identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03AC7D44D95D7D49FF7BA55EF551C3B7.text	03AC7D44D95D7D49FF7BA55EF551C3B7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas dudgeoni Jach 1995	<div><p>The  Eulichas dudgeoni species group</p><p>The  E. dudgeoni species group is characterised by a relatively broad phallobase, which is about the same length or slightly shorter than the parameres, and by the short basal parameral apophysis. In addition, the last antennomere is filiform, rectangular or slightly club shaped, never distinctly widened, its ventral part is smooth; and the last maxillary palpomere is club shaped. The group contains 21 species distributed from Nepal, northern India and southern China, through continental south-eastern Asia, where it reaches its highest diversity, to the Greater Sunda Islands and the Philippines.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D95D7D49FF7BA55EF551C3B7	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D95A7D4EFF7BA76CF6FFC168.text	03AC7D44D95A7D4EFF7BA76CF6FFC168.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas dudgeoni Jach 1995	<div><p>The  Eulichas dudgeoni species complex</p><p>The species complex contains seven species from, more or less, the Palaearctic-Oriental transitional zone area. Their characteristics agree without exception with the definition of the group: Parameres have a distinctly developed subbasal hook. In addition, in most species parameres are distinctly attenuated before the subapical hook, and the median lobe is narrowly lanceolate and often attenuated in the apical third of its length.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D95A7D4EFF7BA76CF6FFC168	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D95A7D45FF7BA6B4F7D4C113.text	03AC7D44D95A7D45FF7BA6B4F7D4C113.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas alesbezdeki Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas alesbezdeki Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 1, 25, 45, 65)</p><p>Eulichas sp. (Guangxi A)  cf. funebris et  undulata: Jäch 1995: 370 (partim).  Eulichas jendeki: Jäch 1995: 373 (partim).</p><p>Type locality. Laos, Boli Kham Xai Prov., 8 km NE of Ban Nape.</p><p>Type material. 79 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “LAOS-CE, 1–18.v.2001, / Boli Kham Xai prov., / 18°21’N 105°08’E, / BAN NAPE (8 km NE), / ~ 600m, Vít Kubáň leg. [printed] / Biological expedition / „ Laos 2001“ / Moravian Museum Brno / Czech Republic [printed]”. Paratypes: 2033 (nos. 1– 20) 6ƤƤ (nos. 21–26), same label data as holotype (MZMB, NHMW, NMPC); 1333 (nos. 27–39) 4ƤƤ (nos. 40–43), same label data, but “L. Dembický leg.” (NHMB, NMPC); 233 (nos. 44–45), “ LAOS – NE; HUA PHAN prov. / 25km SE Vieng Xai (by road); / BAN KANGPABONG env.; / 20°19’N 104°25’E; / J. Bezdĕk leg.; 14.–18.v.2001 [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 46), “LAOS-C, Kamphéng Nakhon / Viangchan prov., Viang Chan / (=VIENTIANE), 17°58’N / 102°36’E, 170m, 17.v.2008, / Khampaseuth Sisoutham leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 47), “ Tonkin / Than-Moi / Juni-Juli / H.Fruhstorfer [printed]” (HNHM); 633 (nos. 48–53), “ Tonkin / Montes Mauson [Tam Dảo], / April, Mai 2 -3000’ / H.Fruhstorfer [printed]” (HNHM, ZMHB); 233 (nos. 54–55), “ Vietnam Tam dao / Vinh phu pr. / 3.– 11.6.1985 / J. Picka lgt. [printed]” (NHMB); 1Ƥ (no. 56), “ Vietnam / Tam dao 3.6.– 11.6.1985 / Vinh phu prov. / Strnad Jan lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 57), “ Vietnam N / Tam dao 26.5.– 3.6.1986 / Vinh phu prov. / Strnad Jan lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 433 (nos. 58–61) 1Ƥ (no. 62), “N. VIETNAM 900m / TamDao 13.–24. / 5.1989 A. Olexa [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 63) 3ƤƤ (nos. 64–66), “ VIETNAM 20.–28.VI.1990 / Vinh Phu Prov. / TAM DAO / Jan Strnad leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 67), “N. Vietnam / Tamdao / 20.6.1995 Gorochov [handwritten]” (ZMAS); 1Ƥ (no. 68), “N-Vietnam, Tam Dao, Vinh / Phu Prov., 21°27’18’’N; / 105°38’58’’E / 2.–6.VI.1999, 1050– 1200m; / leg.: Fabrizi &amp; Ahrens [printed]” (SMTD); 13 (no. 69), “ Vietnam gory [Mts.] SW / Cua-rao 600 m / 24.6.196 Kabakov [printed, transcribed from Cyrillic]” (ZMAS); 13 (no. 70), “ Vietnam / Lao Cai [Lào Cai, ca. 22°30’N 103°57’E] / 15.5.1960 Izokh [handwritten, transcribed from Cyrillic]” (ZMAS); 13 (no. 71), “ Vietnam gory [Mts.] SW / Bai Tuong [Bái Thuơọơng] 300 m / 5.7.1962 Kabakov [printed, transcribed from Cyrillic]” (ZMAS); 1Ƥ (no. 72), “ Vietnam gory [Mts.] / W Sa-pa [Sa Pa, ca. 22°20’N 103°50’E] 1600–2000 m / 1.6.1963 Kabakov [printed, transcribed from Cyrillic]” (ZMAS); 13 (no. 73), “ Vietnam gory [Mts.] 50 km / NO [NE] Thai Nguyen [Thái Nguyên, ca. 21°33’N, 105°51’E] 300 m / 15.6.1963 Kabakov [printed, transcribed from Cyrillic]” (ZMAS); 13 (no. 74), “ Vietnam gory [Mts.] 60 km / NO [NE] Thai Nguyen 300 m / 16.6.1963 Kabakov [printed, transcribed from Cyrillic]” (ZMAS); 1Ƥ (no. 75), “16.– 17.5.1990 YEN BAI [Yên Bái] / HOANG LIEN SON Distr. / N VIETNAM / JAN HORÁK Leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 76–77) 1Ƥ (no. 78), “ China / Yunnan [printed]” (HNHM, NMPC).