identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
37E1527A36915673A58CB38E09A82CFC.text	37E1527A36915673A58CB38E09A82CFC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Exocelina amabilis Shaverdo & Balke 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Exocelina amabilis Shaverdo &amp; Balke sp. nov. Figs 5, 6, 7 </p>
            <p>Type locality.</p>
            <p>Indonesia: Papua Province, Pegunungan Bintang Regency, south from Ok Sibil, tributary Digul River, 05°03'25.9"S, 140°43'21.1"E, 359 m a.s.l.</p>
            <p>Type material.</p>
            <p> Holotype: male "Indonesia: Papua, S Ok Sibil, tributary Digul Riv [River], 359m, 9.vi.2015, -5,05718389 140,722535848617, Sumoked (Pap051)" (MZB). Paratypes: 3 males, 8 females with the same label as the holotype, 2 males additionally with green text label  “6997” and  “6998” (KSP, MZB). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body size and form: Beetle small: TL-H 2.65-3.45 mm, TL 3.55-3.85 mm, MW 1.75-1.9 mm (holotype: TL-H 3.25 mm, TL 3.65 mm, MW 1.8 mm), with oblong-oval habitus (Fig. 6).</p>
            <p>Colouration: Dorsally piceous (Fig. 6), with dark brown posterior part of head and lateral parts of pronotum, and sometimes with middle part of pronotum and elytral sutural lines; head appendages and legs yellowish-red, metathoracic legs darker distally.</p>
            <p>Surface sculpture: Relatively shiny dorsally, with very fine, sparse punctation and distinctly impressed microreticulation. Head with dense punctation (spaces between punctures 1-3 times size of punctures), distinctly finer and sparser anteriorly and posteriorly; diameter of punctures almost equal to diameter of cells of microreticulation. Pronotum with much sparser and finer punctation than head. Elytra with very sparse and fine punctation, often inconspicuous. Pronotum and elytra with distinctly impressed microreticulation; head with microreticulation stronger. Metaventrite and metacoxae distinctly microreticulate, metacoxal plates with longitudinal strioles and transverse wrinkles. Abdominal ventrites with distinct microreticulation, strioles, and very fine and sparse punctation.</p>
            <p>Structures: Pronotum with narrow lateral bead. Base of prosternum and neck of prosternal process with distinct ridge, slightly rounded anteriorly. Blade of prosternal process lanceolate, relatively broad, slightly convex, with distinct lateral bead and few setae.</p>
            <p>Male: Antenna simple. Pro- and mesotarsomeres 1-3 not dilated. Protarsomere 4 cylindrical, narrow, with medium-sized, thick, slightly curved anterolateral hook-like seta. Protarsomere 5 ventrally with anterior row of 12 and posterior row of 6 short, thick, pointed setae (Fig. 7D). Median lobe with slightly discontinuous outline (see apically); in lateral view, more or less evenly curved, with broadly pointed apex; in ventral view, tapering to broadly pointed apex (Fig. 7A, B). Paramere with very deep dorsal notch, separating subdistal part; subdistal part broad, transverse, situated under apex of proximal part, with large tuft of dense, thick, flattened setae; proximal setae sparse, thin, much more inconspicuous than subdistal (Fig. 7C). Abdominal ventrite 6 with extremely weak, small medial impression, visible only apically, concave apically, with 12-16 lateral striae on each side.</p>
            <p>Female: Pro- and mesotarsi not modified. Abdominal ventrite 6 slightly truncate or very slightly concave apically, without medial impression and lateral striae.</p>
            <p>Habitat.</p>
            <p>The specimens were collected from the gravel banks of a primary forest stream. The beetles were mainly hidden in the coarse gravel and were only obtained after some digging.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Indonesia: Papua Province. The species is known only from the type locality (Fig. 5).</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The species name is a Latin adjective and means  “loveable” . </p>
            <p>Affinities.</p>
