identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
292ADD56D42A6F5DFF53FE33FAA02BD8.text	292ADD56D42A6F5DFF53FE33FAA02BD8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma Ganglbauer 1890	<div><p>Morimospasma Ganglbauer, 1890</p><p>Morimospasma Ganglbauer, 1890: 78; Aurivillius, 1922: 70; Breuning, 1942: 130; Gressitt, 1951: 348; Breuning, 1961: 318; Chiang et at., 1985: 102; Hubweber et al., 2010: 268.</p><p>Type species: Morimospasma paradoxum Ganglbauer, 1890 .</p><p>Diagnosis. Frons wider than high. Eye coarsely faceted, inner side deeply emarginate, lower lobe narrow. Scape approximately as long as or slightly shorter than third antennomere, with a developed cicatrix at apex. Pronotum wider than long, with a large central protuberance; lateral spine developed, swollen basally. Elytra connate, nearly oval; surface with tubercles of different size, some of them arranged in rows; apical portion strongly declivous, apices separately rounded. Hind wing reduced, scalelike (Fig. 63). Procoxal cavity closed posteriorly, mesocoxal cavity open at side; mesosternal process broad, not tuberculate; metasternum short. Mesotibia with an oblique groove near external apex; claw divaricate.</p><p>Distribution. China: Gansu, Qinghai, Ningxia, Shaanxi, Hubei, Sichuan, Chongqing, Guizhou, Zhejiang, Anhui.</p><p>Biology. Little is known about the biology of this genus. According to the first author’s observation in the field, adults of M. paradoxum Ganglbauer occur from April to August in Hubei, and can be attracted by light trap. Mating and oviposition behaviour on fallen trees of Pinus L. and Castanea Mill. was observed in a field wood pile in the mornings in May and July (Figs 69, 71–72). In close vicinity the male actively approached the female from the rear when the antennae of both sexes stretched transversely toward side. The male held the female with front legs, adjusted the body axis parallel to that of the female, attempted to copulate by bending the abdomen ventrally and stretching out and drawing back the genitalia repeatedly, and finally copulated with the female. When the copulation was disturbed, the male usually terminated initiatively the mating process. Before ovipositing, the female gnawed at the bark surface, cut oviposition slits with mandibles, and then oviposited in the slits.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D42A6F5DFF53FE33FAA02BD8	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
292ADD56D42A6F5EFF53FAC4FE342C79.text	292ADD56D42A6F5EFF53FAC4FE342C79.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma paradoxum Ganglbauer 1890	<div><p>Morimospasma paradoxum Ganglbauer, 1890</p><p>(Figs 1–6, 15–20, 27–44, 63–64, 69)</p><p>Morimospasma paradoxum, Ganglbauer, 1890: 80; Aurivillius, 1922: 70; Breuning, 1942: 131; Gressitt, 1951: 348; Breuning, 1961: 318; Chiang et at., 1985: 102; Hua, 2002: 217; Hua et al., 2009: 230, 373; Hubweber et al., 2010: 268. Trachystola difformis, Pic, 1934: 12 .</p><p>Body size. Male: length 14.0–22.0 mm, maximum width of elytra 5.0–10.0 mm. Female: length 16.5–26.0 mm, maximum width of elytra 7.5–11.0 mm.</p><p>Material examined. China: Ningxia: 1 male, Longde, Fengtai Forest Farm, 13 July 2009, leg. Xin-pu Wang and Xiaolin Zhao (HBU); Shaanxi: 1 male, Zhen’an, 19 August 1980, leg. Qilin Feng (SWU); Hubei: 1 male and 1 female, Yichang, Dalaoling Nature Reserve, altitude 1200 m, 1 May 2010, leg. Guanglin Xie; 2 males and 3 females, the same locality, 5 July 2010, leg. Guanglin Xie; 7 males and 2 females, the same locality, 29 April 2011, leg. Guanglin Xie; 5 males and 5 females, the same locality, 30 April 2011, leg. Guanglin Xie; 2 males, the same locality, 24 July 2010, leg. Guanglin Xie; 1 female, the same locality, 26 July 2010, leg. Wei Li; 1 female, Xingshan, Longmenhe Nature Reserve, 27 June 2010, leg. Guanglin Xie; 2 males, Longmenhe Nature Reserve, 27 June 2010, leg. Wei Li; 1 male, Longmenhe Nature Reserve, 5 August 2010, leg. Guanglin Xie; 1 female, Shennongjia Nature Reserve, 18 July 2003, leg. Guanglin Xie; 1 male, Shennongjia Nature Reserve, Wenshui Forest Farm, altitude 1800 m, 20 July 2003, leg. Wenkai Wang (all in YZU); Sichuan: 1 female, Qingchuan, Qingxi town, er’chahe, 1484 m, leg. Xiangwei Meng (YZU); Chongqing: 1 female, Nanchuan, Jinfo Mountain, 24 May 1957, leg. Xionghua Lei (SWU); Anhui: 1 male, Yuexi, Yaoluoping, 30 July 2007, leg. Yibin Ba (HBU).</p><p>Distribution. China: Gansu, Qinghai, Ningxia, Shaanxi, Sichuan, Chongqing, Hubei, Anhui (new province record).