identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
4E580716BAE65B27A800E31DF713FFD9.text	4E580716BAE65B27A800E31DF713FFD9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Jujiroa inexpectata Tian & Wang 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Jujiroa inexpectata Tian &amp; Wang sp. nov. Figs 5C, 7, 8, 9, 10 </p>
            <p>Material.</p>
            <p>Holotype: male, cave Shenxian Dong, Qiaoshan, Xinming, Huangshan, Anhui, 30°23'9.55"N, 118°14'7.66"E, 366 m in altitude, 2018-XII-24, leg. Jingli Cheng, in SCAU; Paratypes: 3 males and 2 females, idem, in SCAU; 2 males, same cave, 2019-IV-12, leg. Ye Liu and Wenbo Li, in National Museum of Zoology, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing (IOZ).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> A medium-sized  Jujiroa species, body de-pigmented, microphthalmic, pronotum widely reflexed along lateral margins, with strongly protruding fore angles and acute hind angles, elytra with three dorsal setiferous pores on the 3rd intervals and mucronate at apices. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Length: 12.5-15.0 mm; width: 4.0-5.0 mm. Habitus as in Fig. 7.</p>
            <p>Body concolorous, light reddish brown, smooth and glabrous (though sparsely punctate on the reflexed lateral margins of pronotum), strongly shiny. Microsculpture made of nearly isodiametric meshes on front of head, while striate on pronotum and moderately transverse on elytra.</p>
            <p>Head ovate (Figs 7, 8), much longer than wide, HLm/HW = 1.8-2.0, HLl/HW = 1.4-1.5; widest at middle of head from base to labrum; genae convex, expanded at sides, frontal furrows short and foveate; two pairs of supra-orbital pores present and nearly on parallel lines; eyes very small, slight convex; clypeus bisetose, labrum emarginate at front; mandibles elongate, teeth evidently reduced; labial suture complete; mentum with two setae on each side just in front of basal pit which was not well-defined; median tooth short, sharply bifid at tip; submentum with two setae on each side, inner ones longer than the outer; ligula short, widened and bisetose at apex; palpomeres slender, the 2nd labial palpomere 1.3 times as long as 3rd, the 3rd maxillary palpomere slightly shorter than 4th; suborbital setae absent; antennae filiform, extending to about apical 1/4 of elytra, the 1st to 3rd antennomeres glabrous, the 2nd shortest, relative length of each antennomere as: the 1st (2.61), 2nd (1.00), 3rd (2.12), 4th (1.90), 5th (2.00), 6th (1.82), 7th (1.83), 8th (1.61), 9th (1.66), 10th (1.34) and 11th (1.48).</p>
            <p>Pronotum transverse, PW/PL = 1.20-1.25; slightly shorter than head excluding mandibles; widest at about 1/3 from front, lateral margins including fore and hind angles widely reflexed throughout, distinctly sinuate before hind angles, only basal lateromarginal setae present at hind angles; fore angles extraordinarily protruding, nearly triangular and bluntly sharpened; hind angles nearly rectangular and pointed; whole margins including base and front without borders, base slightly wider than front including fore angles; both base and front truncate. Scutellum small, inverted triangular.</p>
            <p>Elytra elongate, much longer than wide, EL/EW = 1.61-1.83; longer than fore body including mandibles, much wider than pronotum; base well-bordered, shoulders nearly rectangular though rounded; widest at about apical 4/7 of elytra, apex protruding backwardly, mucronate, each elytron with an acute spine, both inner angles evidently divergent; disc slightly convex though largely depressed, striae entire, moderately impressed and punctate; scutellar striole short; basal pores present; interval 3 with three dorsal setiferous pores, at about 1/4, 1/2 and 3/4 of elytra from base, respectively, the anterior close to the 3rd stria, the other two close to the 2nd stria; preapical pore present, at about apical 1/7 of elytra, closer to elytral margin than to suture; two apical pores present; 18 marginal umbilicate pores present throughout.</p>
            <p>Ventral surface smooth and glabrous. Legs slender and elongate, procoxa asetose, mesocoxa unisetose, metacoxa bisetose, without inner seta; pro-, and mesotrochanters unisetose, metatrochanters asetose; metafemur bisetose posteriorly in male, trisetose in female; tibiae and tarsi smooth, without longitudinal sulci or striae externally; the 4th tarsomere bilobed in fore and middle legs, whereas deeply emarginated in hind ones. Each abdominal ventrite IV-VI bisetose, ventrite VII bisetose in male, but quadrisetose in female.</p>
