identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
D81187E6FFACFFD9FF7AFC0DFF72FB08.text	D81187E6FFACFFD9FF7AFC0DFF72FB08.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coecobrya Yosii 1956	<div><p>Genus Coecobrya Yosii, 1956 (in: 1956b)</p><p>Type species: Sinella (Coecobrya) akiyoshiana Yosii, 1956</p><p>Diagnosis. Body with pigment reduced or totally absent, without scales, Th II–III plurichaetotic; antennae shorter than the body length, with four segments, Ant IV not annulated and without apical bulb; 0–3 eyes; prelabral, labral, basolateral and basomedian chaetae smooth; Abd II–IV bothriotrichal formula 2, 3, 2; ms and sens formula of Th II–Abd V as 1, 0| 1, 0, 0–1, 0, 0 and 2, 2| 1, 2, 2, –, 3, respectively; Abd IV relatively developed, 2.5 to 4 times the length of Abd III in the midline; dorsal manubrium with or without smooth chaetae; dens without spines, mucro falcate with basal spine (modified of Chen &amp; Christiansen 1997; Zhang et al. 2009, 2016; Zhang &amp; Deharveng 2015).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D81187E6FFACFFD9FF7AFC0DFF72FB08	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cipola, Nikolas Gioia;Bellini, Bruno Cavalcante	Cipola, Nikolas Gioia, Bellini, Bruno Cavalcante (2016): A new cave species of Coecobrya Yosii (Collembola, Entomobryidae, Entomobryinae) from South Africa, with an identification key to the genus. Zootaxa 4200 (3): 351-366, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4200.3.1
D81187E6FFACFFD1FF7AFAD9FDE4FD72.text	D81187E6FFACFFD1FF7AFAD9FDE4FD72.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coecobrya anaguilae	<div><p>Coecobrya anaguilae sp. nov.</p><p>Figs 2–35, Tab. 1</p><p>Type material. Holotype female, South Africa, Western Cape province, Oudtshoorn, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=22.215&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-33.39278" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 22.215/lat -33.39278)">Cango Caves</a> (33°23’34”S; 22°12’54” E) (Fig. 1), iii.2013, A.L.F. Guil &amp; E. Trajano coll., on slide N° 039/ INPA . Paratypes on slide,in MNRJ, 1 female and 1 immature, same data as holotype.</p><p>Diagnosis. Specimens eyeless; dorsal head chaetotaxy with 3 medial and 8 sutural mac; Th II with 2, 4, 4, 8, 13, 0 mac respectively in Gr I–VI; Th III with 9 and 13 mac in Gr I and II respectively; Abd I–III respectively with 6–7, 3, 1 central mac; Abd IV with 7 central mac; collophore posterior face with 1+1 large apical smooth chaeta; unguis with unpaired median teeth; manubrium without smooth chaetae (Figs 5, 12–17, 30, 32).</p><p>Description. Total length of the holotype 2.04 mm. Body pale, without pigments and scales, densely covered by different types of meso and macrochaetae (Figs 2, 4–5, 12–20). Abd IV about 3.5 times the length of Abd III along dorsal midline (Figs 2–3).</p><p>Head. Antenna 2.15 times the length of cephalic diagonal. Antennae ratio of holotype as I: II: III: IV = 1: 1.7: 1.06: 1.78 (Figs 2–3). Ant IV not annulated, with blunt sens, and ciliated and smooth chaetae (Fig. 6). Ant III organ unclear in all specimens. Ant I with 4 smooth mic at base and 4 mac on dorso-lateral face, plus numerous mes and mic (Fig. 5). Eyeless (Figs 2–3, 5). Dorsal chaetotaxy (Fig. 5) with four antennal mac (An1–3a), An3 as mes; four anterior mac (A0, A2–3 and A5); 3 medio-ocellar mac. (M1–2 and M4); eight sutural mac (S0–7); one post-sutural mac (Ps2); three post-occipital internal mac (Pi1-3); 3 – 4 post-occipital anterior mac (Pa1–3 and Pa5), Pa1 present or absent; two postoccipital medial mac (Pm1 and Pm3); four post-occipital posterior mac (Pp1–3 and Pp5); four post-occipital external mac (Pe3 and three unnamed). Clypeal formula with two (l1), four (f1–2), three (pf0–1) chaetae, f2 short and ciliate, others smooth (Fig. 5). Labral and prelabral chaetae four (a1–2), five (m0–2), five (p0–2)/ four, all smooth, a1 as curved spine-like chaeta (Fig 7). Ventral chaetotaxy (omitted posterior region) with numerous smooth and ciliate chaetae, postlabial formula 4, 4, 4, all chaetae long and smooth, except X2, X3 and X4 short and ciliate (Fig. 8). Basolateral and basomedian labial field with smooth chaetae, M1 and r smaller, others normal (Fig. 9). Labium with five smooth proximal chaetae (Figs 9–10). Labial palp with five main papillae (A–E) plus one hypostomal papilla (H) with 0, 5, 0, 4, 4, 2 guard appendages, respectively, lateral process (l.p.) of papilla E finger-shaped (Fig. 10). Maxillary outer lobe with one apical appendage and one subapical chaeta slightly smaller plus 3 sublobal appendages, all smooth (Fig. 11).