            <p> The species evidently belongs to the  E. ekari group due to the discontinuous outline of its median lobe. It is similar to  E. utowaensis Shaverdo, Hendrich &amp; Balke, 2012 in modification of the abdominal ventrite 6, body size, colouration and shape but distinctly differs from it in having a pronotal bead (absent in  E. utowaensis ) and different shape of the median lobe, paramere, and anterolateral hook-like seta of the male protarsomere 4 (it is also larger in  E. utowaensis ). The species is also similar to  E. athesphatos in modification of the abdominal ventrite 6 and paramere, but distinctly differs from it in smaller size and having simple male antennae. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/37E1527A36915673A58CB38E09A82CFC	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Shaverdo, Helena;Surbakti, Suriani;Sumoked, Bob;Balke, Michael	Shaverdo, Helena, Surbakti, Suriani, Sumoked, Bob, Balke, Michael (2020): Three new species of Exocelina Broun, 1886 from the southern slopes of the New Guinea central range, with introduction of the Exocelina skalei group (Coleoptera, Dytiscidae, Copelatinae). ZooKeys 1007: 129-143, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1007.59351, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1007.59351
2E0FD411D38F5CDC83952CAE3D1FB329.text	2E0FD411D38F5CDC83952CAE3D1FB329.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Exocelina brazza Shaverdo & Balke 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Exocelina brazza Shaverdo &amp; Balke sp. nov. Figs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 </p>
            <p>Type locality.</p>
            <p>Indonesia: Papua Province, Yahukimo Regency, Dekai, upper Brazza River, near 04°44'27.9"S, 139°39'15.2"E, 300 m a.s.l.</p>
            <p>Type material.</p>
            <p> Holotype: male "Indonesia: Papua, Dekai, upper Brazza, 300 m, 2/3.vi.2015, near -4,741084724 139,654211075976, Sumoked (Pap045)" (MZB). Paratypes: 2 males, 10 females with the same label as the holotype, one male and one female additionally with green text labels  “6991” and  “6990” , respectively (KSP, MZB). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body size and form: Beetle small: TL-H 3.05-3.3 mm, TL 3.45-3.7 mm, MW 1.65-1.8 mm (holotype: TL-H 3.3 mm, TL 3.7 mm, MW 1.8 mm), with oblong-oval habitus (Fig. 1).</p>
            <p>Colouration: Dorsally brown, with reddish pronotal sides (Fig. 1). Head reddish in anterior half (in front of eyes) and reddish-brown to brown in posterior half (at eye level and behind); pronotum reddish-brown on disc and with broad reddish sides, sometimes also reddish along anterior and posterior margins; elytron reddish-brown to dark brown, with reddish sutural lines; head appendages yellow to yellowish-red, legs reddish. Teneral specimens paler.</p>
            <p>Surface sculpture: Shiny dorsally, with fine punctation and microreticulation. Head with dense punctation (spaces between punctures 1-3 times size of punctures), distinctly finer and sparser anteriorly and posteriorly; diameter of punctures smaller than diameter of cells of microreticulation. Pronotum with distinctly finer and relatively sparser punctation than on head. Elytra with very sparse and fine punctation, almost invisible. Pronotum and elytra with weakly impressed microreticulation; head with stronger microreticulation. Metaventrite and metacoxa distinctly but weakly microreticulate, metacoxal plates with longitudinal strioles and transverse wrinkles. Abdominal ventrites with weak microreticulation, strioles, and fine sparse punctation, coarser and denser on two last abdominal ventrites.</p>
            <p>Structures: Pronotum with distinct lateral bead. Base of prosternum and neck of prosternal process with ridge, slightly rounded anteriorly. Blade of prosternal process broadly lanceolate, relatively broad and short, slightly convex medially, with distinct bead and few setae. Abdominal ventrite 6 broadly rounded apically.</p>
            <p>Male: Antenna modified: antennomeres 3-4 strongly enlarged, antennomere 5 distinctly enlarged and antennomeres 6-10 stout (Fig. 1). Pro- and mesotarsomeres 1-3 not dilated. Protarsomere 4 cylindrical, narrow, with large, thick, strongly curved anterolateral hook-like seta. Protarsomere 5 ventrally with anterior row of 12 and posterior row of 5 short setae (Fig. 2D). Median lobe with discontinuous outline and distinct submedian constriction in ventral view; apex elongate in lateral view (Fig. 2A, B). Paramere without distinct dorsal notch; subdistal part with relatively long, dense setae; proximal setae inconspicuous (Fig. 2C). Abdominal ventrite 6 broadly rounded, with 10-14 lateral striae on each side.</p>