</p><p>Additional material studied. 12 specimens — LAOS: 1Ƥ, Annam (HNHM). VIETNAM: 1Ƥ, H t Tonkin, A.N. Claire (IRSNB); 1Ƥ, Tonkin, Rég.[ion] Hà Giang, 1916, S. Olivier (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Tonkin, Chapo, prov. de Laokay [Sa Pa, ca. 22°20’N 103°50’E; Lao Cai prov.] (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Tonkin, NE of Bảo Lạc [ca. 22°57’N 105°39’E], 1897–1898, Dr. Battarel leg. (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Làng Son [ca. 21°51’N 106°45’E] (MNHN); 13, Tonkin, Than-Moi [most probably Thanh Moi, ca. 21°38’N 106°32’E], v.–vi., H. Fruhstorfer (MNHN) [paratype of  E. jendeki]; 13, Tonkin, Chiêm Hóa, viii.–ix., H. Fruhstorfer (MNHN) [paratype of  E. jendeki]; 13, Tonkin, Hòa Bình env. [ca. 20°50’N 105°19’E], 1902, J. Laisi leg. (MNHN) [paratype of  E. jendeki]; 233, Tonkin, Rég.[ion] Hòa Bình, 1919 (MNHN) [paratypes of  E. jendeki]; 13, Tonkin, Backan [Bảc Cạn, ca. 22°08’N 105°49’E], 1907–08, P. Lemée (NHMW) [paratype of  E. jendeki].</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to black. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or greyish setae forming typical ocellations on pronotum, elytra and abdominal sternites (Fig. 1).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 21–26 mm (holotype 22 mm); females: 25–31 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna robust, last antennomere nearly rectangular, 2.57–3.06 times as long as wide (Fig. 25), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.89–2.05 times as wide as long. Sides almost regularly rounded (Fig. 45). The disc with two oval shallow depressions. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, relatively slender, their subbasal hook small, but the subapical hook is well developed and prominent. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate (Fig. 65).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Differential diagnosis. The new species is similar to  E. jendeki in habitus, while its aedeagus is rather close to that of  E. dudgeoni .  Eulichas alesbezdeki sp. nov. differs from  E. jendeki in the almost regularly rounded sides of pronotum and the slender and slightly attenuating parameres of aedeagus, and from  E. dudgeoni in shorter last antennomere and distinct body ocellations.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. Known from several localities in north-eastern Laos, and “ Tonkin ”, northern Vietnam. Etymology. The new species is dedicated to my friend Aleš Bezdĕk (České Budĕjovice, Czech Republic), specialist on Scarabaeoidea, with my special thanks for giving me the first  Eulichas specimen and stimulating my interest in this family.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D95A7D45FF7BA6B4F7D4C113	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9517D5BFF7BA6A0F75AC7F5.text	03AC7D44D9517D5BFF7BA6A0F75AC7F5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas bertiae Jach 1995	<div><p>Eulichas bertiae Jäch, 1995</p><p>(Figs. 2, 26, 46, 66)</p><p>Eulichas bertiae Jäch, 1995: 374 (original description, Rég. de Pin-Fa); Jäch &amp; Hájek 2006: 455 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Rég. de Pin-Fa (= Pingba, Anshun Prefecture, ca. 50 km SW Guiyang City, Guizhou, southern China).”</p><p>Type material. 5 specimens — Holotype 3 (MNHN): “MUSEUM PARIS / KOUY-TSCHÉOU / RÉG. DE PIN-FA / PÈRE CAVALERIE 1909 [printed] // Muséum Paris / Coll. M. Pic [printed] // HOLOTYPE /  Eulichas /  bertiae sp.n. / des. M. Jäch 1994 [red label, printed]”. Paratypes: 13, same data as holotype (NHMW); 233 1Ƥ, “Suisapa, 1000 M. / Lichuan Distr. / W. Hupeh, China / VIII-30-48 // Gressitt &amp; / Djou Collrs. [printed]” (NHMW).</p><p>Additional material studied. 3 specimens — CHINA: 13, Fujian prov., Kuatun [= Guadun], 7.ix. [19]46, Tschung-Sen leg. (MNHN); 13, Hubei prov., Lao-ho-k’ou Pr. [Laohekou distr.], Tsch’ia-yuenkow, G. Hauser leg. (ZMHB); 13, Hunan prov., Wulingyuan, N Dayong, Zangjiajie, 450 m, 30.x.1993, H. Schillhammer leg. (NHMW).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring black, rarely dark brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or greyish setae forming rather indistinct ocellations on pronotum, elytra and abdominal sternites (Fig. 2).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 20–24 mm; female: 25 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere almost rectangular, with apical elongation of variable length, ca. 3.60–4.64 times as long as wide (Fig. 26), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.85–1.95 times as wide as long. Sides of rather variable shape; in some specimens almost regularly rounded (Fig. 46). On the other hand some specimens have sides skewed and straight in anterior half, subparallel in basal half, with an indistinct obtuse angle present near the middle. Disc with two oval shallow depressions. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase slightly shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, relatively broad. Subbasal parameral hook small, but the subapical hook is well developed and prominent. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate (Fig. 66).