identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03E5878140093855FEF2FA3D0B7DB2CC.text	03E5878140093855FEF2FA3D0B7DB2CC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Endomychus biguttatus Say 1824	<div><p>Endomychus biguttatus Say, 1824 (Figs. 1 &amp; 2)</p> <p>Length 3.5-4.2 mm, oblong oval, with head, antennae, legs and two round spots on elytra, with the subapical one larger, black. Elytra and rest of body orange red with sparce punctures. Pronotum transverse, subquadrate widest at base with sides and base broadly sinuate within acute basal angle and lateral margins markedly beaded with surface finely and sparsely punctate. It is one of the most common endomychids in Eastern North America. It occurs in moist deciduous forest and overwinter beneath bark and forest debris. It can be found in basidiomycetes fungi or gilled mushrooms and some in bracket fungi such as the birch polypore, Piptoporus betulinus (Bull. ex Fr.) P. Karst, 1881, and on the chicken of the woods, Lactiporus sulphureus (Bull.) Murrill, 1920. When disturbed it releases a defensive milky yellowish fluid from the joints between the tibiae and tarsi.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>Fairfield Co.: Bridgeport, 20 October 1918, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (CAES); Easton, 8 September 1926, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (CAES); Monroe, April 1932, A.P. Jacot, 1 ex. (CAES); Long Hill, 20 July 1948, Doug Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Long Hill, 5 July 1950, D. Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Easton, 9 August 1986, D. Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Fairfield, Lake Mohegan, 5 April 1988, D. Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Stratford, Sikorski Airport, 12/ 13 July 2012, light trap, Eric Haugh, 1 ex. (UCMS).</p> <p>Hartford Co.: Grangy, 14 September 1920, W.E. Britton, 1 ex. (CAES).</p> <p>Litchfield Co.: New Canaan, 19 September 1910, A.B. Champlain, 1 ex. (CAES); New Canaan, 12 August 1918, M.P. Zappe, 3 ex. (YPM-ENT); New Canaan, 12 September 1918, M.P. Zappe, 3 ex. (CAES).</p> <p>Middlesex Co.: Portland, 23 March, 1936, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (CAES); Chester, Cockaponset State Forest, 5 October 1941, C.E. Pickford, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT).</p> <p>New Haven Co.: New Haven, Cedar Hill, 2 July 1895, Rev. Celestin Crozet, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Wallinford, 13 August 1912, D.J. Caffrey, 2 ex. (CAES); South Meriden, 12 April 1914, H. Johnson, 1 ex. (DENH); New Haven, under a stone, 19 April 1914, S.E. Ball, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); New Haven, 20 April 1914, S.E. Ball, 3 ex. (YPM-ENT); Woodmont, 25 April 1916, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (CAES); Woodmont, 6 September 1916, M.P. Zappe, 2 ex. (CAES); North Branford, 8 July 1921, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (CAES); South Meriden, 9 May 1936, Henry L. Johnson, 1 ex. (CAES); New Haven only 1942, H. Townshend, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Waterbury, 10 April 1954, C. O’Brien, 1 ex. (UCMS).</p> <p>New London Co.: Lyme, Roger Lake, no date (1937?), M.B. Bishop, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Pawcatuck, 30 June 1991, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 10 July 1992, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 22 May 1993, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 27 September 2003, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E5878140093855FEF2FA3D0B7DB2CC	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
03E5878140083852FEF2F94A096CB95C.text	03E5878140083852FEF2F94A096CB95C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Phymaphora pulchella Newman 1838	<div><p>Phymaphora pulchella Newman, 1838 (Figs. 3 &amp; 4)</p> <p>Length 3.0- 3.8 mm, elongate, slightly oval, bicolored with reddish or orangish yellow and black. Head blackish with antennal club modified and antennomeres expanded in males and slightly in females. Pronotum with a central black discal spot which can be variable. Elytra with a narrow dark suture and having a wide black bands across the middle and tips. Adults found in birch polypores and shelving tooth fungi Climacodon septentrionale (Fries, 1821) Karsten, 1881, also known as Steccherinum septentrionale (Fries, 1821) Bankers, 1906, and Steccherinum ochraceum (Persoon, 1792) Gray, 1821, a widespread and not uncommon species on dead hardwood twigs and branches, especially maples. Occasionally it is attracted to light. It is found across New England.