A world generic revision of Quediini (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Staphylininae), part 1. Early diverging Nearctic lineages
Author
Brunke, Adam J.
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1158-936X
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids and Nematodes, 960 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
adam.j.brunke@gmail.com
text
ZooKeys
2022
2022-12-08
1134
129
170
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1134.87853
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1134.87853
1313-2970-1134-129
C79C5E40D9C64E3B816F0201713DBA77
0973AEF60C1D54EBA960C4E252F447B0
Quediellus Casey, 1915, stat. res.
Figs 5C, D
, 8K-Q
, 9H, I
Quediellus
Casey, 1915: 398, 402;
Smetana 1971
(as synonym of
Quedius (Raphirus)
),
Brunke et al. 2021
(phylogeny, isolated position, non-
Raphirus
, to be reinstated as genus).
Type species.
Quedius debilis
Horn, 1878.
Diagnosis.
Quediellus
, in the restricted sense used here, can be recognized within
Quediini
by a combination of: head with genal and interocular punctures absent; pronotum without extra punctures between dorsal and sublateral rows, sublateral rows not extended posteriad of single large lateral puncture (but sometimes at same level); prosternum without trace of longitudinal carina; scutellum impunctate; elytra with punctures not arranged in distinct rows, spaces between with distinct meshed microsculpture (Fig.
5D
).
Quediellus
and
Quedionuchus
are the only genera of
Quediini
with meshed (scale-like) microsculpture on the elytra (Fig.
5D, E
), while other lineages may have granulose microsculpture composed of micropunctures or microsetae (Fig.
5F
), superficially giving a similar dull appearance at low magnification.
Quediellus
differs from
Quedionuchus
by the irregularly scattered (not rows) or evenly distributed elytral punctures (Fig.
5D
versus Fig.
5E
) and complete infraorbital ridge, running from the neck to the base of the mandibles under the eye.
Quediellus
shares plesiomorphic, simple head chaetotaxy (though the basal puncture is often doubled, e.g., Fig.
5C
) with members of the mostly Palaearctic subgenus
Quedius (Raphirus)
(sensu
Brunke et al. 2021
), with which it was long considered to be synonymous. However, all
Quedius (Raphirus)
differ by the lack of meshed microsculpture on the elytra and those with a dull reflection between the punctures (e.g.,
Q. cincticollis
Kraatz,
Q. fumatus
(Stephens), the members of clade
'X2'
of
Brunke et al. 2021
(
Q. lateralis
(Gravenhorst) and its relatives)) have micropunctures rather than meshes, much denser elytral punctation and most have an, at least partly, carinate prosternum.
Redescription.
Small and slender, to medium-sized and fusiform rove beetles, often with pale yellow markings on apex, humerus and sides of elytra (Fig.
12
). With the character states of
Quediini
(see
Brunke et al. 2021
) and the following: antennomere 3 longer than 2, without dense setae; head with eyes large, much more than twice as long as temples, convex, bulging from lateral head outline, weakly convergent anteriad and with inner margin well separated from suprantennal ridge (Fig.
5C
); antennal insertions close to inner margin of eye, separated by about the width of antennal sclerite (Fig.
5C
); frons weakly developed anterolaterad of antennal insertions; with single or doubled basal puncture; interocular, parocular and genal punctures absent; labrum notched medially, creating two short lobes; apical maxillary and labial palpi fusiform and glabrous; infraorbital ridge complete to mandibles; gular sutures converging towards neck and narrowly spaced posteriad; mandibles with dorsal lateral groove; right mandible with single, simple tooth (Fig.
5C
); pronotum subquadrate; hypomeron strongly inflexed, not visible in lateral view; with single large lateral puncture; dorsal row of pronotum with three punctures; sublateral row not reaching level of large lateral puncture; basisternum with pair of distinct macrosetae, without trace of longitudinal carina; elytron with subbasal ridge complete, forming scutellar collar; scutellum impunctate; with row of three or four humeral spines; disc of elytra with even punctation, with distinct meshed microsculpture; foretibia with lateral spines and apical spurs; metatarsomeres with disc setose; metatibia spinose with at least three spines on outer face; abdominal tergite I with prototergal glands well developed, with one side surrounded by row of well-developed setae; abdominal tergites without impressed, glabrous basal areas; abdominal sternite III with basal transverse carina forming obtuse angle at middle, not produced; abdominal sternite VII unmodified; abdominal sternite VIII with distinct median emargination; aedeagus with well-developed paramere bearing peg setae (Fig.
8M, N
).
Distribution.
Quediellus
is endemic to the western Nearctic, occurring along the western cordilleras from southern British Columbia to southern California on the western side of the continental divide, and known from the Rocky Mountains of Alberta, Idaho and Montana on the eastern side.
Bionomics.
Specimens have been collected mainly from sifting leaf litter, rotting wood and moss along streams, in forests and in montane meadow.
Comments.
Casey (1915)
erected the genus
Quediellus
to unite species belonging to the Debilis and Brunnipennis groups of
Smetana (1971)
, based on an entire labrum. This concept was correctly recognized by
Smetana (1971)
as erroneous as not only did he consider these two groups to be distantly related but only
Quedius densiventris
exhibited an entire labrum and only in some individuals. The always bilobed labrum of
Quediellus
is quite transverse in some specimens and sometimes at lower magnification it can be difficult to observe its shape. The type species of
Quediellus
,
Q. debilis
, was assigned to the Debilis group of
Quedius (Raphirus)
by
Smetana (1971)
and has been treated as such ever since. Quite recently (
Brunke et al. 2021
), the Debilis group (as
Quedius nanulus
(Casey)) was shown to be one of the smaller, phylogenetically isolated lineages of
Quediini
and quite distantly related to true
Quedius (Raphirus)
, despite sharing several morphological, though plesiomorphic, character states including the simple head chaetotaxy. In order to achieve monophyly of both
Quedius
and subgenus
Quedius Raphirus
,
Quediellus
is here resurrected as a valid genus under a morphological concept that is similar to that given by
Smetana (1971)
for the Debilis group.