper, the authors cited one recorded as 25°45’ S 27°49’ E instead of 23°45’ S 27°49’ E (
lapsus calami), here represented by the northernmost record (Figure 15). This species was collected together with
C. neserorum and the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer. 3.1.17. Cis mpumalangaensis Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Cis sp. Q and
Cis sp. N (in part) in Neser [
9].
Type locality: “Mooihoek Farm” (near Wakkerstroom), coordinates 27°13’ S 30°32’ E (Pixley Ka Seme Local Municipality, Gert Sibande District, Mpumalanga Province).
Etymology: The species name is Latinized from “Mpumalanga” in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the Mpumalanga Province, the province where the holotype and most part of the paratypes were collected.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the pacificus group. It differs from C. foveocephalus sp. n. in males being devoid of a vertexal sex patch; from C. parvisetosus sp. n. in the comparatively thicker and denser vestiture, as well as longer and more acute anterocephalic plates; and from C. umlalaziensis sp. n. in the non-subseriate elytral vestiture.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 7(A–D)): Adult fully pigmented and in good conditions, except for lacking one tarsus. Measurements in mm: TL 1.47, PL 0.49, PW 0.63, EL 0.98, EW 0.69, GD 0.56. Ratios: PL/PW 0.78, EL/EW 1.42, EL/PL 2.01, GD/EW 0.81, TL/EW 2.13.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum and venter reddish dark brown; antennae, palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of short suberect bristles, easily discernible in high magnifications (>65×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>65×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse, deep punctures, separated from each other by less than one puncture-width, with decumbent minute bristles (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge produced and elevated forming two subtriangular plates.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, left antennae measured): 0.05, 0.04, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.01, 0.01, 0.03, 0.04, 0.05 (FL 0.11 mm, CL 0.12 mm, CL/FL 1.14).
Eyes coarsely facetted; with about 50 ommatidia; GW 0.13 mm.
Gula 0.46× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 7(D)) with irregularly distributed, dual punctation, bearing an impunctate median line beginning about four puncture-widths of base until disc; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one megapuncture-width or less; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of short suberect yellowish bristles (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures; anterior edge rounded; lateral edges not crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield pentagonal, bearing few punctures and few bristles; BW 0.10 mm; SL 0.05 mm.
Elytra with non-seriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by two puncture-widths or less; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture single, consisting of short suberect yellowish bristles (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing one fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave and barely carinate; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, about 0.8× as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-third of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about one-fourth the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing one fine decumbent yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.22, 0.08, 0.07, 0.07, 0.08; first abdominal ventrite bearing a margined, circular, setose sex patch at middle, with transverse diameter of 0.05 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 7(F–I)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 7(F)) with posterior margin almost straight, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at rounded corners; anterior portion membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 7(H)) 1.9× as long as wide, widest at apex; sides expanding from basal third to apex; apex with deep V-shaped emargination forming slender lateral struts curved to middle (
Figure 7(H), black arrows).
Basal piece (
Figure 7(G)) subtriangular, 1.4× as wide as long.
Penis (
Figure 7(I)) as long as tegmen, 4.6 as long as wide; subcylindrical, subparallel-sided and converging to triangular apex; anterior portion rounded.
Females (
Figure 7(E)): Anterior edge of head truncate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of head plates, abdominal sex patch and protibial tooth.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 5, including the holotype): TL 1.20–1.53 (1.41 ± 0.13), PL 0.40–0.49 (0.47 ± 0.04), PW 0.50–0.63 (0.58 ± 0.05), EL 0.80–1.05 (0.95 ± 0.09), EW 0.60–0.73 (0.67 ± 0.05), GD 0.50–0.56 (0.53 ± 0.02). Ratios: PL/PW 0.78–0.83 (0.81 ± 0.02), EL/EW 1.33–1.46 (1.41 ± 0.05), EL/PL 2.00–2.10 (2.02 ± 0.04), GD/EW 0.76–0.83 (0.80 ± 0.03), TL/EW 2.00–2.19 (2.11 ± 0.07). Females, measurements in mm (n = 8): TL 1.13–1.45 (1.37 ± 0.12), PL 0.38–0.48 (0.43 ± 0.04), PW 0.45–0.63 (0.54 ± 0.06), EL 0.75–1.00 (0.93 ± 0.08), EW 0.55–0.70 (0.64 ± 0.05), GD 0.43–0.55 (0.51 ± 0.04). Ratios: PL/PW 0.75–0.90 (0.81 ± 0.05), EL/EW 1.36–1.56 (1.45 ± 0.06), EL/PL 2.00–2.33 (2.15 ± 0.13), GD/EW 0.68–0.84 (0.80 ± 0.05), TL/EW 2.05–2.28 (2.13 ± 0.08).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus versicolor, BF# 135\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis mpumalangaensis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 40 ♂♂ and 32 ♀♀ as follows: 13 ♂♂ (4 CELC, one dissected; 9 SANC) and 15 ♀♀ (5 CELC; 10 SANC) same data as the holotype; 11 ♂♂ (4 CELC, one dissected; 7 SANC) and 5 ♀♀ (3 CELC, one dissected; 2 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Thelephora sp., BF# 125\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ and 2 ♀♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus BF# 107\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 4 ♂♂ (2 CELC; 2 SANC) and 8 ♀♀ (3 CELC; 5 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus versicolor, BF# 140\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 7 ♂♂ (3 CELC; 4 SANC) and 6 ♀♀ (2 CELC; 4 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Stereum ostrea, BF# 138\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 2 ♂♂ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Stereum ostrea, BF# 90\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket unidentified fungus, BF# 168\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 2 ♀♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Trametes sp., BF# 113\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Ganoderma applanatum, BF# 139\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 2 ♀♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: LIMP, Blouberg Mt. NW Polokwane, 23°04’ S 29°00’ E, 27.iv.2007, OC Neser\Adults ex bracket fungus on fallen trunk\Ex bracket fungus Trametes sp., BF# 34\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: LIMP, Otter’ S Dan 16 Km from Hoedspruit, 24°24’ S 30°49’ E, 18.vii.2008, D. van Heerden\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus versicolor, BF# 136\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Alkmaar W Nelspruit, 25°27’ S 30°50’ E, 10.ii.2008\OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus Trametes versicolor, BF# 45\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis mpumalangaensis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat., one record; Stereum ostrea (Blume & T. Nees) Fr., two records, one being breeding record; Thelephora sp. (Thelephoraceae), one breeding record; Trametes sp., two records (obs.: we are not sure whether these correspond to a single fungus species or several unidentified Trametes); Trametes versicolor (L.) Lloyd, four records, two being breeding records.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern and southeastern Mpumalanga, northern and southeastern Limpopo (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 13).