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Distribution. Known from several localities in southern and south-eastern China (Fujian, Guizhou, Hubei, Hunan).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9517D5BFF7BA6A0F75AC7F5	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D94F7D5AFF7BA70CF4B9C177.text	03AC7D44D94F7D5AFF7BA70CF4B9C177.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas dudgeoni Jach 1995	<div><p>Eulichas dudgeoni Jäch, 1995</p><p>(Figs. 3, 27, 47, 67)</p><p>Eulichas dudgeoni Jäch, 1995: 372 (original description, Hongkong: Tai Po Kau forest); Jäch &amp; Hájek 2006: 455 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Stream in Tai Po Kau forest, New Territories, Hong Kong ”.</p><p>Type material. 73 specimens — Holotype 3 (NHMW): “ Hong Kong / Tai Po Kau / leg. Dudgeon [handwritten] / HOLOTYPUS /  Eulichas /  dudgeoni sp. n. / des. M. Jäch 1993 [red label, printed]”. Paratypes: 4633 2ƤƤ, same data, but printed (NHMW); 933 4ƤƤ, “ HONGKONG / leg.Dudgeon [printed] (NHMW); 233, “ HONGKONG, Tai Po Kau / 10.8.1983, light / leg. Dudgeon [printed]” (NHMW); 13, “Coll.Nonfried / China [white label with black frame, printed] // Collect. / Plason [printed]” (NHMW); 533, “Coll.R.I.Sc.N.B. / Chine: Kwang - Si / Nan - ning / ex coll. Le Moult [printed]” (IRSNB, NHMW); 233, “Suisapa, 1000 M. / Lichuan Distr. / W. Hupeh, China / VIII-30-48 // Gressitt &amp; / Djou Collrs. [printed]” (NHMW).</p><p>Additional material studied. 23 specimens — CHINA: 13 1Ƥ, Sichuan Prov., Yannsien [= Ya’an, ca. 29°59’N 102°59’E], coll. Le Moult (IRSNB); 13, Guangxi A.R., Jaochan, G. Sin leg. (ZMHB); 433, Guangxi A.R., Region Nanning, 1931 (MNHN); 13, Guangxi A.R., Yaosan [= Dayaoshan], 17.vii. [19]34, H.G. Tao leg. (MNHN); 13, Guangxi A.R., Ku-ling [Guling, ca. 23°38’N, 108°17’E], 25.ii. [19] 35, O. Piel leg. (MNHN); 13, Guangdong Prov., Lung-zo-Aam bei Kanton [= near Guangzhou] (ZMHB); 1Ƥ, Guangdong Prov., Tsha-jiu-san [= Tshayuen Shan, ca. 24°53’N 113°50’E], vii.-ix.1910, S.V. Mell leg. (ZMHB); 13, Guangdong Prov., Canton [= Guangzhou], Fung-wan, 1.v.1911, S.V. Mell leg. (ZMHB); 233 1Ƥ, Hong Kong (MNHN, NMPC); 13 Hongkong, Pak Sha O, 100 m, 4.viii.1989, W.J. Tennent (BMNH); 13 1Ƥ, Jiangxi prov., Kiukiang [Jiujiang, ca. 29°43’N 115°58’E]; vii.1887, A.E. Pratt leg. (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Fujian prov., Shaowu env., 23.-27.vi.1991 (NHMW); 13, Zhejiang prov., Wenchow [Wenzhou, ca. 28°00’N 120°38’E] (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Zheijang prov., Lin-An, Xi-Tianmu Shan Mt., 300-400 m, 17.vii.2000, N. Ohbayashi &amp; L.-Z. Li leg. (EUMC); 13 1Ƥ, Shanghai (MNHN).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or greyish setae uniformly covering body surface, or forming indistinct ocellations on elytra (Fig. 3).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 20–25 mm; females: 25–31 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of irregularly distributed sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere slightly club shaped with apical elongation of variable length, ca. 3.55–4.53 times as long as wide (Fig. 27), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.89–2.00 times as wide as long. Sides almost regularly rounded, rarely in some specimens with very indistinct obtuse angle near the middle (Fig. 47). Pronotum with two rounded shallow depressions on the disc. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally almost regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase slightly shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, slender, attenuating regularly to the subapical hook. Parameral subbasal hook small, but the subapical hook is well developed, slightly prominent. Median lobe slender, subparallel (Fig. 67).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Imagos collected mostly at light (cf. Jäch 1995).</p><p>Distribution. A species occurring in central and southern China (Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi Hong Kong, Hubei, Jiangxi, Sichuan, Shaanxi). Imprecisely labelled specimens are known also from “North China ”.</p><p>Eulichas sp. Ƥ ( bertiae /  dudgeoni)</p><p>Material studied. 2 specimens — CHINA: 1Ƥ, Fujian prov., Kuatun [= Guadun], iv.-vi.1946, Tshung Sen leg. (SMNS); 1Ƥ, Gansu prov., Bikou, 32°32’N 104°38’E, 3.-7.vii.1997, E. Kučera leg. (NMPC).</p><p>Remarks.  E. bertiae and  E. dudgeoni represent extremely similar species in general appearance. Whereas I was not able to find any diagnostic characters on females of these two species, I am not able to resolve specific placement of specimens listed above.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D94F7D5AFF7BA70CF4B9C177	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D94E7D58FF7BA69FF55FC558.text	03AC7D44D94E7D58FF7BA69FF55FC558.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas jendeki Jach 1995	<div><p>Eulichas jendeki Jäch, 1995</p><p>(Figs. 4, 28, 48, 68)</p><p>Eulichas jendeki Jäch, 1995: 373 (original description, Vietnam: Tam Dao National Park); Jäch &amp; Hájek 2006: 455 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Tam Dao National Park, 75 km NW Hanoi, North Vietnam (collected at light)”.</p><p>Type material. 16 specimens — Holotype 3 (NHMW): “N-Vietnam 15.V.