On the Harpopaederus fauna of China (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Paederinae)
Author
Assing, Volker
text
Linzer biologische Beiträge
2015
2015-07-31
47
1
163
190
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5414042
0253-116X
5414042
Paederus agnatus
EPPELSHEIM
, 1889
(
Figs 1-29
,
54
,
Map 2
)
Paederus agnatus
EPPELSHEIM, 1889:
180
f.;
Paederus dangchangensis
LI & ZHOU, 2007: 227
ff.;
nov.syn.
Paederus konfuzius
WILLERS, 2001b: 3
ff.; partim.
T y p e m a t e r i a l e x a m i n e d
P. agnatus
:
Syntype
♀
: "Kan-ssa / 14.IV [overleaf] / c. Epplsh. Steind. d. /
agnatus Epp., Hor. Soc.
ent. Ross., t. XXIII. p. 180. / Typus /
Syntypus
♀
Paederus agnatus Eppelsheim
rev. V. Assing 2015 /
Paederus (Harpopaederus) agnatus
♀
Eppelsheim, det. V. Assing 2015" (NHMW).
A d d i t i o n a l m a t e r i a l e x a m i n e d
China
G a n s u
1♀
,
Qinling Shan
, N
Chengxian
,
34°10'N
,
105°43'E
,
1850 m
, mixed secondary forest margin, litter sifted,
29.VII.2012
, leg.
Wrase
(cAss)
;
13,
1♀
,
Qinling Shan
, N
Chengxian
,
34°10'N
,
105°42'E
,
1830 m
, stream valley with secondary deciduous forest, moist litter sifted,
29.VII.2012
, leg.
Schülke
&
Wrase
(cSch, cAss)
;
13,
2♀♀
,
Qinling Shan
, NW
Longnan
,
Lazikou
pass, S-side,
Laolong valley
,
34°08'N
,
103°52'E
,
2300 m
, S-slope with pine and spruce forest, litter sifted,
3.VIII.2012
, leg.
Assing
,
Schülke
&
Wrase
(cAss, cSch)
;
13,
Qinling Shan
, NW
Longnan
,
Lazikou
pass, S-side,
Zhuli valley
,
34°08'N
,
103°56'E
,
2260 m
, N-slope, mixed forest with oak and pine near stream, litter and dead wood sifted,
3.VIII.2012
, leg.
Wrase
(cAss)
;
333,
2♀♀
,
Lazikou valley
,
34°10'N
, 103°48- 52'E,
2120-2510 m
,
28.VI.2005
, leg.
Hájek
et al. (cSch, cAss)
;
13,
Lazikou valley
,
34°10'N
,
103°52'E
,
2120 m
, vegetation along meadow,
baited pitfall trap
(fish, meat, cheese),
28.VI.2005
, leg.
Hájek
et al. (cSch)
;
233,
Lazikou
pass,
34°14'N
,
103°54'E
,
3180 m
, grassland,
29.VI.2005
, leg.
Hájek
et al. (cSch, cAss)
;
233, S
Longnan
,
Min Shan
,
33°03'N
,
104°41'E
,
2200 m
, secondary pine forest with hazelnut, moist litter and roots sifted,
6.VIII.2012
, leg.
Assing
&
Wrase
(cAss, cSch). S h a a n x i [see also
type
material of
P. konfuzius
]: 233,
1♀
,
Qinling Shan
,
105 km
SW Xi'an
, pass on road
Zhouzhi-Foping
,
33°46'N
,
107°58'E
,
1880 m
,
4.VII.2001
, leg.
Wrase
(cSch)
;
13,
2♀♀
,
Qinling Shan
,
105 km
SW Xi'an
, pass on road
Zhouzhi-Foping
,
33°46'N
,
107°58'E
,
1700 m
, stream valley, mixed deciduous forest,
3.VII.2001
, leg.
