identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03A887A7FFA9FF83FF1BF8FDFD4CFA07.text	03A887A7FFA9FF83FF1BF8FDFD4CFA07.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Odochilus (Parodochilus) shavrini Rakovic & Anichtchenko 2021	<div><p>Odochilus (Parodochilus) shavrini Rakovič &amp; Anichtchenko, new species</p><p>(Figs. 1–3)</p><p>Type material. Holotype, male: “ Philippines, Mindanao, Maragusan, 700m, Marangig Falls, Candalaga Mts., 7˚20’32.2”N 126˚10’24.0”E, 3- 4.05.2019, Shavrin A. V. leg.” (DUBC) . Paratype, female, with the same label data (DUBC) .</p><p>Description of the holotype. Small (length of 2.8 mm), strongly convex (Figs. 1, 2), remarkably broader behind, length-to-width ratio of 1.98, dark brown, tibiae and tarsi light brown, antennae and mouth parts yellowish.</p><p>Head glabrous from above, except for minute, dust-like setae along ridges above eyes. Genae moderately protruding. Clypeus margin with upper and lower edges: upper edge convex, sharp and distinct, lower edge obsolete and not observable from above. Clypeal disc convex, matte, with rather uneven, corrugately punctate surface; longitudinal ridges on clypeus barely visible. Vertex with two pairs of distinct oblique ridges. Median pair of ridges replaced by a continuous semicircular ridge. Exterior pair forming a characteristic T-shaped structure with ridge extending forward from eyes. Eyes visible from above.</p><p>Pronotum transverse, 1.5 times as wide as long; opaque, convex, with four transverse ridges. Anterior and lateral margins, and all ridges with very small, dust-like setae. Lateral margins with two sub-angular emarginations and thus, with three moderately protruding, widely angular lobes (ponotum narrowed behind posterior lobe). Basal margin with apically slightly dilated setae. First and second pronotal ridges continuous, sharp, third ridge weakly and narrowly interrupted in the middle; fourth ridge broken into six discrete teeth; lateral longitudinal ridges small, connected with ends of third ridge. Intervals between ridges matte.</p><p>Elytra widely suboval, 1.1 times as long as wide; with small humeral tooth at base of costa 8. Odd costae twice as high as even ones; both odd and even costae covered by small, dust-like setae. Intercostae with large punctures; the punctures about as long as wide, distance between punctures slightly longer than their diameter. Intervals between punctures shiny. Scutellum small, elongate, with rounded apex.</p><p>Profemur wide, with large punctures throughout. Protibia slim at base; slightly widened toward the apex, with three equidistant teeth in apical half; apical tooth long, medial slightly shorter, basal tooth twice shorter than medial. Apical spur as long as two basal tarsomeres.</p><p>Ventral side (Fig. 3) dark brown, matte. Abdomen with ventrites 1–5 minutely punctate, ventrite 5 with four short setae; ventrite 6 densely punctate, matte, with six setae. Pygidium with six erect setae.</p><p>Female: there are no considerable differences between external characters of the male holotype and those of the female paratype. The body length of the female paratype (3.0 mm) is larger compared to the male holotype (2.8 mm).</p><p>Differential diagnosis. The new species can be compared only with Odochilus (Parodochilus) buruensis Boucomont, 1926, known from the Moluccas, because of an unusually small elytra length-to-width ratio (the elytra are relatively very broad). The two species can be most easily differentiated from each other based on the pronotal sculpture. In O. (P.) buruensis ridges 1–3 are in the form of continuous, high, narrow and sharp lamellae (Fig. 4); in the new species, ridges 1–3 are convex but not in the form of lamellae and ridge 3 is rather interrupted medially (Fig. 5). Longitudinal V-shaped formations, present in the subgenus Parodochilus instead of ridge 4, are very distinct in the former species (Fig. 4), but rather indistinct in the new species (Fig. 5).</p><p>Distribution. Species known only from the type locality in Mindanao Island, The Philippines.</p><p>Name derivation. New species named after our friend and colleague, specialist in Staphylinidae (Coleoptera), Dr. Alexey Shavrin, who collected the new species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887A7FFA9FF83FF1BF8FDFD4CFA07	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	Rakovič, Miloslav;Anichtchenko, Alexander	Rakovič, Miloslav, Anichtchenko, Alexander (2021): Two new species of the genus Odochilus Harold, 1877 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae Aphodiinae: Odochilini). Zootaxa 4942 (3): 447-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4942.3.8