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>Fairfield Co.: Monroe, 5 September 1938, A.P. Jacot, 1 ex. (CAES).</p> <p>New Haven Co.: South Meriden, 14 November (no year), Harry L. Johnson, 1 ex. (CAES).</p> <p>Windham Co.: Windham, Follett Road, 12 june 1999, J. O’Donnell, 1 ex. (UCMS); <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-72.09471&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=41.84238" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -72.09471/lat 41.84238)">Eastford</a>, Natchaug State Forest at entrance on State Road 198, 41.84238 N and 72.09471 W, 12/ 18 April 2012, Tracy Zarrillo, 3 ex. (RNFC), captured in a 12 funnel Lindgren trap baited with alpha-pinene and ethyl alcohol in plantation of eastern white pine, Pinus stratus Linnaeus (Chris Maier, pers. comm.).</p> <p>Length 2.0- 2.5 mm, elongate, subparallel, dark reddish brown, shining and sparcely punctate. Pronotum transverse, widest before middle, sides round before middle, then straight and converging behind and basal two-thirds with a pair of lines down the middle each flanked by a pit before angle. Elytra usually darker with humeri indistinctly and apices broadly reddish in some entire elytra reddish brown. Adults found in Polyporus tulipiferae (Schwein, 1822) Overholts, 1915, now Irpex lacteus (Fries) Fries, 1828 a milk-white toothed polypore on dead branches of deciduous trees, and under barks with fungus. Not common in New England.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>New Haven Co.: No locality, date or collector name, only SI#3178, 1 ex. (CAES). Britton (1938) reported this species from Connecticut (probably New Haven) and it still resides in his collection; Hamden, 8 July 2008, Raul N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E5878140083852FEF2F94A096CB95C	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
03E58781400E3853FEF2FEBF0F5DB95C.text	03E58781400E3853FEF2FEBF0F5DB95C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aphorista vittata (Fabricius 1853)	<div><p>Aphorista vittata (Fabricius, 1853) (Figs. 7 &amp; 8)</p> <p>Length 5.5-6.5 mm, oblong, elongate, orange or brownish red. Antennae dark with last antennomere paler. Pronotum with the sides margined with or without a black spot on each side. Elytra with a tapering stripe down of the suture and a long black spot on each side. Adults are associated with the wood rotting fungus of the Boletaceae family,</p> <p>Coniophora arida (Fries, 1828) Karst, 1868. They are attracted to light. Common along the coast of</p> <p>New England to Florida.</p> <p>Material studied: Fairfield Co.: Cornwall, 5 July 1919, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (CAES); Long Hill, 6 June 1947, Doug Comboni, 2 ex. (YPM-ENT); Stafford Twp., 15 October 1971, no collector name, 1 ex. (UCMS); Danbury, Tarrywide Pk., 8 June 2001, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC). Hartford Co.: Reservoirs, 20 March 1902, Rev. Celestin Crozet, 4 ex. (YPM-ENT); Reservoirs, 24 March 1902, Rev. Celestin Crozet, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT). Litchfield Co.: Cornwall, 5 July 1919, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Cornwall, 5 July 1919, M.P. Zappe, 2 ex. (CAES); Cornwall, 5</p> <p>Figs. 7-8.- Aphorista vittata (Fabricius, 1853). 7.</p> <p>-</p> <p>July 1919, K.F. Chamberlain, 1 ex. (CAES); Habitus (Photo by Tom Murray). 8.- Distributional map.</p> <p>Woodridge, 11 August 1946, Dorothy Brown, 3 ex. (YPM-ENT). Middlesex Co.: Middletown, 16 April 1962, J. Tardif, 2 ex. (UCMS). New Haven Co.: New Haven, 4 May 1937, M.B. Bishop, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); New Haven, 1 August 1943, C.E. Pickford, 1 ex. (to light) (YPM-ENT); Waterbury, 167 Crest Street, 6 April 1975, R. Yerzak, 1 ex. (UCMS); Wilcott, 10 October 2000, Matt Sanford, 1 ex. (CAES). New London Co.: Pawcatuck, 15 June 1991, R.N. Ferreira, 2 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 18 August 1991, R.N. Ferreira, 6 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 8 July 1992, R.N. Ferreira, 2 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 26 August 1992, 2 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 20 November 1993, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Mystic, 5 September 1994, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 2 July 1999, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 