            <p> Male genitalia (Fig. 9): Similar in  Jujiroa satoi Uéno , 2007, but slenderer and more elongate, with smaller sagittal aileron, wider basal opening and broader parameres. Median lobe thin and narrow, slightly arcuate in middle portion, then gently curved towards apex with a long and blunt apical lobe. In lateral view, apical lobe thin, much longer than wide. </p>
            <p> Female reproductive tract (Fig. 10): Abdominal ventrite X sparsely setose; gonocoxites 1 and 2 similar in other  Jujiroa species, the former bearing eight fringe setae along apical margin, the latter triangular, slightly curved outwardly, blunt at apex, without lateral or dorsal ensiform setae, but with a tiny seta on outer margin and subapical setose organ; bursa copulatrix wide, simply saccate, with middle part evidently folded, narrowed at base; oviduct situated in middle position, both spermathecal gland and spermatheca twisted, connected each other by a short spermathecal gland duct, spermathecal duct fairly long. </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The genus  Jujiroa Uéno , 1952 is known from Japan (Habu 1978, 1981; Takakura 1987; Sasakawa 2006), Vietnam, and from Taiwan Province and mainland China (  Jedlička 1961; Casale 1988;  Uéno and Saito 1991; Vigna Taglianti 1995,  Uéno and Kishimoto 2001; Deuve 2004;  Uéno 2007b; Deuve and  Pütz 2013). All of the five presently known species from mainland China are cave-adapted beetles:  J. rufescens (  Jedlička , 1961) from Jiangxi;  J. iolandae Vigna Taglianti, 1995,  J. satoi Uéno , 2007,  J. deliciola Uéno &amp; Kishimoto, 2001 and  J. lingguanensis Deuve et  Pütz , 2013 from Sichuan; and  J. clarkei Deuve, 2004 from Guangxi. These species are usually very rare as all are monotypic species (except  J. satoi , which was described based on three type specimens) and are known only by the type material. Therefore, we were quite surprised when we collected several individuals together in the cave during a two-hour survey. </p>
            <p> Regarding the hypogean  Jujiroa species from mainland China, this new species is easily separated from  J. clarkei by the presence of a spinous elytral apex (apical margin of elytra is rounded in  J. clarkei ), from  J. lingguanensis by its broader body and sharpened hind angles of pronotum, and from the other three species by its smooth tarsomeres which are without longitudinal sulci. </p>
            <p> However,  J. inexpectata sp. nov. is closely similar to  J. iolandae Vigna Taglianti, 1995, which occurs in Huaying, Sichuan, but it differs by fore angles of pronotum which is more protruding than in  J. iolandae , by its elytron which is presence of three dorsal setiferous pores, versus anterior pores absent in  J. iolandae , and by its tarsi which are smooth, whereas longitudinally striated in  J. iolandae . </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>To indicate that it was a surprise to find this interesting species.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>China (Anhui). Known only from the cave Shenxian Dong in Huangshan Shi.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4E580716BAE65B27A800E31DF713FFD9	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	Fang, Jie;Li, Wenbo;Wang, Xinhui;Tian, Mingyi	Fang, Jie, Li, Wenbo, Wang, Xinhui, Tian, Mingyi (2020): New cavernicolous ground beetles from Anhui Province, China (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechini, Platynini). ZooKeys 923: 33-50, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322
D9F5FA61A750586E8CA0B9915AFFA07A.text	D9F5FA61A750586E8CA0B9915AFFA07A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Shenoblemus minusculus Tian & Fang 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Shenoblemus minusculus Tian &amp; Fang sp. nov. Figs 1, 2, 3A, 4A, B </p>
            <p>Material.</p>
            <p>Holotype male, cave Shenxian Dong, Qiaoshan, Xinming, Huangshan, Anhui, 30°23'9.55"N, 118°14'7.66"E, 366 m in altitude, 2016-IV-22, leg. Wenbo Li, deposited in the insect collections of South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou, China (SCAU).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p>Small-sized, eyeless and yellowish-brown beetle, with stout body and short appendages; covered with pubescence which are sparser on head, prothorax and elytra, and denser on abdominal ventrites.</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Length: 2.45 mm; width: 0.84 mm. Habitus as in Fig. 1. Fore body (head plus pronotum including mandibles) much shorter than elytra. Microsculpture made of isodiametric meshes irregularly distributed on head, pronotum and elytra.</p>