03A887A7FFABFF82FF1BFA35FDBDFBC3.text	03A887A7FFABFF82FF1BFA35FDBDFBC3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Odochilus (Parodochilus) borneensis Rakovic & Anichtchenko 2021	<div><p>Odochilus (Parodochilus) borneensis Rakovič &amp; Anichtchenko, new species</p><p>(Fig. 5)</p><p>Type material. Holotype, female: “ Malaysia, Borneo, Sarawak, Kuching div., Bako National park, tropical rainforest, 1˚42’55.14”N 110˚26’30.30”E, 11-14.III.2014, R. Cibulskis leg.” (DUBC).</p><p>Description of the holotype. Body size small (2.8 mm), convex, oblong oval (Fig. 4), slightly broader behind, brown, tibiae and tarsi light brown, antennae and mouth parts yellowish.</p><p>Head smooth from above, except for minute, dust-like setae along ridges. Genae moderately protruding beyond clypeus lateral margins. Clypeus smooth and shiny; margin with upper and lower edges: upper edge convex, sharp and distinct, lower edge obsolete and not observable from above. Frons convex, matte, surface minutely granulate; longitudinal, nearly parallel ridges clearly visible. Vertex with two pairs of distinct oblique ridges. Median pair of ridges replaced by a continuous V-shape ridge. Exterior pair of ridges long, connected with ridge extending forward from the eyes. Eyes visible from above.</p><p>Pronotum transverse, 1.43 times as wide as long; opaque, convex, with four transverse ridges. Anterior and lateral margins, and all ridges with minute, yellow, dust-like setae. Lateral margins with two sub-angular emarginations and thus, with three moderately protruding, widely angular lobes (ponotum narrowed behind posterior lobe). Three setae present on each side on lateral margin, in above mentioned posterior narrowed part of pronotum. Basal margin with apically slightly dilated setae. First, second and third pronotal ridges continuous, sharp; fourth ridge broken into six discrete teeth; lateral longitudinal ridges small, connected with ends of third ridge. Intervals between ridges relatively shiny and longitudinally rugose.</p><p>Elytra moderately elongate, 1.28 times longer than wide; with small humeral tooth at base of costa 8. Odd costae high, strongly costate, with yellow, short, dust-like setae; even costae flat, smooth, surface of even costae not differentiated from surface areas between punctures in striae. Intercostae with large punctures; the punctures about as long as wide, distance between punctures equal to or smaller than their diameter. Intervals between punctures shiny. Scutellum small, elongate, with rounded apex.</p><p>Profemur wide, with large punctures throughout. Protibia slim at base; slightly widened toward apex, with three teeth in apical half; apical and medial teeth long, closely placed, basal tooth very small. Apical spur as long as two basal tarsomeres.</p><p>Ventral side brown, matte. Abdomen with ventrites 1–5 almost smooth medially, with sides minutely punctate, ventrite 5 with six setae; ventrite 6 densely punctate, matte, with six erect setae. Pygidium with four erect macrosetae.</p><p>Differential diagnosis. In the subgenus Odochilus (Parodochilus), there are the following three species having flat even elytral intervals: O. (P.) thailandicus Rakovič, 1997, O. (P.) jani Bezděk &amp; Křivan, 2001, and the new species described here. The first of them has subparallel body, whereas the second and third ones are distinctly broader behind. The new species is thus most similar to O. (P.) jani . Odochilus (P.) jani (Fig. 6) has sharper (more carinate) odd elytral intervals than the new species (Fig. 5). In the new species, the pronotum width at the first lateral lobe is at most slightly larger than that at the third lateral lobe; in O. (P.) jani, the pronotum width at the first lateral lobe is distinctively larger than that at the third lateral lobe. The macrosetae situated posteriorly along pronotum margins are finer in the new species (Fig. 5) and less widened apically compared to O. (P.) jani (Fig. 6).</p><p>Distribution. The species is currently known only from the type locality in Sarawak, Borneo Island, Malaysia.</p><p>Name derivation. Patronymic.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887A7FFABFF82FF1BFA35FDBDFBC3	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	Rakovič, Miloslav;Anichtchenko, Alexander	Rakovič, Miloslav, Anichtchenko, Alexander (2021): Two new species of the genus Odochilus Harold, 1877 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae Aphodiinae: Odochilini). Zootaxa 4942 (3): 447-450, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4942.3.8