</p><p>Thorax chaetotaxy (Figs 12–13). Th II with one S-microchaeta (ms) and two sens type I (al, acc.p6); Gr I with two (m1, m 1i), Gr II with four (a5, m4, m 4i, m4p), Gr III with four (p 1i 2, p 1i, p1, p1a), Gr IV with eight, and Gr V with 13 mac; Gr VI mac absent (Fig. 12). Th III with two sens type I (al, acc.p6); Gr I with nine, Gr II with 13, Gr III with three, and Gr IV with five mac (Fig. 13).</p><p>Abdomen chaetotaxy (Figs 14–20). Abd I with one S-microchaeta (ms), one accessory sens type I (acc.p6); one anterior (a3), five medial (m2, m 2i, m3, m4, m4p) plus one extra (?) mac, the latter present or absent (Fig. 14). Abd II with two sens type I (as, acc.p6); four medial (m3, m3ep, m3e, m5) and one posterior (p6) mac (Fig. 15). Abd III with two sens type I (as, acc.p6), S-microchaeta (ms) absent; one anterior (am6), two medial (m3) and two posterior (p6, pm6) mac (Fig. 16). Abd IV with two sens type I (as, ps), about five sens type II; seven medial (A4, A6, I, B4–6, M) and six lateral mac (D3, E2–4, F1), eight posterior chaetae present (Fig. 17). Abd V with three sens type I (as, acc.p4, acc.p5); three medial (m2, m3, m5) and four posterior (p1, p3, p4) mac (Fig. 19). Abd IV and V respectively with seven and two lateral mac (Figs 18, 20).</p><p>Legs. External face of subcoxa I with two mac and two pseudopores; subcoxa II with one anterior row of five mac plus one posterior row of two mac and two pseudopores; subcoxa III with one row of six mac plus three anterior mac and two posterior pseudopores (Figs 21–23 respectively). Trochanteral organ with approximately 19 smooth spine-like chaetae; 5 in arms and 14 smaller (Fig. 24). Femur I with two rows of three inner outstanding ciliate mac of smooth apex. Tibiotarsi subdivided (Fig. 25) with five types of chaetae (excluding one distal smooth chaeta on tibiotarsus III): several medium sized sparsely ciliate chaetae (Fig. 26), one outstanding inner ciliate proximal mac with smooth apex (Fig. 27), about 14 thin feathered chaetae (Fig. 28), six inner differentiated chaetae with ciliations not appressed to axis on tibiotarsi I–II (seven on tibiotarsus III) (Fig. 29), and one ciliate weakly clavate antero-distal tenent-hair (Fig. 30). Unguis with three inner teeth, basal paired teeth unequal at 0.40 distance from base of inner edge, and one unpaired median teeth at 0.73. Unguiculus with a large outer tooth, with smooth edges (Figs 25 and 30).</p><p>Collophore (Figs 31–33). Anterior side with two large and three small ciliate chaetae (Fig 31); posterior side with one large apical and three small subapical smooth chaetae (Fig. 32); lateral flap with about nine smooth chaetae (Fig. 33).</p><p>Furca. Manubrium without smooth chaetae, manubrial plate with three ciliate chaetae and two pseudopores; ventral side with three subapical and five distal ciliate chaetae (Fig. 34). Mucro falcate with a basal spine almost reaching the mucro apex (Fig. 35).</p><p>Etymology. “ Anaguilae ” refers to Ana Luiza Guil, collector of the specimens.</p><p>Distribution and habitat. The species is possible troglobite or troglophile and it was collected directly from soil/substrate of Cango Caves, located at the beginning of the Swartberg Range, near the town of Oudtshoorn, in Western Cape Province of South Africa, Good’s biogeographic zone 14 “Paleotropical” (Good 1974). It is not clear if the specimens were collected from the entrance, twilight or dark zones of the caves. The climate of the area following the Köppen-Geiger system is ”Bsk” cold semi-arid climate (steppe), characterized by high altitude with mountain formations (Kottek et al. 2006).