            <p>Head large and widened, a little narrower than head including mandibles, HW/HLm = 0.90, or wider excluding mandibles, HW/HLl = 1.17; widest at about 1/4 of head from base excluding mandibles; front and vertex convex; frontal furrows well-defined and complete, strongly divergent at both anteriorly and posteriorly; genae markedly expanded laterally; anterior and posterior supra-orbital pores close, both at widest area of genae; clypeus quadrisetose, labrum transverse, almost straight in the front margin, 6-setose; mandibles widened and moderately curved at apices; ligula thin and short, adnated with paraglossae; palps short, penultimate joints much stouter than apical ones; the 2nd labial palpomere slightly longer than the 3rd, bisetose on inner margin, with two or three additional setae at subapex on outer margin; the 3rd maxillary palpomere as long as the 4th; the 1st-6th antennomeres filiform, while the 7th-11th semi-moniliform; relative length of each antennomere as: the 1st (1.13), 2nd (1.00), 3rd (1.08), 4th (1.04), 5th (1.13), 6th (1.00), 7th (1.04), 8th (1.04), 9th (1.04), 10th (1.00) and 11th (1.42).</p>
            <p>Pronotum moderately transverse, PnW/PnL = 1.21, as long as head (including mandibles), much wider than head, PnW/HW = 1.32; lateral margins finely bordered, anterior lateromarginal pores located at about apical sixth, posterior ones at a little before hind angles; base slightly narrower than front, PbW/PfW = 0.97, both nearly straight and unbordered; hind angles denticulate at tips; both frontal and basal impression faint, basal foveae large and deep; disc moderately convex. Scutellum small and almost rounded.</p>
            <p>Elytra much longer than wide, EL/EW = 1.56, wider than pronotum, EW/PnW =1.24; unbordered at base; strial punctures large and widely isolated; basal pores distant from scutellum, anterior and posterior dorsal pores on the 3rd striae at about 1/4 and 4/7 of the elytra from the base respectively; preapical pores at about apical 1/7 of elytra, subequal to suture and apical margin; humeral group of marginal umbilicate series regular though the 2nd closer to marginal gutter than other; the 5th widely separated from the 6th, apical pores close to elytral margin (Fig. 3A).</p>
            <p>Legs short and stout, densely pubescent; protarsi short, the 1st tarsomere much shorter than the 2nd-4th combined in fore and middle legs, whereas slightly shorter in hind legs; abdominal ventrites IV - VI each with a pair of paramedical setae in male.</p>
            <p>Male genitalia (Fig. 4A, B): The median lobe of aedeagus moderately sclerotized, rather long and thin, weakly arcuate at median portion, rounded at apex; dorsal margin suddenly folded at about basal quarter; base small, sagittal aileron quite large and hyaline, inner sac provided with a triangular and small copulatory piece, which is about 1/5 as long as aedeagus; in dorsal view, apical lobe widened at subapex, nearly triangular form, longer than wide, with a broadly rounded apex; parameres moderately elongated, right one as long as the left, each armed with two long setae at apex.</p>
            <p>Female: Unknown.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>To refer to the small body size.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>China (Anhui). Known only from a limestone cave called Shenxian Dong in Huangshan Shi.</p>
            <p>The Shenxian Dong limestone cave is more than 3000 m long. It is divided in three parts (front, middle, and back) for touristic purpose. There is an underground stream along the main passage. The single beetle specimen was collected in a dark area approximately 50 m from the entrance.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D9F5FA61A750586E8CA0B9915AFFA07A	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	Fang, Jie;Li, Wenbo;Wang, Xinhui;Tian, Mingyi	Fang, Jie, Li, Wenbo, Wang, Xinhui, Tian, Mingyi (2020): New cavernicolous ground beetles from Anhui Province, China (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechini, Platynini). ZooKeys 923: 33-50, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322
55D9F8367A6356CEB246F80101B2E061.text	55D9F8367A6356CEB246F80101B2E061.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Shenoblemus Tian & Fang 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Shenoblemus Tian &amp; Fang gen. nov.</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Shenoblemus minusculus Tian &amp; Fang, sp. nov. (the cave Shenxian Dong, Huangshan Qu, Huangshan Shi, Anhui). </p>
            <p>Generic characteristics.</p>