20 August 2003, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 30 July 2007, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 25 August 2011, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 29 August 2011, R.N. Ferreira, 3 ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 30 August 2011, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC). Tolland Co.: Storrs, 23 February 1949, R.B. Smith, 4 ex. (UCMS); Storrs, 20 April 1956, M.H. Sweet, 1 ex. (UCMS); Mansfield, 27 March 1962, G. Smith, 1 ex. (UCMS); Mansfield, 3 April 1962, B. Barks, 1 ex. (UCMS); Mansfield Twp., near Chapins Pond, 25 September 1971, no collector name, 1 ex. (UCMS); Somers, Soapstone Mountain, 25 September 1971, no collector name, 1 ex. (UCMS); Mansfield, 20 April 1976, no collector name, 1 ex. (UCMS). Windham Co.: Eastford, Natchaug State Forest, 1 October 1944, C.E. Pickford, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E58781400E3853FEF2FEBF0F5DB95C	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
03E58781400D3850FEF2FEFC09C5B2A6.text	03E58781400D3850FEF2FEFC09C5B2A6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Lycoperdina ferruginea LeConte 1824	<div><p>Lycoperdina ferruginea LeConte, 1824 (Figs. 9 &amp; 10)</p> <p>Length 4.7-6.0 mm, oblong-oval, brownish with appendages slightly paler. Pronotum transverse, widest before middle with apex narrower, arcuate in front with sides almost straight to acute hind angles and fine punctures. Elytra slightly wider than pronotum, much wider behind and slightly punctate. Tibiae of male with internal obtuse tooth. Antennae with the last two antennomeres abruptly widened and flattened. Occasionally found in leaf litter and several fungi but it is specialist feeder in puffballs, Lycoperdon pyriforme (Schaeff, 1774) Kreisel &amp; Kr ̡ger, 2003 that grow on decaying logs in dump woods. It can be detected by squeezing the puffballs. It is frequent in New England.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>Hartford Co.: Windsor, 24 June 1936, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (CAES); Cranby, 6 May 1956, D.L. Yost, 2 ex. (UCMS).</p> <p>Litchfield Co.: New Canaan, 22 September 1905, B.H. Walden, 1 ex. (UCMS); Canaan, 24 September 1919, M.P. Zappe, 3 ex. (UCMS); Cornwall, 17 June 1921, M.P. Zappe, 1 ex. (UCMS); Fall Village, under Mount Road, 1.5 miles NE of the village, in fresh puffballs, 8 October 1972, R.W. Brown, 3 ex. (YPM-ENT); Cornwall, no date #3181, K.T. Chamberlain, 3 ex. (UCMS).</p> <p>New Haven Co.: North Branford, 2 June 1943, H. Townshend, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT).</p> <p>Tolland Co.: Mansfield, 24 September 1992, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC).</p> <p>Windham Co.: Thompson, 3 July 2011, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E58781400D3850FEF2FEFC09C5B2A6	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
03E58781400D3851FEF2F9330F5DB41D.text	03E58781400D3851FEF2F9330F5DB41D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mycetina perpulchra (Newman 1838)	<div><p>Mycetina perpulchra (Newman, 1838) (Figs. 11 &amp; 12)</p> <p>Length 3.5-4.0 mm, oblong-oval, convex and shiny blackish to black. Head black. Pronotum slightly flattened, wider than long with sides sharply margined, orange red with a black spot on the middle at the base with surface shiny and finely sparsely punctate. Elytra convex, each elytron with two orange red spots, with the one near the base larger and shiny with coarse punctures. Tip of the last antennomere paler. Front tibia of the male sinuate. Found in wood rooting fungus, in boletes and some species of Agaricales. It is attracted to light in late spring and summer. Uncommon in New England.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>Fairfield Co.: Long Hill, 7 July 1948, Doug Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT.); No Town, 11 August 1961, Doug Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Shelton, 20 March 1983, Doug Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Long Hill, Trumbull, 26 May 1986, Doug Comboni, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT).</p> <p>Middlesex Co.: North Plain, 15 June 1932, S.C. Ball, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); North Plain, 28 June 1932, S.C. Ball, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); Killingworth, 23 June 1935, C.H. Pumb, 1 ex. (CAES).