Comments: This species was collected with C. bicaesariatus sp. n., C. foveocephalus sp. n., C. neseroum, C. mooihoekite, C. tessariplacus sp. n., Xylographus madagascariensis Mellié, 1849, Scydmaeninae sp., the invasive species Cer. tabellifer, and the parasitoids A. gracilis Neser, 2012, A. micans and A. silvani Neser, 2012.
3.1.18. Cis mooihoekite Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2018
Cis mooihoekite Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2018: 27 [
12]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Mpumalanga Province, Mooihoek Farm.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the bilamellatus group. It differs from C. pickeri in the TL less than 1.30 mm; pronotum devoid of a median impunctate line; anterocephalic edge in male with acute corners and pronotal plate angularly emarginate forming two small and triangular corners with acute apex; and male abdominal sex patch about one-quarter the length of the first ventrite at midline.
Host fungi:Thelephora sp., one record; and
Trametes versicolor (L.) Lloyd, two records [
12].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from northern and southern Mpumalanga (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
12]. This species was collected together with
C. grobbelaarae sp. n.,
X. madagascariensis, the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer and the parasitoids
A. micans and
A. silvani.
3.1.19. Cis muriceus Mellié, 1849
Cis muriceus Mellié 1849: 348 [
22]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Western Cape Province, Cape of Good Hope.
Host fungi. Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from Cape of Good Hope (Western Cape Province, Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
22]. There is no further record in the literature, as far as we have traced. We cannot place it in any group at this moment.
3.1.20. Cis neserorum Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2017
Cis neserorum Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017: 349 [
11]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Limpopo Province, Wesfalia Estate.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species of the neserorum group (except for C. mandelai, C. stalsi, C. testaceus, and C. urbanae) in males bearing a concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis neserorum differs from C. mandelai, C. stalsi and C. urbanae in males with first abdominal ventrite devoid of a sex patch. It differs from C. testaceus in possessing comparatively shorter and closer pronotal plates.
Additional material: 3 ♂♂ and 3 ♀♀ as follows: 1 ♂ (ANIC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 Km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.74, S. & J. Peck\Ber 28, 29.XII.79, Podocarp forest, rotted wood w/ fungi, 1500m”; 2 ♂♂ and 2 ♀♀ (ANIC) “NATAL, A. JANSE\J.F. Lawrence Lot.2008\ex Polyporus sanguineus\ex U.S.D.A. Herbaria”; 1 ♀ (CUIC) “Port St. Johns, U. S. AFR., Mar.6-8.1949, J.C. Bradley\CU [salmon paper]”. All additionally labeled “Cis neserorum Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade, 2017, I. Souza-Gonçalves det.”
Host fungi:Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat., one record;
Lenzites elegans (Spreng.) Pat. (Polyporaceae), six breeding records;
Pycnoporus sanguineus (L.) Murrill (Polyporaceae), ten records, eight being breeding records;
Stereum ostrea (Blume & T. Nees) Fr. (Steraceae), one breeding record;
Trametes sp., six records, three being breeding records (obs.: we are not sure whether these correspond to a single fungus species or several unidentified
Trametes);
Trametes hirsuta (Wulfen) Lloyd, four records, three being breeding records;
Trametes meyenii (Klotzsch) Lloyd, two breeding records;
Trametes polyzona (Pers.) Justo, four records, three of which are breeding records;
Trametes versicolor (L.) Lloyd, seven records, six being breeding records;
Thelephora sp., one breeding record [
11].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from many localities in Republic of South Africa [
11]. The species is the largest distributed among
Cis species in southern and South Africa [
11]. The additional material was collected in western and southern KwaZulu-Natal (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 15).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. chinensis, C. grobbelaarae sp. n., C. fuscipes, C. mandelai, C. masekelai, C. mooihoekite, C. mpumalangaensis sp. n., C. parvisetosus sp. n., C. pickeri, C. stalsi, C. westerncapensis sp. n., the morphospecies Cis sp. S, Cis sp. Y, Orthocis sp. A, X. madagascariensis, the invasive species Cer. tabellifer and the parasitoids A. micans, A. gracilis and A. silvani.
3.1.21. Cis paraliacus Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2018
Cis paraliacus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2018: 510 [
13]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: KwaZulu-Natal Province, Umlalazi Nature Reserve.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the multidentatus group. It differs from C. chinensis in bearing elytral punctation dual and lateral protonal edges not visible from above.