</p><p>Characters Species of Coecobrya</p><p>anaguilae communis (3) edenticulata (1,2) tropicalis (4)</p><p>M1 s s or – – S or C Head ventral R s s or c S s or c chaetotaxy X S s or c? s Collophore anterior side 2C, 3c 2C, 3–5c 4–6C 2C chaetotaxy posterior side 1S, 3s 2S, 3–5s 1S, 1s 2S, 2s</p><p>lateral flap 9s 6–10s 4s 6–10s</p><p>Symbols used to represent the morphological characteristics: (C) ciliated chaeta; (c) reduced ciliated chaeta; (S) smooth chaeta; (s) reduced smooth chaeta; (?) unknown; (+) present; (–) absent; (*) rarely present. References: (1) Handschin 1926; (2) Yoshii &amp; Suhardjono 1989 (3) Chen &amp; Christiansen 1997; (4) Qu et al. 2007.</p><p>Remarks. Coecobrya anaguilae sp. nov. shares characteristics such as absence of eyes, overall pattern of dorsal chaetotaxy, unguis with one unpaired median tooth, and manubrium without smooth chaetae, with other species of the tenebricosa -group such as C. edenticulata (Handschin, 1926, after Yoshii &amp; Suhardjono 1989, pg.</p><p>33) from Java, C. communis Chen &amp; Christiansen, 1997 from China, and C. tropicalis Qu, Chen &amp; Greenslade, 2007 from Australia. However C. anaguilae sp. nov., is easily distinguished from these other species by the combination of: collophore posterior side with one large apical smooth chaetae (two in C. communis and C. tropicalis) plus three small smooth chaetae (one in C. edenticulata); dorsal cephalic chaetotaxy with M4 and S0 mac (absent in C. tropicalis), and Gr I with four mac (two in C. edenticulata and C. tropicalis); Th II chaetotaxy with two mac (m1– 1i) in Gr I (one in C. communis, three in C. tropicalis and C. edenticulata), Gr II with m 4i mac (absent in C. edenticulata and C. tropicalis), Gr III with four mac (three in C. edenticulata and C. tropicalis), Gr IV with eight mac (seven or less in C. communis), Gr V with 13 mac (eigth in C. edenticulata and 10 in C. communis and C. tropicalis), and Gr VI without mac (one in C. tropicalis). Coecobrya anaguilae sp. nov. is also distinct among other species of the genus by the combination of the following characteristics: Th III with 13 mac in Gr II (11 or less in these other species); Abd I with seven mac (two in C. edenticulata, five or six in C. tropicalis); Abd II–III respectively with m3e and am6 mac (both absent in C. edenticulata); Abd IV with B4 and B5 mac (both absent in C. tropicalis) and trochanteral organ with about 19 spines. Other morphological differences among the compared species are presented in Table 1.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D81187E6FFACFFD1FF7AFAD9FDE4FD72	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cipola, Nikolas Gioia;Bellini, Bruno Cavalcante	Cipola, Nikolas Gioia, Bellini, Bruno Cavalcante (2016): A new cave species of Coecobrya Yosii (Collembola, Entomobryidae, Entomobryinae) from South Africa, with an identification key to the genus. Zootaxa 4200 (3): 351-366, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4200.3.1
D81187E6FFA2FFD6FF7AFF11FA04F9BC.text	D81187E6FFA2FFD6FF7AFF11FA04F9BC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Coecobrya	<div><p>Key to the world species of Coecobrya</p><p>* Cave-dwelling species</p><p>1 Eyes present ( boneti -group)............................................................................ 2</p><p>- Eyes absent ( tenebricosa -group)........................................................................ 9</p><p>2(1) Eyes 1+1 or 3+3...................................................................................... 3</p><p>- Eyes 2+2; Vietnam............................................................ C. tetrophthalma (Denis, 1948)</p><p>3(2) Eyes 1+1............................................................................................ 4</p><p>- Eyes 3+3............................................................................................ 8</p><p>4(3) Abd I with 5+5 central mac or less.......................................................................5</p><p>- Abd I with 6+6 central mac............................................................................. 6</p><p>5(4) Th II with 2+2 mac (p4 and p 4i) in Gr VI; Abd I with 4 + 4 central mac; Abd IV with 6+6 central mac; Cambodia ......................................................................... C. tukmeas Zhang, Deharveng &amp; Chen, 2009 *</p><p>- Th II without mac in Gr VI; Abd I with 5+5 central mac; Abd IV with 7+7 central mac (Figs 12, 17); China ...................................................................................... C. sanmingensis Xu &amp; Zhang, 2015</p><p>6(4) Abd IV with 6+6 central mac or less; dorsal manubrium without smooth chaetae.................................. 