-16.VI. / TAMDAO N.P. / 75 km NW Hanoi / leg. E. Jendek 1991 [printed] / HOLOTYPUS /  Eulichas /  jendeki sp. n. / des. M. Jäch 1993 [red label, printed]”. Paratypes: 13, same data as holotype (NHMW); 1333, “N-Vietnam 25.V.-10.VI. / SAPA (Lao Cai) / 22°20’N 103°50’E / leg. E. Jendek 1991 [printed]” (IRSNB, NHMW); 13, “DJOUKOULA / YUNNAN / Coll.de Touzalin [black frame, printed] // 2 [handwritten] // Muséum Paris / Coll. M. Pic [printed] //  L. uniformis / (defloré) [handwritten]” (MNHN).</p><p>Additional material studied. 177 specimens — LAOS: 13 1Ƥ, Luang Prabang à Theng, 1888, A. Pavie leg. (MNHN) [paralectotypes of  E. phoca]; 2233 9ƤƤ, Louangnamtha prov., 20 km NW Louang Namtha, 21°09,2’N 101°18,7’E, 800–1000 m, 5.–11.v.1997, E. Jendek &amp; O. Šauša leg. (NHMW, NMPC); 533 2ƤƤ, Louangnamtha prov., Namtha – Muang Sing, 21°09’N 101°19’E, 900–1200 m, 5.–31.v.1997, V. Kubáň leg. (NHMW, NMPC); 13, Hua Phan prov., 25 km SE Vieng Xai (by road), Ban Kangpabong env., 20°19’N 104°25’E, 14.–18.v.2001, D. Hauck leg. (NMPC); 13, Hua Phan prov., Phu Loei Nat. Park, Ban Sakok, 20°10’N 103°12’E, 23.–26.v.2001, J. Bezdĕk leg. (NMPC); 13, same label data, but D. Hauck leg. (NMPC); 13, Hua Phan prov., Phu Phan Mt. Env., Ban Saluei, 20°13’N 103°59’E, 1300–2000 m, 16.–18.v.2004, F. &amp; L. Kantner leg. (NMPC); 13, same label data, but 20°12’-13.5’N 103°59.5’- 104°01’E, 1340–1870 m, 15.iv.– 15.v.2008, Lao collectors leg. (NMPC). THAILAND: 13, Tak prov., Umphang distr., Thung Yai Wildlife Sanctuary, Song Bae stream, 15°28’N 98°48’E, 300 m, light trap, 18.–27.iv.1988, M.J.D. Brendell leg. (BMNH); 13, Tak prov., Région de Umphang, v.1991 (VKCZ); 3 33, Chaing Rai prov., Wiangpapao, 26.vii.1990 (EUMC); 333 5ƤƤ, Mae Hong Son prov., Ban Huai Po, 1600–2000 m, 9.–16.v.1991, J. Horák leg. (NMPC); 433, [Mae Hong Son prov.], Soppong, 19°22’N 98°18’E, 750 m, 13.v.1993, L. Bocák leg. (SMNS); 233, same data, but 1.–9.v.2000, P. Viktora leg. (NMPC); 13, [Mae Hong Son prov.], Pai, 15.– 16.v.1999, R. Grimm leg. (SMNS); 13, Chiang Mai, viii.1996, Wong Tet Fatt leg. (HNHM); 13, Nan prov., Bo Klua, 19°08’N 101°10’E, 700 m, 22.–26.iv.1999, D. Hauck leg. (NMPC); 13, same label data, but M. Říha leg. (NMPC); 13, Nan prov., Ban Bo Klua env., 13.–26.v.2002, P. Prûdek &amp; M. Obořil leg. (NMPC); 13, Nan prov., Khun Nan Nat. Park, 23.iv.2004, P. Viktora leg. (NMPC). VIETNAM: 13, gory u [mountains near] Sa Pa, 1200 m, 23.v.1963, Kabakov leg. (ZMAS); 2033 8ƤƤ, Lao Cai prov., Sa Pa [ca. 22°20’N 103°50’E], 11.–15.v.1990, P. Pacholátko leg. (NHMB); 933 6ƤƤ, same label data, but V. Kubáň leg. (NHMB, NMPC); 13, same label data, but J. Picka leg. (NHMB); 1Ƥ, same label data, but 11.–18.vi.1990, A. Olexa leg. (NMPC); 6ƤƤ, same label data, but 25.v.–10.vi.1991, E. Jendek leg. (NHMW); 433 2ƤƤ, same label data, but 1500 m, 11.–19.vi.1991, J. Strnad leg. (NHMB); 13, same label data, but S. Brantlová leg. (NHMB); 13, same data, but Hoang Lien Son Nat. Res., 1250–1300 m, 15.–20.vi.1998, A. Napolov leg. (ZMAS); 2833 9ƤƤ, Vinh Phuc prov., Tam Dảo [ca. 21°27’N 105°39’E], 6.–21.v.1990, P. Pacholátko leg. (NHMB, NMPC); 333 1Ƥ, same label data, but L. Dembický leg. (NHMB, NMPC); 13, same label data, but V. Kubáň leg. (NHMB); 13 1Ƥ, same label data, but 6.–25.v.1990, O. Šauša leg. (NHMB). The following specimens were identified with doubt: MYANMAR: 13, Hte Birmanie, Etat de Momeit [= Möng Mit, Shan state], 600 m, 1890, Doherty leg. (MNHN); 13, Dawna, 20.iv.1991 (SMNS); 533 6ƤƤ, same label data, but 1.iv.–2.v.1992 (EUMC, NMPC).</p><p>Doubtful localisation: 13 1Ƥ, Malaysia, Fraser’s Hill, 18.iv.1990, Y. Hori leg. (EUMC).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellow greyish, or whitish setae forming indistinct ocellations on pronotum, and characteristic ocellations on elytra (Fig. 4).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 19–25 mm; females: 24–28 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of irregularly distributed sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna robust, last antennomere nearly rectangular, 2.71–3.00 times as long as wide (Fig. 28), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.82–2.00 times as wide as long. Sides skewed and straight in anterior half, then with obtuse angle, and sides usually subparallel in basal half; hind angles very slightly prominent (Fig. 48). Pronotum with two oval shallow depressions on the disc, and indistinct depressions also medially along anterior and posterior margin. Punctation consists of rather irregularly distributed sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally almost regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, moderately broad, almost parallel sided, usually only slightly attenuating before subapical hook. Parameral subbasal hook small, but the subapical hook is well developed, slightly prominent. Median lobe slender, subparallel (Fig. 69).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Remarks. The specimens from Myanmar agree with typical specimens in habitus, but differ slightly in the shape of the parameres. However, because I have not been able to find constant differences, I leave them within  E. jendeki .