Host fungi:Trametes hirsuta (Wulfen) Lloyd, one breeding record [
13].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern and southeastern KwaZulu-Natal (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
13]. This species was collected together with
C. mandelai,
C. umlalaziensis sp. n., the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer, the tenebrionid
Pentaphyllus fronticornis Gebien, 1910, and the parasitoid
A. micans [
13].
3.1.22. Cis parvisetosus Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Cis sp. M and
Cis sp. N in Neser [
9].
Type locality: “Monk’ S Cowl Foothills” (Champagne Castle), coordinates 29°03’ S 29°23’ E (Drakensberg range, KwaZulu-Natal Province).
Etymology: The species name derives from the Latin adjectives “parvus”, which means “small”, and “setosum”, which means “setose”, both in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the short vestiture of this species.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the pacificus group. It differs from C. foveocephalus sp. n. in males being devoid of a vertexal sex patch; from C. mpumalangaensis sp. n. in the comparatively thinner and sparser vestiture, and comparatively shorter and less acute anterocephalic plates; and from C. umlalaziensis sp. n. in the non-subseriate and comparatively thinner elytral vestiture.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 8(A–D)): Adult fully pigmented and in good conditions, except for lacking two tarsi and both antennae. Measurements in mm: TL 1.34, PL 0.46, PW 0.58, EL 0.88, EW 0.65, GD 0.51. Ratios: PL/PW 0.80, EL/EW 1.35, EL/PL 1.89, GD/EW 0.79, TL/EW 2.07.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum and venter reddish dark brown; palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of minute suberect setae, easily discernible in high magnifications (>80×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>80×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less, with suberect minute seta (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic produced and slightly elevated forming two subtriangular.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, left antennae measured in a paratype): 0.06, 0.05, 0.03, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.01, 0.03, 0.03, 0.06 (FL 0.13 mm, CL 0.12 mm, CL/FL 0.95).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 60 ommatidia; GW 0.13 mm.
Gula 0.55× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 8(D)) with irregularly distributed, dual punctation, bearing an impunctate median line beginning five puncture-widths of base until disc; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one megapuncture-width or less; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of minute suberect pale yellowish setae (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures; anterior edge rounded; lateral edges not crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield triangular, bearing few punctures and apparently glabrous; BW 0.09 mm; SL 0.08 mm.
Elytra with non-seriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by two megapuncture-widths or less; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture single, consisting of minute suberect pale yellowish setae (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, deep punctation; each puncture bearing a fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave and barely carinate; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, about 0.9× as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-fourth of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle rounded.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about one-fifth the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing one fine decumbent pale yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.23, 0.08, 0.08, 0.08, 0.09; first abdominal ventrite bearing margined, circular, setose sex patch at middle, with transverse diameter of 0.05 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 8(F–I)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 8(F)) with posterior margin almost straight, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at rounded corners.
Tegmen (
Figure 8(H)) 1.4× as long as wide, widest at apex; sides expanding from basal third to apex; apex with shallow V-shaped emargination; corners rounded (
Figure 8(H), black arrows); anterior portion subtriangular.
Basal piece (
Figure 8(G)) subhexagonal, 2.8× as long as wide.
Penis (
Figure 8(I)) 1.1× as long as tegmen, 4.0× as long as wide; subcylindrical, subparallel-sided and converging to subtriangular apex; anterior portion rounded.
Females (
Figure 8(E)): Anterior edge of head truncate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of abdominal sex patch.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 9, including the holotype): TL 0.91–1.50 (1.26 ± 0.17), PL 0.31–0.50 (0.42 ± 0.06), PW 0.38–0.60 (0.52 ± 0.07), EL 0.60–1.00 (0.84 ± 0.12), EW 0.43–0.70 (0.59 ± 0.08), GD 0.33–0.53 (0.46 ± 0.06). Ratios: PL/PW 0.79–0.90 (0.82 ± 0.03), EL/EW 1.35–1.56 (1.43 ± 0.06), EL/PL 1.84–2.06 (1.98 ± 0.07), GD/EW 0.65–0.90 (0.79 ± 0.07), TL/EW 2.07–2.33 (2.15 ± 0.08). In some populations, the cephalic plates are smaller than than those of males from the type locality (
Figure 9(F)) or absent (
Figure 9(A)). Some differences are also noted in aedeagus from different populations, principally in size of tegmen and shape of basal piece (
