Taxonomy of the poorly known Quedius mutilatus group of wingless montane species from Middle Asia (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Staphylinini)
Author
Salnitska, Maria
Author
Solodovnikov, Alexey
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2018
2018-02-06
401
1
17
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2018.401
49d45069-6150-4b6e-873c-fc8058025a39
2118-9773
1167581
9C9DB157-AAA5-40B7-BA0B-9A57779382C1
Quedius mutilatus
group
Diagnosis
The
Quedius mutilatus
group of species can be recognized as follows: relatively large
Microsaurus
(body length
8–11.6 mm
) with brown to dark brown, dorso-ventrally flattened body, with notably small eyes and pronounced signs of brachyptery such as short elytra and absent palisade fringe on abdominal tergite VII; head with posterior frontal puncture situated very close to neck; pronotum with distinct anterior and posterior angles, normally with three punctures in dorsal rows with anteriormost (smaller) puncture located latero-anteriorly at pronotal anterior margin, and with one to two sublateral punctures situated slightly anterior to large lateral puncture; scutellum impunctate; aedeagus robust, symmetrical, with apical portion of median lobe slightly curved towards paramere, with characteristic tooth near apex (in lateral view), with paramere widest shortly before apex (in parameral view) and with four distinct groups of sensory peg setae: two apical and two lateral.
List of species
Quedius mutilatus
Eppelsheim, 1888
;
Quedius kalabi
Smetana, 1995
;
Quedius equus
Smetana, 2014
and
Quedius kungeicus
sp. nov.
; all species can be reliably separated from each other by the structure of the aedeagus only.
Distribution
All species of the group seem to be allopatric (
Fig. 1
):
Quedius mutilatus
Eppelsheim, 1888
is restricted to the central part of Terskei Alatau, south of Issyk-Kul Lake; it is replaced eastwardly by
Q. kalabi
Smetana, 1995
and then
Q. equus
Smetana, 2014
, the latter probably being distributed throughout NE Terskei Alatau to
Xinjiang
Province in
China
.
Quedius kungeicus
sp. nov.
is known from the
type
locality in eastern Kungei Alatau only. There is a single female from the high altitudes of Atbashi Mountain in Central Tien-Shan, which presumably belongs to the
Q. mutilatus
group, but cannot be further identified without associated males. Three ambiguous specimens from Toksanbai in Dzungarian Alatau, damaged by dermestids, are presumably mislabelled and in fact originate from Terskei Alatau, because a single fully preserved male among them displays an aedeagus of the
Q. kalabi
type
. All specimens of the
Q. mutilatus
group with recorded bionomic data indicate a specialization to high elevations.
Systematics
Some authors affiliated
Q. mutilatus
with
Q. przewalskii
Reitter, 1887
(
Reitter 1887
;
Boháč 1988
) or with the
Q. przewalskii
group (
Smetana 2014
); the latter, however, lacks a clear definition (
Solodovnikov & Hansen 2016
). For example,
Smetana (2014)
affiliated
Q. mutilatus
and
Q. equus
to the
Q. przewalskii
group, contrary to his (e.g.,
Smetana 2001
) earlier opinion of the composition of this group. Based on body chaetotaxy and the shape of the aedeagus, it could be related to
Q. puncticollis
(Thomson, 1867)
, as proposed by
Coiffait (1978)
. The
Q. puncticollis
group of
Coiffait (1978)
is phylogenetically heterogeneous, based on the diverse morphology and scattered distributions of species. We establish the
Q. mutilatus
group here for
Q. mutilatus
and related species from Tien-Shan. Members of the group markedly differ from
Q. puncticollis
and related species in a microphthalmous, brachypterous habitus, with weakly pigmented coloration and in the shape of the aedeagus, with a pointed apex of the median lobe and sensory peg setae arranged in apical and lateral groups. The
Q. mutilatus
group differs from the
Q. przewalskii
group, in the more restricted sense of
Smetana (2001)
, in having three (contrary to one or two) punctures in the dorsal rows of the pronotum and in the structure of the aedeagus, which is symmetrical, with a median lobe having a pointed apex and a more basally positioned ventral tooth, and with wide parameres having two groups of sensory peg setae (apical and lateral).
All species of this group are individually treated below. In addition to the description of a new species, a redescription is provided for
Q. mutilatus
, the most commonly cited species of the group with which other, later described species have been compared.