</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. Widely distributed Oriental species, known from northern parts of Myanmar, Thailand, Laos and Vietnam, and southern China (Yunnan province).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D94E7D58FF7BA69FF55FC558	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D94C7D5FFF7BA2E4F710C0C6.text	03AC7D44D94C7D5FFF7BA2E4F710C0C6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas siamensis Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas siamensis Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 5, 29, 49, 69)</p><p>Eulichas dudgeoni: Jäch 1995: 373 (partim, Vietnam).</p><p>Type locality. Thailand, Nan Prov., Doi Phu Kha Nat. Park, ca. 19°13’N, 101°07’E.</p><p>Type material. 96 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “ THAI, N, Nan prov., Doi / Phu Kha N.P., Headq., / 19°13’N, 101°07’E, 22– / 26.iv.1999, M. Říha leg. [printed]”. Paratypes: 233 (nos. 1–2), same label data, but “D. Hauck leg.” (NMPC); 13 (no. 3), “ THAILAND / PROV. NAN, BO KHUA / 19. 4 – 7. 5. 2004 / MORAVEC PETR [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 4), “ THAILAND, Nan Prov. / Khun Nan NP / P. Viktora leg., 23.iv.2004 [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 5–6) 1Ƥ (no. 7), “N. Thailand, / Chiang Mai, / VIII. 1996, leg. Wong Tet Fatt [printed]” (HNHM); 13 (no. 8), “THAI-N, 1.–19.v.1998 / Chiang Mai prov., / BAN SAN PAKTIA, 1400 m, / Ivo Martinû leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 1033 (nos. 9–18), “ LAOS north, 5–11.V.1997 / 20 km NW Lounag Namtha, / N 21°09.2, E 101°18.7; / alt. 900± 100 m, / E. Jendek &amp; O. Šauša leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 1033 (nos. 19–28) 2ƤƤ (nos. 29–30), “ LAOS, Louangnamtha pr. / 21°09’N 101°19’E, / Namtha ⊣Muang Sing, / 5 – 31. V. 1997, 900- / Vít Kubáň leg. - 1200 m [printed]” (NHMW, NMPC); 13 (no. 31), “ LAOS, Louangnamtha pr., / 21°09’N 101°19’E, / Namtha ⊣Muang Sing, / 5–31.v.1997, 900– 1200m, / Vít Kubáň leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 32), “LaosPDR: Luang Namtha Prov. / Nam Ha NBCA: Lakkhammai Village / Nam Leung stream, 749mao / 47Q 0 74462, UTM 2339873 / 30 IV 2005, Light trap, loc 29 / N Jönsson, T Malm &amp; B Viklund leg. [printed]” (NHRS); 233 (nos. 33–34), “ LAOS: Louang Phrabang prov. / 20°33.4’N 102°14’E / 5km W Ban Song Cha / ca. 1200m, 24.4.– 16.5.1999 / leg. C. Holzschuh [printed]” (NHMW); 1133 (nos. 35–45), “LAOS-N, 24.iv.–16.v.1999, / Louang Phrabang prov., / 20°33-4’N 102°14’E, / Ban Song Cha (5km W), / ± 1200m, Vít Kubáň leg. // Vít Kubáň expedition / „ Laos 1999“ / Moravian Museum Brno / Czech Republic [printed]” (MZMB, NMPC); 4833 (nos. 46–93) 2ƤƤ (nos. 94–95), “LAOS-N (Oudomxai) / 1–9.V.2002, ~ 1100m, / 20°45’N 102°09’E, / OUDOM XAI (17km / NEE), Vít Kubáň leg. // Entomological expedition / „ Laos 2002“ / Moravian Museum / Brno, Czech Republic [printed]” (BMNH, MZMB, NMPC).</p><p>Additional material studied. 37 specimens — THAILAND: 13, no additional data (SMNS); 433 1Ƥ, Chantaburi prov., Kao Soi Dao, iv. 1984, S. Steinke leg. (MCSN, NMPC); 1933 4ƤƤ, Chiang Mai prov. Doi Pui, v.1985, S. Steinke leg. (MCSN, NMPC); 13, same label data, but 3.vi.1985 (SMNS); 13, Doi Ithanon, 20.v.1988, G. Minet leg. (NHMB). VIETNAM: 13, Hoang Lien Son prov., Sa Pa, 1550 m, 11.–19.vi.1990, J. Strnad leg. (NMPC); 233, Sa Pa (Lao Cai), 27°20’N 103°50’E, 25.v. –. 10.vi.1991, E. Jendek leg. (NHMW); 13, Fan Si Pan Mts., Sa Pa, 1600 m, 20.iv.1995 (BMNH); 13 1Ƥ, Mont Bavi, v.1935, S. Masseyeff leg. (BMNH).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown-blackish. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish setae forming indistinct ocellations on pronotum, and characteristic ocellations on elytra (Fig. 5).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 23–28 mm (holotype 24 mm); females: 29–35 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of irregularly distributed sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna slender, last antennomere nearly rectangular, with apical elongation of variable length, 3.07–3.79 times as long as wide (Fig. 29), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.87–2.02 times as wide as long. Sides skewed and straight in anterior half, then with obtuse angle, and prominent hind angles (Fig. 49). Pronotum with two oval shallow depressions on the disc, and indistinct depressions also medially along anterior and posterior margin. Punctation consists of moderately coarse setigerous punctures, sparse on the disc, and densely distributed laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally usually with more or less distinct sinuation before apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, moderately broad, their inner side attenuating sinuously to subapical hook. Parameral subbasal hook small, but the subapical hook is well developed, very slightly prominent. Median lobe slender, subparallel (Fig. 69).