Revision of the Palaearctic and Oriental representatives of Lachnocrepis LeConte and Oodes Bonelli (Coleoptera: Carabidae), with special account on Chinese species
Author
Guéorguiev, Borislav
0000-0002-8532-0657
gueorguiev@nmnhs.com
Author
Liang, Hongbin
0000-0002-9668-1167
lianghb@ioz.ac.cn
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-09-08
4850
1
1
89
journal article
8579
10.11646/zootaxa.4850.1.1
686337a2-1528-43d0-ae32-68ca023d8df3
1175-5326
4407072
18AA0411-0E54-4922-84C7-608EAC68D281
Oodes
generic group
Diagnosis
. The species of this group share the following character states:
(1) Labrum with six setiferous punctures;
(2) Labrum not appreciably shortened, with flat or slightly convex surface;
(3) Pronotum with or without basal setiferous punctures. If present, the punctures are medially remote from the posterior angles; usually they are quite small (in many cases setae have fallen off and punctures themselves are hardly visible);
(4) Elytral interval 3 with two setiferous pores, adjacent to stria 2;
(5) Elytral intervals 6 and 7 do not join the basal margin;
(6) Elytral interval
8 in
anterior half approximately as wide as intervals 1-7 (never significantly constricted, like species of
Brachyodes
Jeannel, 1949
);
(7) Elytral interval 9 completely disappeared, transformed in marginal furrow;
(8) Apical part of median lobe of aedeagus tubular (not flattened dorsoventrally, as in members of
Miltodes
Andrewes, 1922
, and
Protopidius
Basilewsky, 1949
).
Monophyly and relationships
. This group includes 48 species, 23 of them classified in the genera
Pseudoodes
,
Sundaoodes
,
Oodes
, and
Nothoodes
, as well as 25
Oodes
species
incertae sedis
. The last category includes species still not taxonomically revised. The species from the above mentioned genera have a high degree of morphological similarity. Most of its diagnostic characters (1–2, 4, 6, and 8) are plesiomorphic, and the rest seem to be homoplastic characters shared with other unrelated
Oodini
. Representatives from the first three genera have the basal bulb of median lobe closed dorsally and well-developed, elongate spermatheca with spermathecal gland connected near the apical third of the seminal canal, which suggests that they are more closely related to each other than to
Nothoodes
. The relationships among the former three genera are difficult to assess. Despite sharing two derived features,
Oodes
and
Sundaoodes
are probably not adelphotaxa (see “Monophyly and relationships” under
Sundaoodes
) and together with
Pseudoodes
could be separate lineages that arose from a common ancestor. Alternatively,
Pseudoodes
and
Sundaoodes
may be adelphotaxa (see “Monophyly and relationships” under
Pseudoodes
) and the clade formed by these two genera might be the adelphotaxon to
Oodes
.
Notes
. The species from the above four genera can be distinguished from those of the genus
Simous
Chaudoir, 1882
, by the following characters: (1) labrum relatively long and not convex, with anterior angles moderately rounded; (2) mentum tooth nearly as long as wide, with apex rounded (most species), rarely truncate (most
Pseudoodes
spp.) or emarginate (
Pseudoodes vicarius
,
P
.
rambouseki
); and (3) basal setiferous punctures of pronotum, if present, medially remote from posterior angles. The species of
Simous
have a labrum two or more times shorter than the clypeus whereas the two structures have similar lengths in the species dealt with here. Also, the species of
Simous
have a mentum tooth considerably shorter (considering distance from paramedial border to apex) and wider, with apex emarginate or truncate, as well as basal setiferous punctures of the pronotum situated near posterior angles. A few still undescribed species of this genus have lost their basal punctures of the pronotum, and are thus distinguishable from those of the generic group of
Oodes
only by the first two features listed above. Moreover, all
Simous
species studied have a submentum with one pair of setae. Among taxa considered, this state is present only in species of
Oodes
, which are distinct however from
Simous
by their rounded mentum tooth and proportionally longer labrum.
Also, the species treated in this paper are distinct in character states 4 and 7 from those belonging to another group of
Oriental
oodines that are currently classified in
Oodes
and
Pseudosphaerodes
Jeannel, 1949
. The taxa from the latter group have the elytra without setiferous punctures in interval 3, and the interval 9 is not or incompletely transformed into a marginal furrow. Furthermore, the taxa from this still unrevised taxonomic group have three other characteristics: (1) basal bulb of the median lobe open dorsally (a trait present in species of
Nothoodes
); (2) male protarsomere 3 semicircular with the medial side rounded; and (3) interval 8 (and 9, if present) flat and situated laterally, in contrast with adjacent medial intervals which lie dorsally. Interval
8 in
the species dealt with here is usually more convex than the medial intervals and occupies an intermediate position between the lateral and dorsal surfaces.