            <p> Small-sized beetles for the phyletic series of  Trechoblemus (Casale and Laneyrie 1982; Jeannel 1928; Casale et al. 1998), or  Trechoblemus complex (  Uéno and Pawlowski 1981), anophthalmic; body short and stout, appendages short; dorsal surface more or less pubescent; head subquadrate, wider than long excluding mandibles, and shorter than pronotum; frontal furrows entire, two pairs of supra-orbital and pair of suborbital pores present; right mandible bidentate; labial suture absent, making mentum and submentum completely fused; mentum bisetose, base largely concave, median tooth simple, short and blunt at apex; submentum quadrisetose; antennae short, extending only to about 1/3 of elytra from base, the 7th to 11th antennomeres sub-moniliform; pronotum quadrate, transverse, evidently wider than long, widest near front, at about 1/4 apically, two pairs of lateromarginal setae present, posterior ones located before hind angles, fore angles markedly protruding and sharp, hind ones nearly rectangular and pointed, base nearly straight; elytra stout though distinctly longer than fore body including mandibles, nearly parallel-sided, widest at about middle, surface moderately convex, shoulders distinct, angularly rounded, lateral margins strongly serrated at base, then more or less ciliated throughout; striae obliterated though partly traceable; two dorsal pores present on the 3rd stria, and the preapical present; apical striole weakly defined, connected to the 5th stria; humeral group (the 1st to 4th pores) of marginal umbilicate series equidistantly spaced, median group (the 5th and 6th pores) widely separated each other, the 5th pore forwardly shifted and closer to the 4th than to 6th; protibia without longitudinal groove externally; the 1st and 2nd protarsomeres modified in male, distinctly denticulate inwards at each apex; the 1st protarsomere shorter than 2nd to 4th ones combined in all legs; ventrite VII with one pairs of apical setae in male; male genitalia thin and slender, slightly arcuate. </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The main characteristics (such as the small and pubescent body, two frontal pores present on the head, fused mentum and submentum, location of dorsal pores on the 3rd stria and an equidistantly spaced humeral group of the marginal umbilicate series) indicate that  Shenoblemus is a lineage of the  Trechoblemus phyletic series. It is probably close to the Zhejiangese genus  Microblemus Uéno , 2007, whose members are also small-sized, with similar head, bidentate right mandible, and have similar chaetotaxy on the elytra (  Uéno 2007a). However,  Shenoblemus can be easily distinguished from  Microblemus by: (1) antennae sub-moniliform, whereas they are filiform in  Microblemus ; (2) mentum and submentum completely fused, versus only partly fused with labial suture traceable in  Microblemus ; (3) pronotum quadrate and transverse, with fore angles evidently protruding, but cordate and narrow, with fore angles not protruding in  Microblemus ; and (4) elytral base and shoulders simple or moderately serrate in  Shenoblemus , whereas they are strongly dentate in  Microblemus . </p>
            <p> Shenoblemus may be also related to the sympatric  Wanoblemus as both genera share some important characteristics: (1) similar chaetotaxy on head and pronotum; (2) 1st and 2nd protarsomeres modified in the male; (3) labial suture missing; and (4) bidentate right mandible (though tricuspid in three individuals of  Wanoblemus huangshanicus sp. nov.). However, they are evidently different in the following aspects: (1) body much smaller and stouter in  Shenoblemus ; (2) 7th to 11th antennomeres are sub-moniliform in  Shenoblemus , but filiform in  Wanoblemus ; (3) pronotum strongly transverse, with fore angles protruding and sharp in  Shenoblemus , versus narrower, with fore angles not protruding in  Wanoblemus ; (4) lateral margin of elytra strongly serrate near base in  Shenoblemus , whereas it is weakly subserrate or ciliate in  Wanoblemus ; (5) 5th and 6th pores of the marginal umbilicate series of the elytra widely spaced, making the 5th pore closer to the 4th than to the 6th in  Shenoblemus , instead of much closer to the 6th than to the 4th in  Wanoblemus ; (6) protibiae without a longitudinal sulcus in  Shenoblemus , versus a distinct longitudinal sulcus present in  Wanoblemus ; and (7) male genitalia thin and elongate in  Shenoblemus , versus short and strongly arcuate in  Wanoblemus . </p>