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Remarks. Some specimens from northern Thailand (Chiang Mai) display slight variability in aedeagal characters – they have parameres with ventral side almost straight, and median lobe slender than in typical specimens. Although I believe, that it is only intraspecific variability, I do not designate those specimens as paratypes. On the other hand, specimens from Sa Pa (Vietnam) were already introduced in Jäch (1995) as  E. dudgeoni . Although they agree well with  E. siamensis sp. nov. in habitus, shape of pronotum and last antennomere, they have parameres slightly slender than typical specimens, with their apical part more elongate, and subapical parameral hook more prominent – in these characters, they indeed resemble  E. dudgeoni . They may represent a separate taxon, however, as only four specimens are known, I leave them within  E. siamensis sp. nov., until more material is available.</p><p>Differential diagnosis.  Eulichas siamensis sp. nov. is similar to  E. jendeki and  E. similis sp. nov. in habitus. It differs from both of them in the longer last antennomere and more prominent hind angles of the pronotum. In addition, it differs from  E. jendeki in the sinuous ventral parameral side, and from  E. similis sp. nov. in the slender and subparallel median lobe of the aedeagus.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. A species ranging in the upland area of northern Thailand, Laos and Vietnam.</p><p>Etymology. The name is derived from “ Siam ”, an ancient kingdom spreading in the territory of recent Thailand.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D94C7D5FFF7BA2E4F710C0C6	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D94B7D5EFF7BA66FF7D1C31B.text	03AC7D44D94B7D5EFF7BA66FF7D1C31B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas similis Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas similis Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 6, 30, 50, 70)</p><p>Type locality. Thailand, Mae Hong Son Prov., Soppong.</p><p>Type material. 105 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “ Thailand bor. / Mae Hong Son prov. / Soppong / 1.– 9.5.2000 / P. Viktora lgt. [printed]”. Paratypes: 1Ƥ (no. 1), same label data as holotype (NMPC); 1533 (nos. 2–16) 9ƤƤ (nos. 17–25), “ THAI 13.5. 1993 / 19 29N 98 18E / SOPPONG 750 m / L. Bocák lgt. [printed]” (SMNS); 533 (nos. 26–30) 1Ƥ (no. 31), same label data, but “Vít Kubáň leg.” (NHMB, SMNS); 13 (no. 32), “ THAI, N, Mae Hong Son / prov., Soppong env., 600m / 19°27’N, 98°20’ E, 28.v. – / 2.vi. 1999,D.Hauck leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 33–34) 1Ƥ (no. 35), “ Thailand NW / Mae Hong Son prov. / Soppong vill. env. / 29.4. – 17.5. 2007 / P. Viktora lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 2ƤƤ (nos. 36–37), “ THAILAND bor. occ. / PAI / SOPPONG / 28. 5. – 5. 6. 1997 / Lgt. M. Snížek [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 38) 1Ƥ (no. 39), “NW Thailand 23.–31.V. / Mae Hong Son 1992 / Ban Si Lang 1200m / J. Horák leg. [printed]” (NHMW); 13 (no. 40) 1Ƥ (no. 41), “NW THAILAND, 1200 m, / Mae Hong Son pr., / BAN SI LANG, 20.–22. v. / Sv. Bílý leg., 1996 [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 42), “NW THAILAND, 30.4.- / Mae Hong Son, 4.5.1991 / Ban Huai Po, 1600–2000m / J. Horák leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 43–44), “Chaing Mai / Thailand / V. 1989 [printed]” (EUMC); 13 (no. 45), “Wiang Papao / Thailand / VII–1992 [printed]” (EUMC); 433 (nos. 46– 49), “THAI-N, 25.iv.–7.v.1996 / Chiang Mai prov., 19°19’N 98°50’E, / (Ban) SAN PAKTIA, / L.Hovorka leg.,~ 1400m [printed]” (NMPC); 933 (nos. 50–58) 9ƤƤ (nos. 59–67), “N. Thailand, / Chiang Mai, VIII. 1996, leg. / Wong Tet Fatt [printed]” (HNHM); 333 (nos. 68–70), “ Thailand NE / Nan prov. - Bo Klua / 1. – 11. 5. 2001 / P. Viktora lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 71–72), “ THAILAND 13.–26.V.2002 / NAN prov. / BAN BO KLUA env. / P. Prûdek &amp; M. Obořil leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 73–74) 3ƤƤ (nos. 75–77), “ THAILAND / PROV. NAN, BO KHUA / 19. 4. – 7. 5. 2004 / MORAVEC PETR [printed]” (BMNH, NMPC); 333 (nos. 78–80) 5ƤƤ (nos. 81–85), “ THAILAND, Nan prov. / Khun Nan NP / P. Viktora leg., 23.iv.2004 [printed]” (NMPC); 433 (nos. 86–89) 1Ƥ (no. 90), “ THAILAND NE / Nan province / Khun Nan National Park / 27.4.2004 / P. Viktora lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 91), “ THAILAND / CHIANG DAO / 27.5.– 2.6.2002 / leg. B. Makovský [printed]” (NMPC); 433 (nos. 92–95) 5ƤƤ (nos. 96–100), “LAOS-N, 24.iv.–16.v.1999, / Louang Phrabang prov., / 20°33-4’N 102°14’E, / Ban Song Cha (5 km W), / ± 1200m, Vít Kubáň leg. // Vít Kubáň expedition / „ Laos 1999“ / Moravian Museum Brno / Czech Republic [printed]” (MZMB, NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 101), “ LAOS: Louang Phrabang prov. / 20°33.4’N 102°14’E / 5km W Ban Song Cha / ca. 1200m, 24.4.– 16.5.1999 / leg. C. Holzschuh [printed]” (NHMW); 233 (nos. 102–103), “LAOS-N (Oudomxai) / 1–9.V.2002, ~ 1100m, / 20°45’N 102°09’E, / OUDOM XAI (17km / NEE), Vít Kubáň leg. // Entomological expedition / „ Laos 2002“ / Moravian Museum / Brno, Czech Republic [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 104), “ LAOS / PAK BENG / 9. – 13. 5. 2005 / B.MAKOVSKY lgt. [printed]” (NMPC).</p><p>Additional material studied. Doubtful localisation: 13 4ƤƤ, Malaysia, Pahang, Cameron Highlands, Tanah Rata, v.1996, Wong Tet Fatt (HMNH).