Tribasodites bedosae, Yin & Li, 2011

Yin, Zi-Wei, Nomura, Shûhei & Li, Li-Zhen, 2015, Ten new species of cavernicolous Tribasodites from China and Thailand, and a list of East Asian cave-inhabiting Pselaphinae (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae), Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae 55 (1), pp. 105-127 : 122-123

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5319032

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:32572CA2-D2CB-4A01-B252-CCECB5320114

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/022DE650-D92B-FFB0-07B0-FCDEFB93F9A4

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Tribasodites bedosae
status

 

Key to males of the Tribasodites bedosae View in CoL species-group

Comments. Tribasodites tiani was described based on a single female, thus it is excluded from the following key. This species may be separated from the other congeners by the relatively large median portion of the female genital complex, as well as its distribution ( Fig. 13A View Fig ). Supplementary illustrations of antennae and metaventrites of T. bedosae and T. deharvengi are provided ( Fig. 11 View Fig ) in this paper for comparative purpose.

1 Pronotum with lateral margins lacking spines. ........................................................ 2

– Pronotum with spinose lateral margins. .................................................................. 4

2 (1) Head with modified vertex ( Fig. 2A View Fig ); antennomeres VIII–XI simple, lacking modifications ( Fig. 2B View Fig ); Southwest China: Guizhou. ................... T. abnormalis View in CoL sp. nov.

– Head with simple vertex; antennomeres VIII–XI each modified. ........................... 3

3 (2) Aedeagus split at apex, ventral portion strongly broadened in lateral view ( Fig. 8D View Fig ); South China: Guangxi. .............................................................. T. kawadai View in CoL sp. nov.

– Aedeagus split at apex, ventral portion narrowed toward apex in lateral view ( Fig. 9D View Fig ); South China: Guangxi. .......................................................... T. uenoi View in CoL sp. nov.

4 (1) Metacoxae protuberant at ventral margins ( Fig. 4C View Fig ); Southwest Chiba: Guizhou. ... ................................................................................................... T. liboensis View in CoL sp. nov.

– Metacoxae flat at ventral margins. ........................................................................... 5

5 (4) Metatrochanters modified, either with tuft of dense setae, or protuberant at ventral margins. ................................................................................................................... 6

– Metatrochanters simple. .......................................................................................... 7

6 (5) Metatrochanters with tuft of dense setae at ventral margins ( Fig. 6C View Fig ); Southwest China: Guizhou. .................................................................... T. xingyiensis View in CoL sp. nov.

– Metatrochanters protuberant at ventral margins ( Fig. 10C View Fig ); North Thailand: Chiang Mai. ..................................................................................... T. thailandicus View in CoL sp. nov.

7 (5) Metaventrite with setae sparse or clustered, not arranged in rows. ......................... 8

– Metaventrite with setae arranged in two distinct rows. ......................................... 10

8 (7) Apical split of aedeagal median lobe with dorsal portion much longer than ventral portion in lateral view ( YIN et al. 2011a: Fig. 6 View Fig ); South China: Guangxi. .................. ......................................................................................... T. bedosae Yin & Li, 2011 View in CoL

– Apical split of aedeagal median lobe with dorsal portion much shorter than ventral portion in lateral view. ............................................................................................. 9

9 (8) Antennomeres XI relatively stouter ( Fig. 11B View Fig ); metaventrite with sparse setae not clustered ( Fig. 11D View Fig ); South China: Guangxi. ............ T. deharvengi Yin & Li, 2011 View in CoL

– Antennomeres XI relatively slenderer ( Fig. 3B View Fig ); metaventrite with clustered setae ( Fig. 3C View Fig ); Southwest China: Guizhou. ................................ T. cehengensis View in CoL sp. nov.

10 (7) Rows of setae short, present only at posterior half of metaventrite ( Fig. 7C View Fig ); South China: Guangxi. ............................................................................. T. bama View in CoL sp. nov.

– Rows of setae extending throughout at least 2/3 length of metaventrite ( Figs 1C View Fig , 5C View Fig ). ........................................................................................................................ 11

11 (10) Head and pronotum slightly wider than long, HL/HW and PL/PW <1 ( Fig. 1A View Fig ); Central China: Hubei. ............................................................ T. hubeiensis View in CoL sp. nov.

– Head slightly longer than wide, HL/HW> 1, pronotum about as long as wide, PL/ PW ≈ 1 ( Fig. 5A View Fig ); Southwest China: Guizhou. ................ T. setosiventris View in CoL sp. nov.

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