Priceiella (Torosinirmus) Gustafsson & Bush, new subgenus

Type species. Priceiella (Torosinirmus) koka new species

Diagnosis. Priceiella (Torosinirmus) n. subgen. is most similar to Pr. (Camurnirmus) n. subgen., with which it shares the following characters: dorsal preantennal suture absent (Figs 294, 309) restricted to around dsms (Fig. 287); parameres (Figs 290, 298, 313) highly divergent; antennae generally may be sexually dimorphic [Figs 294– 295, 309–310; but not in Pr. (Camurnirmus) hwameicola n. sp., Fig. 287, and not in some Pr. (Torosinirmus)]; sternal plates and subgenital plates of both sexes without antero-lateral modifications (Figs 285–286, 292–293, 307–308); male subgenital plate without accessory lateral plates (Figs 285–286, 292–293, 307–308); mesosomes broad (Figs 289, 297, 313), generally irregularly oval or shield-shaped, without rugose nodi. These two subgenera differ in the following characters: ps present on segment III in both sexes and aps present on tergopleurites III in males in Pr. (Torosinirmus) (Figs 307–308) but both absent in Pr. (Camurnirmus) (Figs 285–286, 292–293); marginal thickening of mesosome never displaced medianly and continuous distally in Pr. (Torosinirmus) (Fig. 312) but displaced medianly at least at lateral margin and may be interrupted distally in Pr. (Camurnirmus) (Figs 289, 297); proximal mesosome broad, flat, and not overlapping with basal apodeme in Pr. (Torosinirmus) (Figs 311–312), but narrowed and variable, overlapping with basal apodeme in Pr. (Camurnirmus) (Figs 288–289, 296– 287).

Description. Both sexes. As in genus description except: dorsal preantennal suture absent. Antennae may be sexually dimorphic (Figs 309–310). Abdominal chaetotaxy as in Tables 2 and 8. Both sexes with ps on segment III. Antero-lateral corners of sternal plates not modified (Figs 307–308).

Male. Males with aps on tergopleurites III–VII. No accessory plates lateral to male subgenital plate. Proximal mesomere broad, rounded or rectangular (Fig. 311). Primary mesomeral lobes broad, rounded or angular. Ventral rugose nodi absent; ames and pmes as in Fig. 311. Parameral heads small, blunt (Fig. 312). Parameral blades very broad, divergent distally.

Female. Female without psps on tergopleurite VIII.

Etymology. The name Torosinirmus is derived from Latin “ torosus ” for “muscular, fleshy”, referring to the very thick parameres of the species in this group (Fig. 313). The ending “ Nirmus ” is a common generic suffix in louse taxonomy, referring to the genus of the same name erected by Nitzsch (1818).