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or greyish setae forming indistinct ocellations on pronotum, and characteristic ocellations on elytra (Fig. 6).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 21–26 mm (holotype 23 mm); females: 25–31 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of irregularly distributed sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna robust, last antennomere nearly rectangular, 2.17–2.44 times as long as wide (Fig. 30), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.87–2.00 times as wide as long. Sides skewed and straight in anterior half, then with obtuse angle, and prominent hind angles (Fig. 50). Pronotum with two oval shallow depressions on the disc, and indistinct depressions also medially along anterior and posterior margin. Punctation consists of rather irregularly distributed sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, relatively broad, their sides attenuating sinuously to subapical hook. Parameral subbasal hook small, but the subapical hook is well developed. Median lobe lanceolate (Fig. 70).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Differential diagnosis.  E. similis sp. nov. is almost identical with  E. jendeki in habitus. It differs from that species in the shorter last antennomere, sinuous inner side of paramere, and lanceolate median lobe of aedeagus. The short last antennomere and lanceolate median lobe distinguish  E. similis sp. nov. also from another similar species  E. siamensis sp. nov.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. A species occurring in the upland area of northern Thailand and Laos.</p><p>Etymology. The Latin word for “similar” refers to its similar appearance with other  Eulichas species, in particular with  E. jendeki .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D94B7D5EFF7BA66FF7D1C31B	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9497D5CFF7BA3BEF497C6DD.text	03AC7D44D9497D5CFF7BA3BEF497C6DD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas uniformis (Pic 1911) Pic 1911	<div><p>Eulichas uniformis (Pic, 1911)</p><p>(Figs. 7, 31, 51, 71)</p><p>Lichas uniformis Pic, 1911: 142 (original description, Bengale: Kurseong).</p><p>Eulichas uniformis (Pic, 1911): Pic 1914: 11 (catalogue); Jäch 1995: 363 (lectotype designation, catalogue); Jäch &amp; Hájek 2006: 455 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Bengale: Kurseong” [Kārsiyāng, West Bengal, India].</p><p>Type material. Lectotype 3 (MNHN), designated by Jäch (1995): “Kurseong / Nord-Bengal / H.Rolle,Berlin,S.W.11 [black frame, printed] // Muséum Paris / Coll. M. Pic [yellow label, printed] // n sp [handwritten] // type [handwritten] // type [handwritten] // TYPE [red label, printed] //  Lichas /  uniformis Pic [handwritten] // LECTOTYPUS /  Eulichas /  uniformis PIC / des. M. Jäch 1995 [red label, handwritten]”.</p><p>Additional material studied. 102 specimens — BHUTAN or INDIA: 833 1Ƥ, British Bootang, 1898, L. Durel (MNHN). INDIA: 1Ƥ, Assam (MNHN); 233 1Ƥ, Meghālaya, Khasia Hills [Khāsi Hills], vii. [18]94 (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Meghālaya, Jaintia Hills, Jowai, 25°27’N 92°12’E, 1350 m, 6.–8.vi.1996, E. Jendek &amp; O. Šauša leg. (NHMW); 233, Meghālaya, W Garo Hills, Nokrek N.P., 25°29.6’N 90°19.5’E, 1100 m, 9.– 17.v.1996, E. Jendek &amp; O. Šauša leg. (NHMW); 13, Sikkim, Rinchingpong [ca. 27°14’N 88°15’E], 1000 m, 22.iv.1987, Ch.J. Rai leg. (NHMB); 13, Sikkim, Buhuk Rain Forest, 1600 m, vi.2002, Malicky leg. (NMPC); 1Ƥ, Uttar Pradesh, Allahābād [ca. 25°27’N 81°50’E], Bowring (BMNH); 2ƤƤ, West Bengal, Kārsiyāng [ca. 26°53’N 88°16’E], 1904, ex coll. Baron Moffaerts (BMNH); 13, West Bengal, Darjeeling Distr., Bijanbari, 800 m, 12.v.1975, W. Wittmer leg. (NHMB); 13, West Bengal, Darjeeling Distr., -Jhepi, 17.v.1975, W. Wittmer leg. (NHMB). MYANMAR: 833 1Ƥ, 25 km E Putao, Nan Sa Bon vill. env., 800 m, 6.–9.v.1998, S. Murzin &amp; V. Siniaev leg. (NHMW, NMPC); 533, 50 km E Putao, Nan Thi env., 11.–16.v.1998, S. Murzin &amp; V. Siniaev leg. (NMPC); 333 1Ƥ, 65 km NW Putao, Zi Yar Dam, 1250 m, 18.–21.v.1998, S. Murzin &amp; V. Siniaev leg. (NMPC). NEPAL: 13, Indrawati Khola Saretar, 1700 m, 25./ 26.iv.1962, G. Ebert leg. (ZSMC); 233, Sun Khosi Tal [= valley], 2150 m, 2.v.1962, G. Ebert leg. (ZSMC); 433, Tampa Khosi Tal [= valley], 2600 m, 10.v.1962, G. Ebert leg. (ZSMC); 13 3ƤƤ, Liukhu Khola Tal [= valley], 1700 m, 4.vi.1962, G. Ebert leg. (NMPC, ZSMC); 13, Bagmati distr., 4 km S of Tarang Marang, 900 m, 28.iv.1981, I. Löbl &amp; A. Smetana leg. (MNHG); 1Ƥ, Kathmandu distr., Kakani [ca. 27°49’N 85°14‘E], at light, 23.v.–20.vi.1983, M.G. Allen leg. (BMNH); 233 1Ƥ, Janakpur distr., Jiri-Shivalaya (Khimti-Khola), 1800–2500 m, 11.–12.vi.1987, C. Holzschuh leg. (NHMW); 13, same label data, but Ch.J. Rai leg. (NHMB); 333 1Ƥ, Janakpur distr., Tamba- Koshi-Khola, SE Charikot, 900–1200 m, 16.–25.vi.1987, C. Holzschuh leg. (NHMW); 533, same label data, but Ch.J. Rai leg. (NHMB, NMPC); 13, Kathmandu distr., Bālāju, [ca. 27°44’N 85°18’E], 1400 m, 18.v.1989, M. Brancucci leg. (NHMB); 13, Bagmati distr., Trisuli Bazar-Samri, Bhanjyang, 540–1900 m, 8.vi.1993, Probst leg. (NHMW); 433 4ƤƤ, Dolakha Distr., Suridhoban, 1050 m, 27.