</p><p>Comments. The species is easily distinguished from other members of the genus by the central pronotal protuberance with the anterior half at most shallowly depressed at middle and not forming a deep gap (Figs 28, 31, 34, 37), and the elytral surface from the basal fifth to the top of the apical declivity remarkably flat and sometimes slightly depressed dorsally, nearly vertical dorsal-laterally.</p><p>The body size, shape of the central pronotal protuberance and lateral pronotal spine, and the size of tubercles on elytra of the species are variable. One male individual from Ningxia has the body length only 14mm, the central protuberance on the pronotal disc is short with the dorsal surface flat, and the elytral tubercles small (Figs 5, 18, 39–41). One male individual from Anhui has the same body size with the former but the central pronotal protuberance is strongly elevated with the anterior margin broadly and shallowly depressed (Figs 6, 43). However, individuals from Hubei always have the well-developed central protuberance on the pronotal disc and dentate tubercles on the elytral carinae, and the apical portion of the lateral pronotal spine more elongated. Individuals captured in Daolaoling Nature Reserve at the same time and locality present a different appearance: some with large size (Fig. 2, 26 mm), some with small size (Fig. 4, only 16 mm), some with the central pronotal protuberance rounded laterally (Figs 28, 31), some with the central pronotal protuberance distinctly narrowed posteriorly (Figs 34, 37, 40, 43), and some with the central pronotal protuberance with several more distinct depressions on the dorsum (Figs 28, 31).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D42A6F5EFF53FAC4FE342C79	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
292ADD56D4296F5EFF53FC24FB8E2A8A.text	292ADD56D4296F5EFF53FC24FB8E2A8A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma tuberculatum Breuning 1939	<div><p>Morimospasma tuberculatum Breuning, 1939</p><p>(Figs 7–8, 21, 45–47, 65)</p><p>Morimospasma tuberculatum, Breuning, 1939: 147; Gressitt, 1951: 348; Breuning, 1961: 318; Chiang et at., 1985: 103; Hua, 2002: 217; Hua et al., 2009: 230, 373; Hubweber et al., 2010: 268.</p><p>Morimospasma bimaculatum Breuning, 1947: 1 .</p><p>Body size. Female: length 14.0–16.5 mm, maximum width of elytra 6.5–8.0 mm.</p><p>Material examined. Holotype, female, China: Zhejiang, Tienmushan, 20 July 1936 (IZAS); Zhejiang: 2 females, West Tianmushan, Xianrending, early May 2012, leg. Xiaoling Niu, by a Malaise trap (YZU).</p><p>Distribution. China: Zhejiang, Hubei, Sichuan.</p><p>Comments. This species and other species mentioned below (except M. nitidituberculatus Hua) have a different appearance from the type species Morimospasma paradoxum Ganglbauer, such as the central pronotal protuberance with the anterior half is strongly depressed at middle and forming a broad gap (Fig. 46), the elytral surface convex before the apical declivity which is without dentate sides (Fig. 47).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D4296F5EFF53FC24FB8E2A8A	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
292ADD56D4296F58FF53F989FBCE2BD1.text	292ADD56D4296F58FF53F989FBCE2BD1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma granulutum Chiang 1981	<div><p>Morimospasma granulutum Chiang, 1981</p><p>(Fig. 9)</p><p>Morimospasma granulutum, Chiang, 1981: 80; Chiang et at., 1985: 103; Hua, 2002: 217; Hua et al., 2009: 230, 373; Hubweber et al., 2010: 268.</p><p>Body size. Female: length 14.5 mm, maximum width of elytra 7.5 mm (based on originally description).</p><p>Material examined. No materials are available for this study.</p><p>Distribution. China: Shaanxi.</p><p>Comments. The holotype was not found in the collection of Southwest University. The species was originally described based on a female specimen collected from Mianxian, Shaanxi. According to the original description, it is different from the other species (except M. nitidituberculatus Hua) of the genus by the female antenna being distinctly shorter than the body; it is different from M. nitidituberculatus Hua by the elytra without large tubercles arranged in longitudinal rows.</p><p>Wang (2005) recorded that the species was distributed in Guizhou based on a male specimen collected from Dashahe Nature Reserve. However, after checking the specimen carefully, the first author found that it was misidentified. In fact, it represents an undescribed species that is described in this paper.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D4296F58FF53F989FBCE2BD1	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