Figure 9(B–E,G–J)). Females, measurements in mm (n = 16): TL 0.85–1.53 (1.23 ± 0.17), PL 0.30–0.48 (0.41 ± 0.05), PW 0.30–0.48 (0.41 ± 0.05), EL 0.35–0.58 (0.49 ± 0.06), EW 0.55–1.05 (0.82 ± 0.12), GD 0.40–0.70 (0.57 ± 0.08). Ratios: PL/PW 0.75–0.94 (0.84 ± 0.05), EL/EW 1.31–1.52 (1.43 ± 0.06), EL/PL 1.83–2.27 (2.02 ± 0.11), GD/EW 0.65–0.86 (0.79 ± 0.05), TL/EW 1.96–2.26 (2.15 ± 0.08).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: KZN, Monk’ S Cowl Foothills Drakensberg, 29°03’ S 29°23’ E, 24.iii.2008, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus on fallen log, BF# 64\Ex bracket fungus Hymenochaete ochromarginata, BF# 64\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis parvisetosus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 8 ♂♂ and 20 ♀♀ as follows: 1 ♂ (CELC, dissected) and 2 ♀♀ (1 CELC; 1 SANC) same data as the holotype; 1 ♂ and 2 ♀♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Garden of Eden Indig. Forest, nr. Knysna, 34°02’ S 23°12’ E, 1.iii.1991, AJ Hendricks\Emerged from log of Nuxia floribunda BUDDLEJACEAE, UA677B\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Groenkop Indigenous For., near George, 33°56’ S 22°31’ E, 22.iii.1991, AJ Hendricks\Emerged from dead branches of living tree of Olinia ventosa OLINIACEAE, UA703\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Groenkop Indigenous For., near George, 33°56’ S 22°31’ E, 25.iii.1991, AJ Hendricks\Emerged from dead branches of living tree Rhus chiruadensis ANACARDIACEAE, UA717\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Heatherlands, George, 33°57’ S 22°27’ E, 11.iv.1990, AJ Urban\Emerged from Dais cotinifolia THYMELAEACEAE, with fruiting body of fungus ?Lenzites, UA601\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ (CELC, dissected) and 4 ♀♀ (2 CELC; 2 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Prince Alfred’ S Pass N of Knysna, 33°58’ S 23°09’ E, 5.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus #215 on fallen tree trunk\Ex bracket fungus Fomitopsis lilacino-gilva, BF# 215\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Prince Alfred’ S Pass N of Knysna, 33°58’ S 23°09’ E, 5.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus versicolor, BF# 123\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 3 ♀♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #208 on fallen tree trunk\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 2 ♂♂ (1 CELC, dissected; 1 SANC) and 3 ♀♀ (1 CELC; 2 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: KZN, Mpisini Nature Res., 30°12’ S 30°48’ E, 9.vii.2008, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus Funalia sp., BF# 110\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #201 on fallen tree trunk\Ex bracket fungus Ganoderma applanatum, BF# 201\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 2 ♀♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S. & O.C. Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #210 on fallen tree trunk\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus hirsutus, BF# 210\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis parvisetosus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Funalia sp. (Polyporaceae), one record; Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat., one record; Hymenochaete ochromarginata P.H.B. Talbot (Hymenochaetaceae), one record; Trametes hirsuta (Wulfen) Lloyd, one record; Trametes versicolor (L.) Lloyd, one record; Rhodofomitopsis lilacinogilva (Berk.) B.K. Cui, M.L. Han & Y.C. Dai, one record.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from southern Western Cape, southeastern and western KwaZulu-Natal (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 14).
Comments: This may be a cryptic species and further studies are necessary to elucidate this case. It was collected with C. fuscipes, C. neserorum, C. pickeri, C. regius, C. westerncapensis sp. n., the morphospecies Cis sp. S, Orthocis sp. A, Ptinidae sp. 3, X. madagascariensis, the invasive species Cer. tabellifer, and the parasitoids A. gracilis and A. naiadis.
3.1.23. Cis pickeri Lopes-Andrade, Matushkina, Buder et Klass, 2009
Cis pickeri Lopes-Andrade et al. 2009:57 [
1]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Western Cape Province, Ceres; Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2018: 31 [
12] {new distributional records from Republic of South Africa}.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the bilamellatus group. It differs from C. mooihoekite in the TL being more than 1.30 mm; pronotum with a median impunctate line; anterocephalic edge in male with rounded corners and pronotal plate slightly emarginate forming two small projections with subrounded apex; and male abdominal sex patch about one-third the length of the first ventrite at midline.
Host fungi:Laetiporus sp. (Fomitopsidaceae), one record;
Russula capensis A. Person (Russulaceae), one record; and
Trametes versicolor (L.) Lloyd, one breeding record [
12].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from southern Western Cape (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species was collected together with
C. bicaesariatus sp. n.,
C. grobbelaarae sp. n.,
C. chinensis,
C. parvisetosus sp. n.,
C. neserorum, the morphospecies
Cis sp. S,
Cis sp. Y and the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer [
12].
3.1.24. Cis regius Orsetti et Lopes-Andrade, 2016
Cis regius Orsetti & Lopes-Andrade 2016: 146 [
10]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Western Cape Province, Prince Alfred’ S Pass.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the regius group. It differs from all southern African Cis species by the peculiar occipital tubercle close to vertex in males; pronotum with dual punctation, lateral to anterior edges broadly rounded and bearing a row of scattered setae; and elytra with single punctation and vestiture of seriate setae.
Additional material: 5 ♂♂ and 4 ♀♀ as follows: 2 ♂♂ (1 CELC, dissected; 1 SANC) and 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Storms River Mouth, Tsitsikamma National Park, 34°01’ S 23°54’ E, 29.v.2003, S. Neser\Ex bracket fungus [E]\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Diepwalle State Foret, 33°58’ S 23°09’ E, 1.iii.1990, AJ Urban & AJ Hendricks\Collected from seedlings in shaded nursery of Psoralea pinnata FABACEAE, UA590:A\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (ANIC) “REP. S. AFRICA: Cape Prov., Knysna, Diepwalle, 450 m, 17 Dec. 1981, 81–170, forest fungi & litter, S. & J. Peck, coll.”; 2 ♂♂ and 1 ♀ (ANIC) “REP. S. AFRICA: Cape Prov., Gouna, 81–186, 23 Dec. 1981, berlese forest log litter, S. & J. Peck, coll.”. All additionally labeled “Cis regius Orsetti & Lopes-Andrade, 2016; I. Souza-Gonçalves det.”.
Host fungi:Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat., one breeding record [
10].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from southern Western Cape (Republic of South Africa). The additional material was collected in four areas near the type locality (Figure 15).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. parvisetosus sp. n. and the invasive species Cer. tabellifer.