</p> <p>New Haven Co.: South Meriden, 4 April 1943, Harry L. Johnson, 1 ex. (CAES); Branford, Woods, 13 June 1943, G.E. Pickford, 1 ex. (YPM-ENT); South Meriden, under log in mud wasp cocoon compartment, 1 December 1946, H.L. Johnson, 3 ex. (CAES); Meriden, Hubbard Park, 2 / 3 June 2000, JAne O’Donnell et al., 1 ex. (UCMS); Wolcott, 10 October 2000, Matt Sanford, 1 ex. (UCMS).</p> <p>New London Co.: Pawcatuck, 18 August 1991, R.N. Ferreira, 5 ex. (RNFC); Stonington, 6 September 2006, R.N. Ferreira, 1ex. (RNFC); Pawcatuck, 27 April 2009, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC).</p> <p>Tolland Co.: Mansfield, Mansfield Schoolhouse, Brook Park, 46’28.1”N 7’31,25”E, fly intersection trap, 22 July 1996, no collector name, 1 ex. (UCMS).</p> <p>Figs. 11-12.- Mycetina perpulchra (Newman, 1838). 11.- Habitus (Photo by Tom Murray). 12.- Distributional map.</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E58781400D3851FEF2F9330F5DB41D	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
03E58781400C3851FEF2F9F408CAB95F.text	03E58781400C3851FEF2F9F408CAB95F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mycetaea Stephens 1830	<div><p>Genus Mycetaea Stephens, 1830</p> <p>Mycetaea subterranea (Fabricius, 1801) (Figs. 13 &amp; 14) = Mycetaea hirta (Marsham, 1802)</p> <p>Length 1.5-1.8 mm, body ovate, convex, rufo testaceous, shining with sparse, erect, short pubescence. Head and thorax moderately punctate, pronotum transverse, broadest at middle, sides arcuate, sublateral carina more than twice distant from lateral margins at apex than at base. Elytral punctures coarser than pronotal ones and in rows. It lives in old tree trunks, cellars, green houses, beehives, dung heaps, and can be found inside and outside of nests of ants or birds. It is an adventive species widely distributed in North America.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>New Haven Co.: New Haven, 6 May 1916, on decayed potato, W.E. Britton, 2 ex. (CAES); New Haven, 4 February 1918, W.E. Britton, 2 ex. (CAES).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E58781400C3851FEF2F9F408CAB95F	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
03E587814003385EFEF2FC520B37B48E.text	03E587814003385EFEF2FC520B37B48E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Danae testacea (Ziegler 1845)	<div><p>Danae testacea (Ziegler, 1845) (Figs. 15 &amp; 16)</p> <p>Length 3.5-4.0 mm, elongate, oblong, reddish or orange yellow, shining, sparse pubescence consisting of prostrate yellow setae. Head and sides of pronotum often paler before middle, prominent hind angle prolonged somewhat and curved outward. Antennae with 11 antennomeres with 9-11 darker and forming a distinct club. Elytras finely, sparse punctate with irregular rows. Active in late spring and summer. Found in pitfall traps attracted to cantharidin.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>Only Connecticut, 1 ex. (CAES).</p> <p>Hartford Co.: Keeney Cove area, NW Glastonbury, 12/ 13 June 2009, sifting, R. Chandler, 1 ex. (DENH).</p> <p>Tolland Co.: Storrs, 12 April 1964, R.M. Griswold, 2 ex. (UCMS); Storrs, 15 October 1964, R.M. Griswold, 1 ex. (UCMS); Mansfield, Schoolhouse, 46’28.1”N 7’31.25”E, pitfall trap, 30 July 1996, no collector name, 1 ex. (UCMS); no locality and date, C.E. Pickford (Albert Magnum Collection), 1 ex. (UCMS).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E587814003385EFEF2FC520B37B48E	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
03E587814002385FFEF2FEFE0E06B33D.text	03E587814002385FFEF2FEFE0E06B33D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenotarsus hispidus (Herbst 1799)	<div><p>Stenotarsus hispidus (Herbst, 1799) (Figs. 17 &amp; 18)</p> <p>Length 3.5-4.4 mm, broadly oval, densely clothed in erect and nearly setae. Orange or reddish brown, each elytron with disk blackish. Antennal club black and loose with antennomeres 6-11 darker. Venter pale, dorsum densely covered with erect and suberected setae. Head and pronotal punctures fine sparse. Elytral punctures coarse, quite close in same areas. Adults active in late Spring and Summer. Collected in pitfall traps.</p> <p>Material studied:</p> <p>New London Co.: Pawcatuck, 12 June 1987, R.N. Ferreira, 1 ex. (RNFC).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E587814002385FFEF2FEFE0E06B33D	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.		Plazi	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento	Ferreira, Raul Nascimento (2016): Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae). Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15: 279-289, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12766263