292ADD56D42F6F59FF53FACCFC5A28ED.text	292ADD56D42F6F59FF53FACCFC5A28ED.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma nitidituberculatus Hua 1992	<div><p>Morimospasma nitidituberculatus Hua, 1992</p><p>(Figs 14, 26, 48–50, 66)</p><p>Morimospasma nitidituberculatus, Hua et al., 1992: 509; Hua et al., 2009: 230, 373; Hubweber et al., 2010: 268.</p><p>Body size. Female: length 12.0 mm, maximum width of elytra 5.0 mm.</p><p>Material examined. Holotype, female, China: Hunan, Shimen, Hupingshan Nature Reserve, July 1987, leg. Guangchun Lei (SYSU).</p><p>Distribution. China: Hunan.</p><p>Comments. The species shows remarkable differences from the other members in the genus. It has the body small (body length 12 mm), narrow and elongate (Fig. 14); the scape is without a cicatrix at apex (Fig. 66); the pronotal disc is nearly completely raised, and is broadly and shallowly concave at the center (Fig. 49); the head, pronotum and elytra are very coarsely punctured (Figs 26, 48). Obviously these morphological attributes do not match well with the morphological characters which define the genus. Therefore, the taxonomic status needs to be further confirmed based on more materials.</p><p>FIGURES 27–62. Habitus of Morimospasma spp. 27–44. M. paradoxun Ganglbauer. 27–29, 33–35, 39–41. male. 30–32, 36–38. female. 27–38. from Hubei. 39–41. from Ningxia. 42–44. from Anhui. 45– 47 M. tuberculatum Breuning. female. 48–50. M. nitidituberculatus Hua. holotype, female. 51–56. M. jiangi sp. nov. . 51–53. holotype, male. 54–56. paratype, female. 57–62. M. dalaolingensis sp. nov. . 57–59. holotype, female. 60–62. paratype, male.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D42F6F59FF53FACCFC5A28ED	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
292ADD56D42D6F5BFF53F88BFE7B280D.text	292ADD56D42D6F5BFF53F88BFE7B280D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma jiangi	<div><p>Morimospasma jiangi, sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs 10–11, 22–23, 51–56, 67, 73)</p><p>Material examined. Holotype, male, China: Guizhou, Daozhen, Dashahe Nature Reserve, altitude 1500 m, 29 May 2004, leg. Qiongzhang Song (YZU); paratype, 1 female, Hunan, Zhangjiajie, Tianmen Mountain, altitude 1500 m, 28 July 2009, leg. Jiale Tang (YZU).</p><p>Distribution. China (Guizhou, Hunan).</p><p>Description. Male. Length 15.0 mm, maximum width of elytra 7.0 mm. Body black, densely clothed with appressed reddish-brown, grayish-yellow and dark grayish-brown silky pubescence, uniformly mixed with sparse grayish-white pubescence. Antenna, scutellum, tibia and tarsus densely clothed with grayish-yellow pubescence; posterior margin of pronotum and sterna densely clothed with dark grayish-brown pubescence, each elytron with a black velvet macula behind the middle, the remainder of the body densely clothed with reddish-brown pubescence.</p><p>Head sparsely punctate; frons wider than long, with a central sulcus extending to occiput; eye coarsely faceted, lower lobe slightly narrowed, slightly shorter than gena in front view. Antenna about 1.5 times as long as body; antennal tubercles elevated, widely separated from each other; scape cylindrical, coarsely punctate and rugose, with a developed apical cicatrix; antennomere 3 about as long as scape, slightly longer than antennomere 4, antennomere 4 slightly longer than antennomere 5. Pronotum wider than long, rugose; disc strongly raised centrally, anterior half of the protuberance strongly depressed medianly, forming a broad gap, posterior portion slightly narrowed with a middle longitudinal groove; each side with a blunt spine before the middle. Scutellum small, triangular. Elytra connate, relatively convex, strongly and steeply declivous behind the middle, apex rounded; surface with scattered small tubercles and each elytron with 4 longitudinal rows of tubercles with top glabrous: the first row with tubercles smallest and inconspicuous, along the suture and not reaching the apex; the second row at inner fourth, divided into two parts, each composed of 3 to 4 tubercles, the basal part at basal fourth of elytron, forming a strongly raised blunt ridge, the distal part only reaching to the black macula, the last tubercle of distal part large, strongly elevated and obliquely pointed posteriorly; the third row at the middle of elytron, from basal fourth to lateral side of the black macula, composed of 4 to 5 tubercles; the fourth row behind the humerus, reaching to the center of apical fourth, composed of about 10 tubercles. Metasternum elevated centrally. Legs long, metafemur about as long as abdomen.