            <p>Female: Pro- and mesotarsi not modified. Abdominal ventrite 6 without striae.</p>
            <p>Habitat.</p>
            <p>The specimens were collected from a small creek on an almost flat primary forest floor, about 100 m from the upper Brazza River (Figs 3, 4).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Indonesia: Papua Province. This species is known only from the type locality (Fig. 5).</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The species is named after the Brazza River. The name is a noun in the nominative singular standing in apposition.</p>
            <p>Affinities.</p>
            <p> The species evidently belongs to the  E. ekari group due to the discontinuous outline of its median lobe. Within the group, it can be placed close to the shiny species with antennomeres 3 and 4 larger than other antennomeres (including the recently described  E. athesphatos Shaverdo et al., 2020 and  E. tsinga Shaverdo et al., 2020), to which it is assumed to be closely related. However,  E. brazza sp. nov. can be easily distinguished from all of them by its small size, shape of the male antennae, median lobe and paramere. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2E0FD411D38F5CDC83952CAE3D1FB329	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Shaverdo, Helena;Surbakti, Suriani;Sumoked, Bob;Balke, Michael	Shaverdo, Helena, Surbakti, Suriani, Sumoked, Bob, Balke, Michael (2020): Three new species of Exocelina Broun, 1886 from the southern slopes of the New Guinea central range, with introduction of the Exocelina skalei group (Coleoptera, Dytiscidae, Copelatinae). ZooKeys 1007: 129-143, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1007.59351, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1007.59351
FF858FB30C0250799DF8323697254F96.text	FF858FB30C0250799DF8323697254F96.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Exocelina mimika Shaverdo & Balke 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Exocelina mimika Shaverdo &amp; Balke sp. nov. Figs 5, 8, 9 </p>
            <p>Type locality.</p>
            <p>Indonesia: Papua Province, Mimika Regency, Tsinga Village, Beanekogom River, 04°11.629'S, 137°13.756'E, 1690 m a.s.l.</p>
            <p>Type material.</p>
            <p>Holotype: male "Indonesia: Papua, Kabupaten [Regency] Mimika, Desa [Village] Tsinga, Sungai [River] Beanekogom,", "1690m, 25-30.v.2017, 04°11.629'S, 137°13.756'E, B. Sumoked (Pap66-Bob04)" (MZB). Paratypes: 3 males with the same label as the holotype (KSP, MZB).</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body size and form: Beetle medium-sized: TL-H 4.8-5.0 mm, TL 5.2-5.4 mm, MW 2.5-2.6 mm (holotype: TL-H 4.8 mm, TL 5 mm, MW 2.5 mm), with oblong-oval habitus (Fig. 8).</p>
            <p>Colouration: Dorsally piceous (Fig. 8), sometimes with dark brown posterior part of head, lateral sides of pronotum, and dark brown elytral sutural lines; head appendages yellowish brown, legs yellowish brown to reddish-brown. Teneral specimens paler.</p>
            <p>Surface sculpture: Shiny dorsally, with distinct punctation and weakly impressed microreticulation. Head with relatively dense, unevenly distributed punctation (spaces between punctures 1-4 times size of punctures), distinctly finer and sparser anteriorly and posteriorly; diameter of punctures equal to diameter of cells of microreticulation. Pronotum and elytra with punctation sparser and finer than on head and with distinct but weakly impressed microreticulation; head with stronger microreticulation. Metaventrite and metacoxae distinctly microreticulate, metacoxal plates with longitudinal strioles and transverse wrinkles. Abdominal ventrites with distinct microreticulation, strioles, and fine but distinct punctation.</p>
            <p>Structures: Pronotum with distinct lateral bead. Base of prosternum and neck of prosternal process with distinct ridge, very slightly rounded anteriorly. Blade of prosternal process lanceolate, narrow, slightly convex, with distinct lateral bead and few setae. Abdominal ventrite 6 broadly rounded.</p>