3.1.25. Cis stalsi Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2017
Cis stalsi Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017: 352 [
11]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: KwaZulu-Natal Province, Hlabisi.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species of the neserorum group (except for C. mandelai, C. neserorum, C. testaceus, and C. urbanae) in males bearing a concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis stalsi differs from C. neserorum in males with first abdominal ventrite bearing a sex patch. It differs from C. mandelai and C. urbanae in possessing subparallel-sided prosternal process with rounded apex; and from C. testaceus in the comparatively shorter pronotal plates and very close anterocephalic plates.
Additional material: 3 ♂♂ and 1 ♀ as follows: 1 ♂♂ and 1 ♀ (ANIC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 Km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.79, S. & J. Peck\Ber 22, 26.XII.79, Eucalyptus logs, frass & fungi & decaying bark, 1400m”; 2 ♂♂ (ANIC) “REP. SOUTH AFRICA: Natal, 75 km WSW Estcourt Cathedral Peaks For. Sta., 7-31.XII.79, S. & J. Peck\Ber 23, 26.XII.79, Eucalyptus logs, decayed litter & soil, 1400 m”. All additionally labeled “Cis stalsi Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade, 2017; I. Souza-Gonçalves det.”
Host fungi:Podoscypha parvula (Lloyd) D. A. Reid (Meruliaceae), one breeding record [
11].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern North West and eastern KwaZulu-Natal (Republic of South Africa). The additional material was collected in western KwaZulu-Natal (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 15).
Comments: This species was collected together with
C. neserorum and the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer [
11].
3.1.26. Cis tessariplacus Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Type locality: “Mooihoek Farm” (near Wakkerstroom), coordinates 27°13’ S 30°32’ E (Pixley Ka Seme Local Municipality, Gert Sibande District, Mpumalanga Province).
Etymology: The species name derives from the Greek noun “tessares”, which means “four”, and “plakos”, which means “plates”, both in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the number of plates present on the anterocephalic edge of this species.
Diagnosis: The species resembles members of the Cis multidentatus group in the anterocephalic edge produced and elevate forming four teeth in males and anterior pronotal edge in male projected into two triangular plates; but the prosternum is biconcave and the outer apical angle of protibia is projected in an acute tooth only in males.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 10(A–D)): Adult apparently not fully pigmented but in good conditions, except for lacking one leg, four tarsi, the left antenna, and for being covered by dust or fungus. Measurements in mm: TL 1.22, PL 0.50, PW 0.75, EL 1.22, EW 0.77, GD 0.59. Ratios: PL/PW 0.67, EL/EW 1.58, EL/PL 2.44, GD/EW 0.77, TL/EW 2.23.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum reddish brown (except for dust-covered areas, but visible elsewhere in paratypes); venter dark reddish brown; antenna yellowish brown with club dark brown, palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture dual, consisting of short suberect bristles and minute decumbent setae, easily discernible in high magnifications (>65×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>65×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by less than one puncture-width, with one minute decumbent bristle (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge produced and elevated forming four acute and triangular teeth.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, right antennae measured): 0.05, 0.05, 0.05, 0.03, 0.02, 0.02, 0.01, 0.04, 0.04, 0.06 (FL 0.13 mm, CL 0.14 mm, CL/FL 1.07).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 60 ommatidia; GW 0.14 mm.
Gula 0.56× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 10(D)) with coarse, deep, single punctation, devoid of an impunctate median line; punctures distributed irregularly, separated from each other by less one puncture-width; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of short suberect bristles (0.03–0.04 mm); anterior edge produced and elevated forming two triangular plates with acute apex; lateral edges barely crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield pentagonal, bearing few punctures and few bristles; BW 0.13 mm; SL 0.07 mm.
Elytra with non-seriate, single punctation; punctures coarse, deep, distributed irregularly, separated from each other by two puncture-widths or less; interspaces, somewhat a bit rugose; vestiture dual, consisting of short suberect bristles (~0.04 mm) and minute decumbent setae (~0.02 mm), both yellowish and arising from punctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing one fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-third of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about two-fifths the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing one fine decumbent yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.24, 0.10, 0.08, 0.07, 0.09; first abdominal ventrite bearing a margined, small, circular, setose sex patch at middle, with transverse diameter of 0.03 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 10(F–I)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 10(F)) with posterior margin deeply emarginate, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at acute corners; anterior margin membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 10(H)) 2.7× as long as wide, widest at middle; small emargination at apex, globular tubercles at apical portion (
Figure 10(H), black arrows).
Basal piece (
Figure 10(G)) subtrapezoidal, 1.4× as wide as long.
Penis (
Figure 10(I)) as long as tegmen, 4.2× as long as wide; sides expanding until apical third and then converging to apex; apical portion membranous and bearing acute sclerotization at middle (
Figure 10(I), big red arrow); truncate sclerotization at anterior portion (
Figure 10(I), small red arrows).
Females (
Figure 10(E)): Anterior edge of head truncate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of abdominal sex patch and protibial tooth.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 2, including the holotype): TL 1.55–1.72 (1.62 ± 0.14), PL 0.50–0.53 (0.51 ± 0.02), PW 0.60–0.75 (0.67 ± 0.10), EL 1.00–1.22 (1.11 ± 0.16), EW 0.65–0.77 (0.71 ± 0.09), GD 0.48–0.59 (0.53 ± 0.08). Ratios: PL/PW 0.67–0.88 (0.77 ± 0.14), EL/EW 1.54–1.58 (1.56 ± 0.03), EL/PL 1.90–2.44 (2.17 ± 0.38), GD/EW 0.73–0.77 (0.75 ± 0.03), TL/EW 2.23–2.39 (2.29 ± 0.08). Female, measurements in mm (n = 1): TL 1.73, PL 0.58, PW 0.68, EL 1.15, EW 0.83, GD 0.60. Ratios: PL/PW 0.85, EL/EW 1.39, EL/PL 2.00, GD/EW 0.73, TL/EW 2.09.