</p><p>Female. Length 17.5 mm, maximum width of elytra 7.0 mm. Similar to male, body larger and broader than male, lateral pronotal spine more swollen basally, tubercles on each elytron arranged in rows mostly larger than male, black macula on each elytron narrower than male, basal 7 antennomeres reaching the apical fourth of elytra (remainder missing).</p><p>Female genitalia. Spermatheca approximately S-shaped, tubular, consisting of a basal membranous and apical strongly sclerotized part, basal membranous tube nearly C-shaped, basal section of sclerotized tube narrowed and gradually curved, apical section of sclerotized tube gradually expanded and slightly curved, blunt distally (Fig. 73). Spermathecal duct is borne at the middle of bursa copulatrix; spermathecal gland is borne at the joint of membranous and sclerotized part of spermatheca.</p><p>Comments. The new species is similar to M. tuberculatum Breuning and M. granulutum Chiang, but it differs from the two in having the body mostly clothed with reddish-brown pubescence on dorsum, the pronotum distinctly clothed with bicolored pubescence except the sparse grayish-white pubescence (the posterior margin clothed with dark grayish-brown pubescence, but in M. tuberculatum Breuning and M. granulutum Chiang, the pronotum is clothed with brown to dark-brown pubescence throughout) (Figs 43, 52, 55), the tubercles of outside 3 rows on each elytron more elevated and the apical declivity steeper. Further, it is distinguished from M. tuberculatum Breuning by its central protuberance of pronotum with broader anterior-medial gap, elytral tubercles arranged in rows more prominent, elytral black maculae larger; it is distinguished from M. granulutum Chiang by basal 7 antennomeres of female reaching to basal fourth of elytron (in M. granulutum Chiang, whole female antenna approximately reaching to the basal fourth of elytron), female elytral maculae elongate, not semi-rounded (Figs 9, 11, 23, 56).</p><p>Wang (2005) misidentified the male specimen as M. granulutum Chiang according to the semi-rounded black macula on each elytron which well matches the original description of M. granulutum Chiang. Since the female specimen has been found in Hunan, the status of the species is clear.</p><p>Etymology. The new species is named after Prof. Shunan Jiang (= Shunan Chiang) in memory of the famous Chinese taxonomist of longicorn beetles who died in June 2013. Chinese name spells as Jiǎngshì Jùliútiānniú in Chinese phonetic alphabet.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D42D6F5BFF53F88BFE7B280D	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
292ADD56D42C6F54FF53F8FAFDD32AB8.text	292ADD56D42C6F54FF53F8FAFDD32AB8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma dalaolingensis	<div><p>Morimospasma dalaolingensis, sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs 12–13, 24–25, 57–62, 68, 70, 74)</p><p>Material examined. Holotype, female, China: Hubei, Yichang, Dalaoling Nature Reserve, N 31° 02′ 38.00″, E 110° 57′ 16.69″, altitude 1280 m, 1 May 2010, leg. Guanglin Xie (YZU). Paratype, 1 male, the same locality, 23 July 2010, leg. Guanglin Xie (YZU); 1 female, the same locality, 23 July 2010, leg. Wei Li; 1 female, the same locality, 30 April 2014, Xia Zou(YZU).</p><p>Distribution. China (Hubei).</p><p>Description. Female. Length 15–16 mm, maximum width of elytra 7.0 mm. Body black, densely clothed with appressed yellowish-brown pubescence and uniformly mixed with sparse grayish-white pubescence on ventral surface and femora (except for the antenna, scutellum, most of tibia and whole tarsus clothed with grayish-yellow pubescence).</p><p>Head sparsely punctate; frons wider than long, with a central sulcus extending to occiput; eye coarsely faceted, lower lobe narrow, clearly shorter than gena in front view. Antenna about 1.4 times as long as body; antennal tubercles elevated, widely separated from each other; scape cylindrical, coarsely punctate and rugose, with a developed apical cicatrix; antennomere 3 about as long as scape, slightly longer than antennomere 4, antennomere 4 slightly longer than antennomere 5. Pronotum wider than long, rugose; disc with a large central protuberance, center of the protuberance strongly depressed towards front and forming a broad gap, posterior portion of the protuberance slightly narrowed with a middle longitudinal groove; each side with a blunt spine before the middle. Scutellum small, triangular. Elytra