7</p><p>- Abd IV with 7+7 central mac; dorsal manubrium with smooth chaetae (Fig. 43); Indonesia ............................................................................................ C. indonesiensis (Chen &amp; Deharveng, 1997) *</p><p>7(6) Abd IV with 6+6 central mac; Vietnam .................................................. C. boneti (Denis, 1948)</p><p>- Abd IV with 4+4 central mac; China ................................. C. oculata Zhang, Bedos &amp; Deharveng, 2016 *</p><p>8(3) Labial chaeta r smooth (Fig. 36); Th II with 3+3 (m1, m2 and m 2i) medio-median mac; unguiculus without external teeth (Fig 38); China ........................................................... C. mulun Zhang, Qu &amp; Deharveng, 2010</p><p>- Labial chaeta r ciliate (Fig 37); Th II with 1+1 (m1) medio-median mac; unguiculus with one external tooth (Fig 39); China ............................................................................... C. qin Zhang &amp; Dong, 2014</p><p>9(1) Mucronal basal spine long reaching at least near apex of apical tooth (Fig 44).....................................10</p><p>- Mucronal basal spine very short, not reaching the apex of apical tooth (Fig 45); USA............. C. caeca (Schött, 1896)</p><p>10(9) Unguis with 2 unpaired teeth, with one minute apical tooth (Fig. 40)............................................ 11</p><p>- Unguis with at most 1 unpaired tooth (Figs 38–39)..........................................................13</p><p>11(10) Tenent hairs spatulate.................................................................................12</p><p>- Tenent hairs pointed; India.......................................................... C. montana (Imms, 1912)</p><p>12(11) Tibiotarsus with rows of smooth inner differentiated chaetae; Afghanistan................. C. submontana (Stach, 1960)</p><p>- Tibiotarsus with rows of ciliate inner differentiated chaetae; New Caledonia .............................................................................. C. neocaledonica Zhang, Bedos &amp; Deharveng, 2014 (in: Zhang et al. 2014 a)</p><p>13(10) Manubrium with dorsal smooth chaetae (Fig. 43)........................................................... 14</p><p>- Manubrium without dorsal smooth chaetae................................................................38</p><p>14(13) Unguis without unpaired inner teeth......................................................................15</p><p>- Unguis with unpaired inner tooth (Figs 38–39)............................................................. 16</p><p>15(14) Dental smooth part about 0.7 times as long as mucro; Japan............................. C. ishikawai (Yosii, 1956a) *</p><p>- Dental smooth part about 1.5 times as long as mucro; Korea................................. C. maritima Park, 2004</p><p>16(14) Outer tooth on unguiculus at most slightly broader than unguiculus itself.........................................17</p><p>- Outer tooth on unguiculus twice as broad as unguiculus itself; New Guinea................... C. papuana (Yosii, 1971) *</p><p>17(16) Antennae less than three times as long as the cephalic diagonal................................................18</p><p>- Antennae more than five times as long as the cephalic diagonal; Hawaii (USA)... C. nupa (Christiansen &amp; Bellinger, 1992) *</p><p>18(17) Tibiotarsus with rows of ciliate inner differentiated chaetae (Fig. 41), i.e. with ciliations closely appressed to axis........19</p><p>- Tibiotarsus without rows of ciliate inner differentiated chaetae (Fig. 42)........................................ 