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC, dissected) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Mooihoek Farm, nr. Wakkerstroom, 27°13’ S 30°32’ E, 15.vii.2008, O & S Neser\Ex bracket fungus Stereum ostrea, BF# 138\ NATIONAL COLL. OF INSCTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis tessariplacus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 1♂ and 1 ♀ as follows: 1♀ (SANC) same data as the holotype; 1♂ (CELC, dissected) “SOUTH AFRICA: MPU, Alkmaar W Nelspruit, 25°27’ S 30°50’ E, 10.ii.2008\OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus Trametes sp., BF# 47\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis tessariplacus Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Stereum ostrea (Blume & T. Nees) Fr., one record; Trametes sp., one record.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern and southeastern Mpumalanga (Republic of South Africa) (Figure 14).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. foveocephalus sp. n., C. mpumalangaensis sp. n., the invasive species Cer. tabellifer, and the parasitoids A. gracilis and A. naiadis. We prefer not to place it in any group at this moment.
3.1.27. Cis testaceus Fåhraeus, 1871
Cis testaceus Fåhraeus, 1871: 671 [
21]. Type locality: Caffraria (=Kaffraria), currently Republic of South Africa: Eastern Cape Province (no specific locality); Ferrer 1997: 408 [
24] (lectotype designation).
Host fungi: Unknown.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from Eastern Cape Province (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
21]. There is no further record in the literature, as far as we have traced. It is a member of the
neserorum group.
3.1.28. Cis urbanae Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, 2017
Cis urbanae Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade 2017: 354 [
11]. Type locality: Republic of South Africa: Mpumalanga Province, Nelspruit.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the neserorum group. It differs from other southern African species of the neserorum group (except for C. mandelai, C. neserorum, C. stalsi and C. testaceus) in males bearing a concave impression in anterior pronotal portion. Cis urbanae differs from C. neserorum in males with first abdominal ventrite bearing a sex patch, and from C. neserorum and C. stalsi in the prosternal process conspicuously narrow near base and gradually expanding to a rounded apex. Cis mandelai bears a similar prosternal process, but differs from in the comparatively more robust body and males with comparatively longer pronotal plates. It differs from C. testaceus in the more robust body.
Host fungi:Trametes sp., one breeding record [
11].
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern Mpumalanga (Republic of South Africa).
Comments: The species is known only from the type series [
11]. It was collected together with
C. makrosoma sp. n., the invasive species
Cer. tabellifer and the parasitoids
A. micans.
3.1.29. Cis umlalaziensis Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Type locality: “Umlalazi Nature Reserve” (near Mtunzini), coordinates 28°57’ S 31°46’ E (uMlalazi Local Municipality, Uthungulu District, KwaZulu-Natal Province).
Etymology: The species name is Latinized from “Umlalazi” in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the Umlalazi Nature Reserve, the type locality of this species.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the pacificus group. It differs from C. foveocephalus sp. n. in males being devoid of vertexal sex patch; from C. mpumalangaensis sp. n. in the subseriate elytral vestiture; and from C. parvisetosus sp. n. in the comparatively thicker and subseriate vestiture, and comparatively longer and more acute anterocephalic plates.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 11(A–D)): Adult fully pigmented in good conditions, except for lacking both antennae. Measurements in mm: TL 1.11, PL 0.39, PW 0.49, EL 0.72, EW 0.50, GD 0.41. Ratios: PL/PW 0.79, EL/EW 1.45, EL/PL 1.87, GD/EW 0.83, TL/EW 2.22.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum and venter reddish dark brown; palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of short suberect bristles, easily discernible in high magnifications (>95×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>95×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less, with minute decumbent seta (~0.01 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge produced and elevated forming two triangular plates.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, right antennae measured in a paratype): 0.05, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.01, 0.01, 0.01, 0.02, 0.03, 0.05 (FL 0.08 mm, CL 0.10 mm, CL/FL 1.25).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 50 ommatidia; GW 0.11 mm.
Gula 0.48× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 11(D)) with irregularly distributed, dual punctation, bearing an impunctate median line beginning around four puncture-widths of base until disc; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less; interspaces, microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of short suberect yellowish bristles (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures; anterior edge rounded; lateral edges not crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield pentagonal, bearing few punctures and few bristles; BW 0.05 mm; SL 0.04 mm.
Elytra with non-seriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by two puncture-widths or less; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture subseriate, single, consisting of short suberect yellowish bristles (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from megapunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing one fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave and barely carinate; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, about as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-third of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about one-third the length of metaventrite at midline.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing one fine decumbent yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.15, 0.06, 0.05, 0.05, 0.07; first abdominal ventrite bearing a unmargined, small, oval, setose sex patch at middle, with transverse diameter of 0.02 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 11(E–G)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 11(E)) with posterior margin almost straight, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at subrounded corners; anterior margin membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 11(F)) 2.8× as long as wide, widest at apical third; sides expanding to apex; apex with one emargination in each side forming three rounded lobes (
Figure 11(F), black arrows), the lateral ones slightly shorter than the mid one; anterior portion rounded.
Penis (
Figure 11(G)) 1.2× as long as tegmen, 5.8× as long as wide; subcylindrical, subparallel-sided and converging to subtriangular apex; anterior portion rounded.