connate, nearly oval, convex, steeply declivous behind the middle, apices separately rounded; each elytron with tubercles with top glabrous and slightly pointed backward arranged in 4 longitudinal rows: the first row with tubercles smallest and inconspicuous, along the suture and not reaching the apex; the second row at inner fourth of elytron, from basal fourth to the top of declivity, with a large and blunt basal ridge composed of 5 to 7 tubercles; the third row at the middle of elytron, from basal fourth to apical fourth, composed of 4 to 5 strongly raised tubercles; the fourth row behind the humerus, reaching to the center of apical fourth, composed of about 10 dentate tubercles, the remaining surface scattered with small tubercles. Procoxal cavity closed posteriorly, mesocoxal cavity open at side. Legs long, femora sparsely punctate on apical half, metafemur about as long as abdomen.</p><p>Female genitalia. Spermatheca approximately U-shaped, tubular, consisting of a basal membranous and apical sclerotized part, basal membranous tube crescent-shaped, sclerotized tube acutely curved near the joint between the membranous and sclerotized tube, the apical section of sclerotized tube slightly curved in the same direction as the membranous tube, acute distally (Fig. 74). Spermathecal duct is borne at the middle of bursa copulatrix; spermathecal gland is borne at the joint of membranous and sclerotized part of spermatheca.</p><p>Male. Length 16.0 mm, maximum width of elytra 7.0 mm. Similar to female, antenna about 2.2 times as long as body, antennomere 3 slightly longer than scape; the tubercles of outside 3 rows on each elytron more elevated, partly coalesced and distinctly pointed backward apically, metafemur longer than abdomen.</p><p>Comments. The new species is similar to M. tuberculatum Breuning and M. jiangi sp. nov. in appearance, but the elytra are without black maculae (Figs 59, 62).</p><p>Etymology. The species is named after the type locality Dalaoling. Chinese name spells as Dàlǎolǐng Jùliútiānniú in Chinese phonetic alphabet.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D42C6F54FF53F8FAFDD32AB8	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
292ADD56D4236F54FF53FA7BFA2128EC.text	292ADD56D4236F54FF53FA7BFA2128EC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Morimospasma Ganglbauer	<div><p>Key to species of the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer</p><p>1 Female antennae distinctly shorter than body............................................................... 2</p><p>- Female antennae longer than body........................................................................ 3</p><p>2 Each elytron with a semi-rounded black macula and small tubercles arranged in rows............... M. granulutum Chiang</p><p>- Each elytron without black maculae, with 4 rows of strongly raised tubercles.................. M. nitidituberculatus Hua</p><p>3 Each elytron with a black velvet macula at the top of apical declivity............................................ 4</p><p>- Each elytron without maculae........................................................................... 5</p><p>4 Pronotum clothed with brown to dark brown pubescence throughout, mixed with sparse grayish white pubescence........................................................................................ M. tuberculatum Breuning</p><p>- Pronotum clothed with reddish brown pubescence except for posterior margin with dark grayish brown pubescence, mixed with sparse grayish white pubescence......................................................... M. jiangi sp. nov.</p><p>5 Central protuberance on pronotum with anterior half strongly depressed medianly and forming a broad gap; elytra convex before apical declivity.............................................................. M. dalaolingensis sp. nov.</p><p>- Central protuberance on pronotum at most partly depressed anterio-medially; elytral surface remarkably flat dorsally and nearly vertical dorso-laterally before apical declivity...................................... M. paradoxun Ganglbauer</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/292ADD56D4236F54FF53FA7BFA2128EC	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	Xie, Guanglin;Zou, Xia;Wang, Wenkai	Xie, Guanglin, Zou, Xia, Wang, Wenkai (2014): Note on the genus Morimospasma Ganglbauer with description of two new species from China (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiinae). Zootaxa 3873 (4): 441-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.6