Wrase
(cSch, cAss)
;
2♀♀
,
Qinling Shan
,
105 km
SW Xi'an
, pass on road
Zhouzhi-Foping
,
33°44'N
,
107°59'E
,
1990 m
,
2.-4.VII.2001
, leg.
Schülke
&
Wrase
(cSch, cAss)
;
1♀
,
Qinling Shan
,
52 km
SSW Zhouzhi
,
33°44'N
,
107°58'E
,
1900 m
, mixed forest, litter and soil sifted,
25.VII.2012
, leg.
Wrase
(cSch)
.
C o m m e n t: The original description of
P. agnatus
is based on
two syntypes
("
2 Exemplare
") from "Kan-ssu" (=
Gansu
) (
EPPELSHEIM 1889
), that of
P. dangchangensis
on a male
holotype
and a male
paratype
from "Dangchang County, Dahe Dam" (LI & ZHOU 2007). Only
one syntype
of
P. agnatus
was found in the Eppelsheim collection at the NHMW. Since it is a female, it is not designated as the
lectotype
. The second
syntype
may be in the Potanin collection, whose whereabouts are apparently unknown (
HORN et al. 1990
), if it still exists. The
syntype
from the Eppelsheim collection had been examined, but not assigned to a subgenus, by
WILLERS (2001b)
. Thus, the species is listed as incertae sedis in
SMETANA (2004)
and SCHÜLKE & SMETANA (in press). Based on the external (coloration of the antennae and legs; shape and coloration of the mandibles; shape of labrum), as well as the female sexual characters (shapes of tergite VIII and sternite VIII), the
syntype
of
P. agnatus
is conspecific with
P. dangchangensis
. Hence the synonymy proposed above.
A comparison of the sexual characters of the material from the environs of Chengxian, of the specimens from the regions to the northwest and southwest of Longnan, of material from
Shaanxi
, and of the aedeagus of the
holotype
based on photos kindly sent to me by Xiaoyan Li (
Beijing
) revealed some differences, particularly regarding the shape of the internal structures of the aedeagus (
Figs 1-12
,
17-19, 14
,
26, 29
), the size and number of the denticles on the dorsal plate of the aedeagus, the depth of the posterior excision of the male sternite VIII (
Figs 13-14
,
54
), the shape of the posterior margin of the female tergite VIII (
Figs 20-21
), and the shape of the apical projection of the female sternite VIII (
Figs 22-23
). The aedeagi of the
holotype
and the
paratype
of
P. dangchangensis
, as well as those of some males from
Shaanxi
have smaller denticles on the dorsal plate and an internal structure of slightly different shape. However, no significant differences were found in the external characters and in the general shape of the aedeagus (
Figs 1-12
,
15- 16
,
24-27
). The question whether or not the observed differences are an expression of inter- or intraspecific variation cannot answered with certainty, but the observation that slight differences may occur even within and between geographically close populations suggests that they are most plausibly interpreted as intraspecific variation.
Regardings its male and the female sexual characters,
P. agnatus
is similar to
P. konfuzius
, with which is was previously confounded (see
type
material of
P. konfuzius
) and from which it is distinguished by the absence of pronounced sexual dimorphisms of the head shape and the mandibles, by the paler tibiae (
P. agnatus
: usually yellowish, very indistinctly infuscate at most;
P. konfuzius
: more or less distinctly and more or less extensively infuscate basally), by the smaller aedeagus (
P. agnatus
: approximately
1.9 mm
;
P. konfuzius
: 2.0-
2.1 mm
), and by the apical internal structure of the aedeagus (
P. konfuzius
: straight, dagger-shaped, and more strongly sclerotized). For illustrations of
P. konfuzius
see
PENG et al. (2015)
. The previously unknown female sexual characters of
P. agnatus
are illustrated in
Figs 20-23
.
Paederus agnatus
is remarkably widespread in the Qinling Shan, from central southern
Gansu
to central southern
Shaanxi
(
Map 2
).