Key to the Central American species of Trichoreninus
1. Dorsal surface with abundant distinct setae; inner subhumeral and dorsal elytral striae 1–2 distinctly keeled; outer and posterior parts of elytral surfaces with irregularly rugose microsulpture; disc of metaventrite without large punctures (Figs. 42–44 in Tishechkin 2007)................................................................... T. flohri (Lewis, 1891)
- Dorsal surface completely asetose; subhumeral and dorsal elytral striae not elevated, striate or sulcate; surfaces without irregularly rugose microsulpture; disc of metaventrite at least with a few large punctures................................. 2
2. Dorsal elytral striae sulcate, wide and deep; disc of metaventrite medially without or with a few (2–6) large deep circular punctures along midline, often asymmetrically positioned................................................ T. neo sp. n.
- Dorsal elytral striae regular, narrow and punctatostriate; disc of metaventrite with numerous (more than 10) smaller, circular, relatively shallow punctures, regularly scattered over the most of disc surface...................................... 3
3. Body surface regularly covered with small dense background punctures; outer lateral striae of pronotum interrupted and/or abbreviated in posterior half, known from Belize and Honduras .................................... T. carltoni sp. n.
- Body surface without distinct background punctuation, sometimes tiny background punctures present on pronotum and sterna, elytral surface smooth, alutaceous; outer lateral striae of pronotum complete, reach posterior angles, known from Nicaragua to Panama .................................................................. T. geminus (Reichensperger, 1935)