Female: Unknown.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 3, including the holotype): TL 0.98–1.11 (1.05 ± 0.07), PL 0.38–0.39 (0.38 ± 0.01), PW 0.45–0.49 (0.48 ± 0.02), EL 0.60–0.72 (0.68 ± 0.06), EW 0.48–0.50 (0.50 ± 0.01), GD 0.40–0.43 (0.40 ± 0.01). Ratios: PL/PW 0.79–0.83 (0.79 ± 0.03), EL/EW 1.26–1.45 (1.35 ± 0.09), EL/PL 1.60–1.87 (1.80 ± 0.14), GD/EW 0.80–0.89 (0.80 ± 0.05), TL/EW 2.05–2.22 (2.10 ± 0.09).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: KZN, Umlalazi Nature Res., Mtunzini, 28°57’ S 31°46’ E, 13.vii.2008, R.P. Urban\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus hirsutus, BF# 87\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\Cis umlalaziensis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 2 ♂♂ (1 CELC, dissected; 1 SANC) same data as the holotype. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis umlalaziensis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Trametes hirsuta (Wulfen) Lloyd, one record.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from eastern KwaZulu-Natal (Figure 13).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. paraliacus, the invasive species Cer. tabellifer, the tenebrionid P. fronticornis and the parasitoid A. micans.
3.1.30. Cis westerncapensis Souza-Gonçalves et Lopes-Andrade, sp. n.
Type locality: “Montagu Pass” coordinates 33°54’ S 22°24’ E (north of George, Western Cape Province).
Etymology: The species name is Latinized from “Western Cape” in the genitive singular. The name is a reference to the Western Cape Province, the unique known province where the species occurs.
Diagnosis: The species belongs to the westerncapensis group. It differs from C. lacinipennis sp. n. in bearing slightly longer (0.03–0.04 mm) and subseriate vestiture, lighter dorsal coloration and a comparatively wider body.
Description, male holotype (
Figure 12(A–D)): Fully pigmented and in good conditions, except for lacking the right antenna and one tarsus. Measurements in mm: TL 1.47, PL 0.49, PW 0.58, EL 0.98, EW 0.69, GD 0.55. Ratios: PL/PW 0.84, EL/EW 1.42, EL/PL 2.01, GD/EW 0.80, TL/EW 2.13.
Body elongate, convex, dorsum and venter reddish brown; antenna yellowish brown with club dark brown, palpi and tarsi yellowish brown; dorsal vestiture single, consisting of short suberect bristles, easily discernible in high magnifications (>75×); ventral vestiture of decumbent setae easily discernible in high magnifications (>75×).
Head with anteriormost portion visible from above; dorsum with coarse and deep punctures, separated from each other by one punctures-width or less, with minute decumbent bristle (0.01–0.02 mm) arising from each puncture; interspaces, microreticulate; anterocephalic edge truncate.
Antennae with 10 antennomeres, lengths as follows (in mm, left antenna measured): 0.06, 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.02, 0.04, 0.04, 0.06 (FL 0.10 mm, CL 0.14 mm, CL/FL 1.42).
Eyes coarsely facetted, with about 50 ommatidia; GW 0.12 mm.
Gula 0.46× as wide as head.
Pronotum (
Figure 12(D)) with irregularly distributed, dual punctation, devoid of impunctate median line; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by one megapuncture-width or less; interspaces microreticulate; vestiture single, consisting of moderately short suberect pale yellowish bristles (0.02–0.03 mm) arising from micropunctures; anterior edge rounded; lateral edges not crenulate, not explanate and not visible when seen from above; anterior corners rounded.
Scutellar shield pentagonal, bearing few punctures and apparently glabrous; BW 0.08 mm; SL 0.05 mm.
Elytra with subseriate, dual punctation; megapunctures coarse, deep, about 2× as large as micropunctures, separated from each other by two megapuncture-widths or less; interspaces a bit rugose; vestiture subseriate, single, consisting of moderately short suberect pale yellowish bristles (0.03–0.04 mm) arising from megapunctures.
Metathoracic wings developed, apparently functional.
Hypomera with coarse, shallow punctation; each puncture bearing one fine decumbent seta; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternum in front of coxae biconcave and barely carinate; interspaces, microreticulate.
Prosternal process subparallel-sided, about 0.9× as long as prosternum at midline, apex rounded.
Protibiae with maximum width about one-fourth of its length; apical edge devoid of spines; outer apical angle projected in acute tooth.
Meso- and metatibiae without spines in apical edge.
Metaventrite with coarse, deep punctures; interspaces, microreticulate; discrimen about one-third the length of metaventrite.
Abdominal ventrites with coarse, moderately deep punctures, separated from each other by one puncture-width or less and bearing one fine decumbent yellowish seta; interspaces, microreticulate; length of ventrites (in mm, from base to apex at the longitudinal midline) as follows: 0.22, 0.08, 0.08, 0.08, 0.10; first abdominal ventrite bearing one margined, large, circular, setose sex patch at middle, with transverse diameter of 0.07 mm.
Male terminalia in a paratype (
Figure 12(F–I)) with
sternite VIII (
Figure 12(F)) with posterior margin almost straight, bearing short setae at middle and long setae at rounded corners; anterior portion membranous.
Tegmen (
Figure 12(H)) 1.8× as long as wide, widest at apex; subparallel-sided; two acute angulations in each side at apex (
Figure 12(H), black arrows); anterior portion subrounded.
Basal piece (
Figure 12(G)) subtriangular, 1.4× as wide as long.
Penis (
Figure 12(I)) 4.3× as long as tegmen, 10.0× as long as wide; subcylindrical, subparallel-sided, somewhat stick-shaped; anterior and posterior portions rounded.
Females (
Figure 12(E)): Anterior edge of head truncate and anterior edge of pronotum rounded. Otherwise like males, but devoid of abdominal sex patch and protibial tooth.
