Four new species of Lycocerus Gorham, 1889 from China (Coleoptera: Cantharidae)
Author
Yang, Yu-Xia
College of Life Sciences, Hebei University, Baoding 071002, China;
Author
Yang, Xing-Ke
Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China
yangxk@ioz.ac.cn
text
Journal of Natural History
2013
2013-01-21
47
1 - 2
75
86
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2012.742169
journal article
7054
10.1080/00222933.2012.742169
f8284e18-7e9f-4063-b949-20e53177298e
1464-5262
4631827
A key to the
species related to
Lycocerus kuatunensis
(
Wittmer, 1995
)
1. Pro- and meso-outer claws each with an obtuse tooth at base in male; aedeagus: conjoint dorsal plate of parameres with acute lateral angels, ventral process of each paramere strongly curved at base.....
L. parameratus
sp. nov.
– Pro- and meso-outer claws simple in male; aedeagus: conjoint dorsal plate of parameres with rounded lateral angels, ventral process of each paramere normal at base.......................................................... 2
2. Antennae wider in female than in male; aedeagus: conjoint dorsal plate of parameres narrowly emarginated in middle of apical margin, with lateral margins of emargination bent ventrally................
L. nigrigenus
sp. nov.
– Antennae narrower in female than in male; aedeagus not like above........ 3
3. Head, pronotum and elytra yellowish brown, elytra darkened at apices...........................................................
L. nigroapicis
sp. nov.
– Head, pronotum and elytra black, at most yellow at clypeus............... 4
4. Aedeagus: conjoint dorsal plate of parameres each side with two teeth near lateral angle on inner surface, ventral process of each paramere distinctly shorter than conjoint dorsal plate, laterophyses normal at apices................................................................
L. kuatunensis
(
Wittmer, 1995
)
– Aedeagus: conjoint dorsal plate of parameres without any tooth on inner surface, ventral process of each paramere nearly as long as conjoint dorsal plate, laterophyses bifurcated at apices.......................
L. bifurcatus
sp. nov.