Revision of the Quedius fauna of Middle Asia (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Staphylininae)
Author
Salnitska, Maria
Author
Solodovnikov, Alexey
text
Deutsche Entomologische Zeitschrift
2018
65
2
117
159
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/dez.65.27033
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/dez.65.27033
1860-1324-2-117
B1A8523CA4634FC4A0C3072C2E78BA02
Genus
Quedius Stephens, 1829
Type species.
Quedius levicollis
(
Brulle
, 1832).
According to the latest phylogenetic hypotheses (Solodovnikov, 2006;
Chatzimanolis et al., 2010
;
Brunke et al., 2016
) the genus
Quedius
as it stands now in the taxonomic literature (e.g., summaries in Herman, 2001 or
Schuelke
and Smetana, 2015) is a polyphyletic assemblage of species belonging to several different subtribes of
Staphylinini
. Within the Palaearctic or Middle Asia, all species of
Quedius
are members of the subtribe
Quediina
in the restricted sense of
Brunke et al. (2016)
. Because of the polyphyly,
Quedius
in the current composition lacks synapomorphies and clear diagnosis. However, genus descriptions and diagnostic combination of characters that can define any Palaearctic species as a member of the genus
Quedius
are available in
Coiffait (1978)
,
Smetana (1988)
,
Assing and
Schuelke
(2012)
and other sources. The diagnosis of the genus
Quedius
and comparative notes we provide here are tuned for the fauna of Middle Asia.
Adults and larvae of
Quedius
seem to be predators hunting small invertebrates in various, sufficiently hu
mid
ground-based debris, mostly in forest leaf litter. In a largely arid region like Middle Asia,
Quedius
are mainly confined to humid open or forested habitats along creeks or rivers in the lowland or forests, meadows, snowfield margins and talus in the mountains. Some members of the subgenus
Microsaurus
are specialized inhabitants of mammal burrows. Overall, bionomics of the genus in Middle Asia remain largely unstudied.
Diagnosis.
Medium to large size (body length 3.5-24.0 mm) rove beetles with glossy forebody, infraorbital ridges extended from neck to base of mandibles and pronotal hypomera strongly inflexed under pronotal disk (not visible in lateral view). First segment of antennae at most slightly longer than second and third segments together. Last segment of maxillary palps fusiform, not densely setose. Tarsal formula 5
-5-
5; anterior tarsi widened in both sexes, with pale adhesive setae ventrally, with pair of empodial setae. Males always with distinct apical emargination on abdominal sternite VIII. Aedeagus varies in shape, paramere mostly with sensory peg setae.
Comparison.
Among other
Staphylinini
in Middle Asia
Quedius
can be sometimes confused with
Philonthus
(subtribe
Philonthina
), a genus with somewhat similar habitus and very abundant in the region. Species of
Philonthus
, however, do not have long infraorbital ridges, they lack empodial setae and mostly have a pronotal hypomeron well visible in lateral view. Also,
Philonthus
mostly possess multiple setiferous punctures in dorsal rows of pronotum (usually at most three in
Quedius
). Smaller species of
Quedius
may be confused with the genus
Heterothops
(subtribe
Amblyopinina
), but the latter have very thin acicular apical segments of maxillary palps, and a very different aedeagus without sensory peg setae and reduced median lobe giving the appearance of an absent paramere).