            <p> The following features may separate  Shenoblemus from another Zhejiangese genus,  Wulongoblemus Uéno , 2007 whose members have also the 1st and 2nd protarsomeres modified in the male: (1) right mandible bidentate in  Shenoblemus , but tridentate in  Wulongoblemus ; (2) body small, short, and stout in  Shenoblemus , whereas it is large and slender in  Wulongoblemus ; (3) pronotum transverse, with fore angles protruding in  Shenoblemus , versus pronotum longer than wide, with obtuse fore angles in  Wulongoblemus ; (4) antennae sub-moniliform in  Shenoblemus , instead of filiform in  Wulongoblemus . </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> "Shen (=  “Shenxian” , meaning immortal in Chinese) + blemus", referring to the locality of the type species. Gender masculine. </p>
            <p>Generic range.</p>
            <p>China (Anhui).</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/55D9F8367A6356CEB246F80101B2E061	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	Fang, Jie;Li, Wenbo;Wang, Xinhui;Tian, Mingyi	Fang, Jie, Li, Wenbo, Wang, Xinhui, Tian, Mingyi (2020): New cavernicolous ground beetles from Anhui Province, China (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechini, Platynini). ZooKeys 923: 33-50, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322
F57C0544A8955086B04806C12673A504.text	F57C0544A8955086B04806C12673A504.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Wanoblemus huangshanicus Tian & Li 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Wanoblemus huangshanicus Tian &amp; Li sp. nov. Figs 3B, 4C, D, 5B, 6 </p>
            <p>Material.</p>
            <p>Holotype: male, cave Shenxian Dong, Qiaoshan, Xinming, Huangshan, Anhui, 30°23'9.55"N, 118°14'7.66"E, 366 m in altitude, 2016-IV-22, leg. Wenbo Li, in SCAU; Paratypes: 3 males and 2 females, idem; 12 males and 15 females, same cave, 2018-XII-24, leg. Weibo Li, Mengzhen Chen, Zhuanghui Qin, Jingli Cheng &amp; Mingyi Tian, in SCAU and in the animal collections of Anhui University, Hefei, China (AHU) respectively.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p>A rather small eyeless trechine beetle, yellowish brown, body thin and elongate, sparsely pubescent.</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Length: 3.2-3.5 mm (including mandibles); width: 0.9-1.0 mm. Habitus as in Fig. 6.</p>
            <p>Head longer than wide, HLm/HW = 1.38-1.42, HLl/HW = 1.08-1.2; right mandible bidentate (but tricuspid in three individuals); antennae extending beyond basal 2/5 of elytra.</p>
            <p> Pronotum slightly wider than longer, PnL/PnW = 0.90-0.93, shorter than head, PnL/HLm = 0.72-0.75, wider than head, PnW/HW = 1.20-1.24, base narrower than front, PbW/PfW = 0.83-0.87, lateral margins more contracted behind the widest portion than in  Wanoblemus wui Tian &amp; Fang, 2016. </p>
            <p> Elytra slightly thinner than those in  W. wui , longer than fore body, EL/(HLm+PnL) = 1.28-1.31, EL/(HLl+PnL) = 1.50-1.62, much longer than wide, EL/EW = 1.77-1.81; much wider than pronotum, EW/PnW = 1.51-1.53; chaetotaxy similar in  W. wui (Fig. 3B). </p>
            <p>VII ventrite bisetose in male, while quadrisetose in female.</p>
            <p> Male genitalia (Fig. 4C, D): The median lobe of aedeagus well-sclerotized, small but more elongate than the one of  W. wui , and less curved ventrally in middle part; membranous opening large, rather sharp at apex, base larger, with a small sagittal aileron; in dorsal view, apical lobe much longer than wide, gently contracted towards apex which is broad; parameres shorter than median lobe, both widened at apices, each armed with four long apical setae. </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> This new species is very similar to the type species  W. wui which occurs in the cave Baiyun Dong, Xuancheng Shi, approximately 46 km in a straight-line distance from the cave Shenxian Dong. However, the new species is smaller and slenderer than the type species, and with a longer and more elongated aedeagus. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>To refer to the type locality.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>China (Anhui). Known only from the cave Shenxian Dong in Huangshan Shi.</p>
            <p>The specimens collected in 2016 were found in a small wet area about 300 m from the cave entrance. The specimens collected in 2018 were found in dark areas 200-300 m from the entrance.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F57C0544A8955086B04806C12673A504	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	Fang, Jie;Li, Wenbo;Wang, Xinhui;Tian, Mingyi	Fang, Jie, Li, Wenbo, Wang, Xinhui, Tian, Mingyi (2020): New cavernicolous ground beetles from Anhui Province, China (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechini, Platynini). ZooKeys 923: 33-50, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.923.47322
