Revision of Quedius sensu stricto (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) Author Hansen, Aslak Kappel Natural History Museum of Denmark, Zoological Museum, Universitetsparken 15, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark; e-mails: akhansen @ snm. ku. dk; asolodovnikov @ snm. ku. dk & Natural History Museum Aarhus, Wilhelm Meyers Allé 10, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark & Department of Bioscience, University of Aarhus, Ny Munkegade 116, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark Author Brunke, Adam Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 960 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, K Author Simonsen, Thomas Natural History Museum Aarhus, Wilhelm Meyers Allé 10, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark Author Solodovnikov, Alexey Natural History Museum of Denmark, Zoological Museum, Universitetsparken 15, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark; e-mails: akhansen @ snm. ku. dk; asolodovnikov @ snm. ku. dk & Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Science, Universitetskaja nab. text Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae 2022 Acta. Ent. Mus. Natl. Pragae 2022-11-26 62 1 225 299 http://dx.doi.org/10.37520/aemnp.2022.017 journal article 217329 10.37520/aemnp.2022.017 795cf556-a4a9-477b-b55d-cb80ed8a0f2d 1804-6487 7399702 28D55112-98B1-49A5-B382-58B1B068570B Quedius molochinus -group Diagnosis. Species of medium size. Coloration variable from completely dark to dark with brown, reddish, or yellowish pale elytra and appendages. Eyes smaller, temples larger, with temporal puncture separated from posterior margin of eye by a distance equal to the diameter of the puncture. Frons without interocular punctures (cf. Fig. 6F ). Scutellum punctate and pubescent. Pronotum without puncture(s) in the posterior part of sublateral row. Palearctic; Q. molochinus introduced to North America. Comments. The Quedius molochinus -group is composed of four species ( Q. molochinus , Q. meridiocarpathicus , Q. vicinus , and Q. balticus ) that usually have red elytra, although some variants have them darkened. All of these are distributed within the Palearctic Region – although Q. molochinus has been introduced to the Nearctic (Sආൾඍൺඇൺ 1981). Among others of the subgenus, these species are characterized by usually having reddish-brown to orange elytra, frons without interocular punctures, scutellum punctate and pubescent, and sublateral rows on pronotum without punctures on the posterior half ( Fig. 8 ). The species are externally very similar and have been confused for a long time, rendering their real distributions unknown. They have also been confused with the red elytral species of the Q. pallipes -group, from which they are distinguished by sublateral rows on pronotum without punctures in posterior half. Thorough investigation of representative material here demonstrates that Q. molochinus , Q. meridiocarpathicus and Q. vicinus are almost entirely allopatric ( Fig. 20 ). Quedius molochinus is a more northern species, distributed in Europe from the UK and European Russia to the Alps and the Czech Republic , in Asia it is widespread from the Urals to Transbaikalia. In southern Europe it is replaced by Q. meridiocarpathicus , which is found in the Italian and Balkan peninsulas and continuing eastwards through Hungary to the Black Sea coast of Ukraine and Russia . Quedius vicinus is confined to Eastern Transcaucasia along the Caspian Sea, southeastern Anatolia , and the northern Middle East across to central Asia. The only overlap is in Anatolia where both Q. meridiocarpathicus and Q. vicinus can co-occur. In this area the species can be most easily distinguished by differences in male genitalia ( Fig. 13 ). Another minor difference includes the antennal coloration, where the middle antennomeres (from fourth to sixth) are slightly lighter in Q. vicinus compared to Q. meridiocarpathicus ( Fig. 8 ). Quedius meridiocarpathicus in turn has slightly lighter middle antennomeres as compared to Q. molochinus ( Fig. 8 ). All three species are found in similar habitats, mainly in various types of moist litter or under rocks either near creeks and rivers or in forests. Quedius balticus is found across a large part of the Palearctic and thus has an overlapping distribution with the other three species in parts of their ranges ( Fig. 19 ). Unlike the three former species, Q. balticus is almost exclusively found in bogs and on floodplains, to which it is highly adapted.Also, it is externally easy to recognize based on the darkened basal three antennomeres, which are pale in the three other species ( Fig. 8 ). If there is any doubt in external characters, these four species in the Q. molochinus -group can most easily be identified through differences in male genitalia (see descriptions).