Inventory of the Carabid Beetle Fauna of the Gaoligong Mountains, Western Yunnan Province, China: Species of the Tribe Trechini (Coleoptera: Caraboidea), with Descriptions of Four New Genera, One New Subgenus and 19 New Species.
Author
Deuve, Thierry
Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité, ISYEB - UMR 7205 - MNHN, CNRS, UPMC, EPHE, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Sorbonne-Universités, 57 rue Cuvier, CP 50, F- 75231 Paris cedex 05, France.
Author
Kavanaugh, David H.
Department of Entomology, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA 94118, U. S. A.
dkavanaugh@calacademy.org
Author
Liang, Hongbin
Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China * Corresponding author: David H. Kavanaugh (dkavanaugh @ calacademy. org)
text
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences
2016
2016-10-14
63
12
341
455
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.13155283
0068-547X
13155283
4C790FE0-B735-4592-8827-EEF83C663CB1
Genus
Epaphiotrechus
Deuve
and Kavanaugh,
gen. nov.
TYPE
SPECIES
.—
Epaphiotrechus fortipesoides
sp. nov.
Derivation of genus group name
.— The genus group name (masculine) is a combination of two other trechine generic names,
Epaphius
and
Trechus
.
DIAGNOSIS
.— Adults of this genus (
Fig. 33a
) can be recognized by the following combination of character states: size large (BL =
4.5 to 4.7 mm
), apterous; body color dark piceous with elytral interval 1 and lateral areas of pronotum and elytra more or less reddish; dorsum shiny, distinctly iridescent, dorsal surface glabrous except for isolated fixed setae typical for trechines, eyes also glabrous; right mandible (
Fig.
16g
) with premolar not fused with retinaculum but closely associat- ed with the latter [possibly representative of an intermediate state in the evolution of the “bidentate” mandibular
type
(see discussion above for genus
Trechus
)], anterior tip of retinaculum enlarged as a distinct tooth and displaced anteriorly (but not quite as far as in members of
Trechepaphiopsis
species
); pronotum with basal angles small and rectangular; elytra elongate, oblong, slightly flattened along the median suture area, striae finely impressed, crenulate or finely punctate, lateral striae partly effaced but striae 6 and 7 still evident; two discal setae present on interval 3 next to stria 3, inserted near the anterior one-sixth and near mid-elytral length, respectively; preapical seta present, inserted next to stria 2.
COMMENTS
.— When Uéno (1999) described
Trechus
(
s. str.
)
fortipes
, he noted that it was a “strange species similar to certain
Epaphiopsis
”, with the distinct premolar on the right mandible. However, characters of the male aedeagus, particularly the presence of a distinct endophallic sclerite, led him to consider this species as a basal member of genus
Trechus
in which the plesiomorphic right mandibular dentition was retained.
GEOGRAPHICAL
DISTRIBUTION
.
This genus currently is known from only two species, both found only in the southern part of the Gaoligong Shan region of western
Yunnan Province
,
China
.