Variation: Males, measurements in mm (n = 21, including the holotype): TL 1.23–1.65 (1.35 ± 0.10), PL 0.43–0.58 (0.46 ± 0.04), PW 0.48–0.65 (0.33 ± 0.05), EL 0.80–1.08 (0.90 ± 0.07), EW 0.55–0.80 (0.63 ± 0.06), GD 0.45–0.63 (0.51 ± 0.04). Ratios: PL/PW 0.77–0.95 (0.86 ± 0.05), EL/EW 1.33–1.58 (1.43 ± 0.70), EL/PL 1.75–2.24 (1.97 ± 0.13), GD/EW 0.78–0.88 (0.81 ± 0.02), TL/EW 2.04–2.33 (2.16 ± 0.09). Females, measurements in mm (n = 28): TL 1.23–1.58 (1.36 ± 0.09), PL 0.40–0.53 (0.45 ± 0.04), PW 0.45–0.58 (0.51 ± 0.03), EL 0.83–1.05 (0.91 ± 0.06), EW 0.53–0.70 (0.62 ± 0.04), GD 0.45–0.58 (0.51 ± 0.04). Ratios: PL/PW 0.81–1.00 (0.89 ± 0.05), EL/EW 1.36–1.58 (1.46 ± 0.06), EL/PL 1.81–2.24 (2.00 ± 0.12), GD/EW 0.76–0.90 (0.83 ± 0.04), TL/EW 2.07–2.38 (2.20 ± 0.08).
Type material: Holotype: ♂ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #210 on fallen tree trunk\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus hirsutus, BF# 210\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa\ Cis westerncapensis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade HOLOTYPUS [red paper]”. Paratypes: 39 ♂♂ and 56 ♀♀ as follows: 1 ♀ (SANC) same data as the holotype; 2 ♀♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #211 on Brachylaena neriifolia\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus hirsutus, BF# 211”; 2 ♀♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #201 on fallen tree trunk\Ex bracket fungus Ganoderma applanatum, BF# 201\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ (CELC, dissected) and 1 ♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #199 on Rapanea sp.\Ex bracket fungus Ganoderma applanatum, BF# 199\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA, CP, Grootvadersbosch, nr. Heidelberg, 33.50S 20.53E, v.1985, A.J. Prins \ NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, S. Afr.”; 1 ♂ and 3 ♀♀ (CELC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Prince Alfred’ S N of Knysna, 33°58’ S 23°09’ E, 5.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #215 on fallen tree trunk\Ex bracket fungus Fomitopsis lilacino-gilva, BF# 215\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus hirsutus, BF# 186\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #188 on fallen tree trunk\Ex bracket fungus Coriolus sp., BF# 188\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 3 ♂♂ (1 CELC, dissected; 2 SANC) and 3 ♀♀ (1 CELC, dissected; 2 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCape, Saasveld Foretry. Coll., 33°57’ S 22°32’ E, 14.viii.1990, AAJ Hendricks\Collected from rotten log of Olea capensis OLEACEAE, UA627\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCape, Groeneweide Forest Walk, Saasveld, 33°58’ S 22°32’ E, 20.iii.1991, AJ Hendricks\Emerged from dead branches of living tree of Rapanea melanophloeos MYRSINIACEAE, UA716\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 2 ♂♂ (1 CELC; 1 SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Prince Alfred’ S Pass N of Knysna, 35°58’ S 23°09’ E, 5.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #219 on fallen tree trunk\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 24 ♂♂ (8 CELC; 16 SANC, 13 in dried capsule) and 31 ♀♀ (10 CELC; 21 SANC, 13 in dried capsule) “SOUTH AFRICA WCAPE, Montagu Pass N of George, 33°54’ S 22°24’ E, 4.xi.2009, S & OC Neser\Ex bracket fungus, #208 on fallen tree trunk\NATIONAL COLL. OF INSECTS Pretoria, South Africa”; 2 ♀♀ (SANC) “SOUTH AFRICA: WCAPE, Heatherlands, George, 33°57’ S 22°27’ E, 11.iv.1990, AJ Urban\Emerged from Dais cotinifolia THYMELAEACEAE, with fruiting body of fungus ?Lenzites, UA601”; 3 ♂♂ (1 CELC; 2 ANIC) and 5 ♀♀ (1 CELC; 4 ANIC) “REP. S. AFRICA: Cape Prov., Knysna, Diepwalle 450m, 17 Dec. 1981, 81-170, forest fungi & litter, S. & J. Peck, coll.”; 2 ♂♂ and 1 ♀ (ANIC) “REP. S. AFRICA: Cape Prov., Knysna, Gouna, 81-186, 23 Dec. 1981, berlese forest log litter, S. & J. Peck, coll.”; 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ (CELC) “REP. S. AFRICA: Cape Prov., Tsitsikama For. N.P., 20 Dec. 1981, 81-176, Berlese forest litter, S. & J. Peck, coll.”. All paratypes additionally labeled “Cis westerncapensis Souza-Gonçalves & Lopes-Andrade PARATYPUS [yellow paper]”.
Host fungi:Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat., two records; Rhodofomitopsis lilacinogilva (Berk.) (Berk.) B.K. Cui, M.L. Han & Y.C. Dai (Fomitopsidaceae), one record; Trametes sp., one record; Trametes hirsuta (Wulfen) Lloyd, three records.
Distribution: Ethiopian. Known from southern Western Cape (
Figure 13).
Comments: This species was collected together with C. neserorum, C. parvisetosus sp. n., C. regius, the morphospecies Orthocis sp. A, X. madagascariensis, the invasive species Cer. tabellifer, and the parasitoids A. gracilis and A. naiadis.