            <p>Male: Antenna simple. Pro- and mesotarsomeres 1-3 very slightly dilated. Protarsomere 4 simple, narrow, with large, thick, strongly curved anterolateral hook-like seta. Protarsomere 5 ventrally with anterior band of more than 50 and posterior row of 20 relatively long setae (Fig. 9D). Median lobe robust, with continuous outline and without setation; lateral margins thick in apical half; apex with very short blunt prolongation in lateral view and deeply concave in ventral view (Fig. 9A, B). Paramere without dorsal notch and with reduced setation: setae very thin, inconspicuous, sparse, longer subdistally and proximally and very short medially (Fig. 9C). Abdominal ventrite 6 broadly rounded, with 2-7 lateral striae on each side.</p>
            <p>Female: Unknown.</p>
            <p>Habitat.</p>
            <p>The specimens were collected from rock pools at the edge of a fast-flowing mountain stream.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Indonesia: Papua Province. The species is known only from the type locality (Fig. 5).</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The species is named after Mimika Regency, where it was collected. The name is a noun in the nominative singular standing in apposition.</p>
            <p> Affinities and introduction of the  E. skalei group. </p>
            <p> The other  Exocelina species known from the Tsinga area is  E. tsinga Shaverdo et al., 2020, which is very similar to the new species in size, body shape, colouration, and surface sculpture. The males of these species can be easily distinguished due to the modified antennae of  E. tsinga and different shape and setation of their genitalia; female identification, however, could be problematic. </p>
            <p> Based on morphological characters, we cannot place the new species in any known species group. The new species resembles representatives of the  E. jaseminae group in the shape of the median lobe and  E. mekilensis Shaverdo &amp; Balke, 2019 and species of the  E. ullrichi group (Shaverdo and Balke 2014) in the reduced setation of the paramere. However, in the shape of the median lobe and setation of the paramere, the new species is the most similar to  E. skalei . Thus, we assume that these two species might be closely related.  Exocelina skalei has been so far treated as a member of the  E. ekari group but according to the molecular analyses, it is the sister clade of the  E. ekari group (Toussaint et al. 2014, 2015). </p>
            <p> Therefore, for  E. skalei and  E. mimika sp. nov., herein we introduce a new species group, the  E. skalei group, with the following diagnostic characters: </p>
            <p>beetle small or medium-sized (TL-H 2.9-5.0 mm), with continuous body outline of broadly oval or oblong-oval shape;</p>
            <p>elytra without striae/strioles, with distinct punctation, beetles shiny or submatt;</p>
            <p>pronotum with distinct lateral bead;</p>
            <p>antennomeres not modified;</p>
            <p>male protarsomere 4 simple, with medium-sized or large, slightly or strongly curved anterolateral hook-like seta;</p>
            <p>median lobe of aedeagus without setation, with continuous or slightly discontinuous apically outline;</p>
            <p>paramere without dorsal notch and with strongly reduced setation: setae very thin and sparse, some longer setae distinct subdistally; setae tiny, inconspicuous medially and proximally.</p>
            <p> Since the southern slopes of the central range is a poorly studied area, we assume that more species of the  E. skalei group await discovery. The new material, including its molecular analysis, would help to confirm group delimitation. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FF858FB30C0250799DF8323697254F96	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Shaverdo, Helena;Surbakti, Suriani;Sumoked, Bob;Balke, Michael	Shaverdo, Helena, Surbakti, Suriani, Sumoked, Bob, Balke, Michael (2020): Three new species of Exocelina Broun, 1886 from the southern slopes of the New Guinea central range, with introduction of the Exocelina skalei group (Coleoptera, Dytiscidae, Copelatinae). ZooKeys 1007: 129-143, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1007.59351, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1007.59351
