Ten new species of cavernicolous Tribasodites from China and Thailand, and a list of East Asian cave-inhabiting Pselaphinae (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae)
Author
Yin, Zi-Wei
Department of Biology, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Shanghai Normal University, 100 Guilin Road, Shanghai, 200234, P. R. China
Author
Nomura, Shûhei
Department of Zoology, National Museum of Nature and Science, 4 - 1 - 1, Amakubo, Tsukuba-shi, Ibaraki, 305 - 0005 Japan
Author
Li, Li-Zhen
Department of Biology, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Shanghai Normal University, 100 Guilin Road, Shanghai, 200234, P. R. China & Corresponding author; e-mail: pselaphinae @ gmail. com
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2015
2015-06-01
55
1
105
127
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5319032
0374-1036
5319032
32572CA2-D2CB-4A01-B252-CCECB5320114
Tribasodites
Jeannel, 1960
Tribasodites
Jeannel, 1960: 411
.
Type
species.
Tribasodites antennalis
Jeannel, 1960
Diagnosis.
Head rectangular; with median longitudinal carina on vertex; lacking frontal rostrum; ocular-mandibular carinae distinct. Pronotum with median and lateral longitudinal sulci, lateral sulci usually carinate at inner margins, disc with additional pair of thin carinae between median and lateral sulci; with median antebasal impression and lateral antebasal foveae separated by antebasal spines; acute small spines often present on lateral margins (lacking in several cavernicolous species). Elytra each with three basal foveae, discal striae extending past half elytral length; subhumeral foveae present, marginal striae from foveae to elytral posterior margin. Abdomen with tergite IV (first visible tergite) longer than the next, inner marginal carinae extending throughout whole length of tergite, outer carinae slightly shorter than inner carinae, extending to near posterior margin of tergite; tergites V–VI each with single thin marginal carina.
Differential diagnosis.
The genus
Tribasodites
can be separated from the allied genus
Tribasodes
by the lack of a basal depression on the abdominal tergite IV, and by having the sexual character on the frons or the antennomeres VIII–XI in general. On the other hand,
Tribasodites
can be easily separated from the genus
Tribasodellus
by the transverse and laterally protuberant and/or spinose pronotum, while
Tribasodellus
has the pronotum longer than wide, feebly arcuate laterally and lacking spines.