25</p><p>19(18) Abd IV with 4+4 central mac...........................................................................20</p><p>- Abd IV with more than 4+4 central mac.................................................................. 23</p><p>20(19) Abd III with 2 + 2 lateral mac...........................................................................21</p><p>- Abd III with 3 + 3 lateral mac...........................................................................22</p><p>21(20) Th II with 4+4 mac in Gr IV; Th III with 9+9 to 13+13 mac in Gr I; Northern Hemisphere.. C. tenebricosa (Folsom, 1902) *</p><p>- Th II with 2+2 mac in Gr IV; Th III with 8+8 mac in Gr I; Rapa Nui ( Eastern Island, Chile)................................................................................... C. aitorererere Bernard, Soto-Adames &amp; Wynne, 2015</p><p>22(20) Th II with 2+2 mac in Gr I; collophore anterior face with 2+2 long central mac; Japan ......... C. tibiotarsalis (Yosii, 1964)</p><p>- Th II with 1+1 mac in Gr I; collophore anterior face with 1+1 long central mac; China ..... C. brevis Xu, Yu &amp; Zhang, 2012</p><p>23(19) Abd III with 2+2 central mac...........................................................................24</p><p>- Abd III with 1+1 central mac; Germany............................................... C. hoefti (Schäffer, 1896)</p><p>24(23) Th II with 3+3 (m1, m2 and m 2i) medio-median and 2+2 (m4 and m4p) medio-lateral mac; Hungary ................................................................................... C. magyari Chen, Wang &amp; Christiansen, 2002</p><p>- Th II with 2+2 (m1 and m2) medio-median and 3+3 (m4, m 4i and m4p) medio-lateral mac; Thailand ...................................................................................... C. lanna Zhang, Deharveng &amp; Chen, 2009</p><p>25(18) Unguis with unpaired inner distal tooth at more than 25% from the base of the claw (Fig. 40)........................26</p><p>- Unguis elongate, with unpaired inner distal tooth basal, at less than 20% from the base of the claw; Japan ............................................................................................ C. akiyoshiana (Yosii, 1956a) *</p><p>26(25) Abd II with 2+2 central mac............................................................................27</p><p>- Abd II with 3+3 or 4+4 central mac......................................................................29</p><p>27(26) Th II with 4+4 mac in Gr I–II altogether..................................................................28</p><p>- Th II with 6+6 mac in Gr I –II altogether; Thailand ...................................... C. similis Deharveng, 1990</p><p>28(27) Abd IV with 3+3 central mac and 3+3 lateral mac; Japan ................................... C. arcuata (Yosii, 1955)</p><p>- Abd IV with 4+4 central mac and 6+6 lateral mac; Rapa Nui ( Easter Island, Chile)... C. kennethi Jordana &amp; Baquero, 2008 *</p><p>29(26) Abd III with 1+1 central mac (Fig. 16)....................................................................30</p><p>- Abd III with 2+2 central mac; Hawaii (USA).............................. C. kukae Christiansen &amp; Bellinger, 1992 *</p><p>30(29) Abd I with 4+4 central mac.............................................................................31</p><p>- Abd I with 5+5 central mac.............................................................................33</p><p>31(30) Abd IV with 4+4 central mac or more................................................................... 32</p><p>- Abd IV with 2+2 central mac; Hawaii (USA)................................. C. lua Christiansen &amp; Bellinger, 1992 *</p><p>32(31) Abd IV with 4+4 central mac; China ............................................... C. islandica Shi &amp; Pan, 2015</p><p>- Abd IV with 6+6 or 7+7 central mac; Republic of Vanuatu .................................. C. aokii (Yoshii, 1995)</p><p>33(30) Unguis with paired teeth at more than 35% from the base of the unguis (Figs 38–40).............................. 34</p><p>- Unguis with paired teeth at less than 25% from the base of the unguis; Japan............... C. spinidentata (Yosii, 1942) *</p><p>34(33) Abd IV with 3+3 central mac...........................................................................35</p><p>- Abd IV with 4+4 or 5+5 central mac.....................................................................36</p><p>35(34) Th II without medio-lateral mac; Hawaii (USA)............................ C. borerae Christiansen &amp; Bellinger, 1992</p><p>- Th II with 3+3 (m4, m 4i and m4p) medio-lateral mac; China ................... C. oligoseta Chen &amp; Christiansen, 1997</p><p>36(34) Abd IV with 4+4 central mac...........................................................................37</p><p>- Abd IV with 5+5 central mac; Japan and Korea........................................ C. dubiosa (Yosii, 1956a) *</p><p>37(36) Th II with p4 and p 4i mac; China ................................................ C. pani Xu, Yu &amp; Zhang, 2012</p><p>- Th II without mac p4 and p 4i; Thailand ......................................... C. guanophila Deharveng, 1990 *</p><p>38(13) Abd III with 1+1 central mac (Fig. 16)....................................................................39</p><p>- Abd III with 2+2 central mac...........................................................................46</p><p>39(38) Abd IV with at least 6+6 central mac.....................................................................40</p><p>- Abd IV with 5+5 central mac or less......................................................................42</p><p>40(39) Abd IV with 7+7 central mac (Fig. 17)...................................................................41</p><p>- Abd IV with 6+6 central mac; China ................................ C. annulata Zhang, Bedos &amp; Deharveng, 2016 *</p><p>41(40) Collophore posterior face with 1+1 large apical smooth chaetae (Fig 32); Th II with 10+10 mac in Gr V; Th III with 11+11 or less mac in Gr II; China ................................................ C. communis Chen &amp; Christiansen, 1997</p><p>- Collophore posterior face with 2+2 large apical smooth chaetae; Th II with 13+13 mac in Gr V; Th III with 13+13 mac in Gr II (Figs 12–13); South Africa ............................................................ C. anaguilae sp. nov. *</p><p>42(39) Abd IV with 4+4 or 5+5 central mac.....................................................................44</p><p>- Abd IV with 3+3 central mac...........................................................................43</p><p>43(42) Abd I with 2+2 mac; Abd II with 2+2 central mac; Java ........................... C. edenticulata (Handschin, 1926) *</p><p>- Abd I with 6+6 mac; Abd II with 3+3 central mac (Fig 15); China .......... C. ciliata Zhang, Bedos &amp; Deharveng, 2016 *</p><p>44(42) Abd IV with 5+5 central mac...........................................................................45</p><p>- Abd IV with 4+4 central mac, China .............................. C. gejianbangi Zhang, Bedos &amp; Deharveng, 2016 *</p><p>45(44) Th II with 1+1 mac (p4) in Gr VI; Abd II with 2+2 central mac; Australia ...... C. tropicalis Qu, Chen &amp; Greenslade, 2007</p><p>- Th II without mac in Gr VI; Abd II with 3+3 central mac (Figs 12, 15); China ............... C. qinae Xu &amp; Zhang, 2015</p><p>46(38) Abd IV with at least 7+7 central mac.....................................................................47</p><p>- Abd IV with 5+5 or less central mac..................................................................... 48</p><p>47(46) Abd IV with 7+7 central mac (Fig 17); China ............................... C. liui Wang, Chen &amp; Christiansen, 2002</p><p>- Abd IV with at least 8 + 8 central mac; Tibet ................................ C. tibetensis Chen &amp; Christiansen, 1997</p><p>48(46) Abd IV with 5+5 central mac.......................................................................... 49</p><p>- Abd IV with 4+4 central mac; China ........................................... C. draconis Zhang &amp; Dong, 2014 *</p><p>49(48) Th III with 8+8 lateral mac; Abd III with 3+3 lateral mac; Tibet................... C. huangi Chen &amp; Christiansen, 1997</p><p>- Th III with 5+5 lateral mac; Abd III with 2+2 lateral mac; China.......................... C. xui Zhang &amp; Dong, 2014</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D81187E6FFA2FFD6FF7AFF11FA04F9BC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Cipola, Nikolas Gioia;Bellini, Bruno Cavalcante	Cipola, Nikolas Gioia, Bellini, Bruno Cavalcante (2016): A new cave species of Coecobrya Yosii (Collembola, Entomobryidae, Entomobryinae) from South Africa, with an identification key to the genus. Zootaxa 4200 (3): 351-366, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4200.3.1
