Quedius (Microsaurus) impressithorax Scheerpeltz, 1965
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.864.2093 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D47B6B04-B2AD-4FDD-B7C4-B71CA6A5BB84 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7872307 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6C38C875-FFA6-5B44-FE1B-FB22E033FA5B |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Quedius (Microsaurus) impressithorax Scheerpeltz, 1965 |
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Quedius (Microsaurus) impressithorax Scheerpeltz, 1965 View in CoL
Figs 2E–F View Fig , 7F View Fig
Quedius (Microsaurus) impressithorax Scheerpeltz, 1965: 281 View in CoL .
Diagnosis
Within the Kiangsiensis group, Quedius impressithorax may be distinguished by a combination of: small eyes, temples about 1.5 × as long as eyes ( Fig. 2F View Fig ); head slightly elongate, with posterior frontal puncture about three puncture diameters from eye margin ( Fig. 2F View Fig ); body entirely dark ( Fig. 2E View Fig ).
Type material
Holotype
MYANMAR – Kachin State • ♀; “ N.E. Burma , Kambaiti; 7000 ft.; 1/5.1934; R. Malaise [printed label] / HOLOTYPUS [red handwritten label] / TYPUS Quedius impressithorax, O. Scheerpeltz [dark red-pink label] / Quedius (Microsaurus) impressithorax nov. spec., det. Scheerpeltz [printed label] / 6590 E91 [blue printed label] / impressithorax Scheerpeltz [large, printed, folded label] / JLKB 000021054 ”; NHRS.
Redescription
Head, elytra, abdomen, antennae and legs dark brown, pronotum and apices of abdominal tergites slightly paler, dark reddish brown; apical tarsomeres of all legs paler, yellow-brown; abdomen vaguely iridescent. Head slightly longer than wide, with posterior angles indistinct; eyes small and only slightly protruding from lateral head outline, tempora longer than eyes, about 1.5 ×; without interocular punctures or additional punctures near the eye margin; posterior frontal puncture somewhat close to posterior margin of eye, about three puncture diameters, situated closer to margin of eye than to hind margin of head; temporal puncture slightly closer to posterior margin of head than margin of eye; surface of head with fine and dense microsculpture of transverse waves, becoming meshed at middle of disc, with distinct micropunctures moderately densely distributed. Antennae somewhat bulky, antennomere 4 only slightly transverse, 5–10 distinctly transverse, symmetrical, last segment shorter than previous two. Pronotum distinctly transverse, much wide than long, distinctly explanate laterally; dorsal rows with three punctures, sublateral rows with two punctures, not extended posteriad of large lateral puncture; microsculpture similar to that on head. Scutellum entirely and moderately densely punctate. Elytra at base distinctly narrower than pronotum, at both middle and sides, clearly longer than pronotum; punctures rather fine and dense, many punctures touching laterally; pubescence pale, yellow-brown; disc without microsculpture. Wing fully developed. Abdomen with tergite VII with palisade fringe; punctation sparser than that of elytra, punctures clearly separated by their diameter or more; tergite III with very small sparsely punctate area at middle; tergites with extremely fine microsculpture of transverse waves.
Male
Unknown.
Female
Tergite X elongate triangular, strongly narrowed to acutely projected apex, sides of apex sinuate, disc with median darkening from about posterior two-thirds to apex ( Fig. 7F View Fig ).
Distribution
Known only from the type locality in Myanmar (Kachin).
Remarks
The posterior frontal puncture is located at a distance from the eye that is similar to Q. kubani Smetana, 1996 and Q. kuatunensis Smetana, 2013 but in these species the head is clearly transverse, the eyes are larger and the apical antennomeres are asymmetrical. Quedius impressithorax keys to Q. albiorix Smetana, 2012 (Sichuan, China) in Smetana (2017a) but is quite different in habitus, with entirely dark antennae, a longer head and a distinctly less distant posterior frontal puncture (4–5 puncture diameters in Q. albiorix ). Quedius impressithorax is here provisionally treated as a valid species until males are found at or near the type locality.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Quedius (Microsaurus) impressithorax Scheerpeltz, 1965
Brunke, Adam James 2023 |
Quedius (Microsaurus) impressithorax Scheerpeltz, 1965: 281
Scheerpeltz O. 1965: 281 |