–28.v.2000, W. Schawaller leg. (NMPC, SMNS); 333 10ƤƤ, Dolakha Distr., lower Khare Khola, 1400 m, 29.v.2000, W. Schawaller leg. (NMPC, SMNS); 333 4ƤƤ, same label data, but 1200 m, 3.–4.vi.2000, (NMPC, SMNS); 13 2ƤƤ, Dolakha Distr., Bazar bridge bellow Amatal, 1660 m, 8.vi.2000, W. Schawaller leg. (NMPC, SMNS); 1Ƥ, Dolakha distr., lower Amata Khola, 1700 m, 9.vi.2000, W. Schawaller leg. (SMNS).</p><p>Doubtful localisation: 13, Inde Anglaise [India], Trichinopoly [Tiruchchirāppalli, Tamil Nadu], P. Newton leg. (NMPC).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown-blackish. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellow or greyish setae covering uniformly body surface, or forming indistinct ocellations on elytra (Fig. 7).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 16–19 mm; females: 19–25 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of irregularly distributed sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna relatively slender, last antennomere nearly rectangular, 2.67–3.25 times as long as wide (Fig. 31), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.84–1.97 times as wide as long. Sides almost straight, with more or less distinct obtuse angle behind the middle (Fig. 51). Pronotum with two oval shallow depressions on the disc, and in some specimens with indistinct depressions also medially along anterior and posterior margin. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally almost regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, relatively slender, slightly attenuating before subapical hook. Parameral subbasal hook small, but the subapical hook is well developed. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate (Fig. 71).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. The species is known from upland area of Nepal, northern India (Uttar Pradesh, Sikkim, West Bengal, Meghālaya, Assam) and northern Myanmar (Kachin). The occurrence in Bhutan needs to be verified by precisely localised specimens.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9497D5CFF7BA3BEF497C6DD	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9487D5CFF7BA017F38BC7C8.text	03AC7D44D9487D5CFF7BA017F38BC7C8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas sikkimensis	<div><p>Eulichas sikkimensis species complex</p><p>The species complex contains ten species distributed from Nepal and northern India, through continental south-eastern Asia, to Greater Sunda Islands and the Philippines. The highest diversity is reached in the Malay Peninsula. Species included in the complex are characterised by the reduction of the parameral subbasal hook.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9487D5CFF7BA017F38BC7C8	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9487D52FF7BA718F6E4C138.text	03AC7D44D9487D52FF7BA718F6E4C138.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas baeri (Fairmaire 1898) Fairmaire 1898	<div><p>Eulichas baeri (Fairmaire, 1898)</p><p>(Figs. 8–9, 32, 52, 72)</p><p>Lichas baeri Fairmaire, 1898: 388 (original description, Luzon).</p><p>Eulichas baeri (Fairmaire, 1898): Pic 1914: 11 (catalogue); Jäch 1995: 363 (catalogue).  Eulichas baeri var. innotatus Pic, 1924: 31 (original description, Luzon); Jäch 1995: 363 (catalogue). syn. nov.</p><p>Type locality. “Luzon” [Philippines] ( E. baeri), “Luzon” [Philippines] ( E. baeri innotatus).</p><p>Type material.  Lichas baeri: not studied, no syntype was found in Fairmaire’s collection (MNHN).  Eulichas baeri var. innotatus: Lectotype 3 (MNHN), by present designation: “Mt. Makiling / Luzon, Baker [printed] // 21160 [handwritten] // L.  Baeri / Frm. var. [handwritten] // Muséum Paris / Coll. M. Pic [printed] / / TYPE [red label, printed] // v. innotatus / mihi [handwritten] // LECTOTYPUS /  EULICHAS /  baeri /  var. innotatus Pic, 1924 / Jiří Hájek des. 2002 [red label, printed] //  EULICHAS (s. str.) /  baeri (Fairmaire, 1898) / Jiří Hájek det. 2002 [printed]”. Number of syntypes unknown. I designate a lectotype to fix the identity of this species, as available taxonomic works do not allow an unambiguous identification of specimens.</p><p>Additional material studied. 155 specimens — BRUNEI: 13, Bukit Teraja, Labi [ca. 04°24’N 114°27’E], Dipterocarp. forest, light trap, 60 m, 2.viii.1979, S.L. Sutton leg. (BMNH); 233 1Ƥ, Temburong, Kuala Belalong F.S.C., mixed Dipterocarp forest, 60–300 m, 16.–20.iv.1993, E. Heiss leg. (NHMW). INDONESIA: 1Ƥ, Kalimantan Timur, Boven, Mahakkam, 1894, Dr. Nieuwenhuis exped. (RMNH); 13, Kalimantan Tengah, Busang / Rekut confluence, 0°03’S 113°59’E, light trap, M.J.D. Brendell &amp; H. Mendel leg. (BMNH); 13, Kalimantan Timur, Sanga Sanga, H.D. Jensen leg. (BMNH). MALAYSIA: SABAH: 433 7ƤƤ, Kinabalu (HNHM, IRSNB, MNHN, SMTD); 13 1Ƥ, Mount Kinabalu (NHMB); 233 4ƤƤ, same label data, but v.–viii.1903, J. Waterstradt (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Kinabalu NP, Head Q., 06°00’N, 116°32’E, 1600 m, nearly undisturbed montane evergreen rain forest, 15.v.1987, J. Huisman leg. (RMNH); 2ƤƤ, Kinabalu Nat. Park, Sayap, 1000 m, 25.–29.xi.1996, W. Schawaller leg. (NMPC, SMNS); 3ƤƤ, same label data, but 6°10’N 116°34’E, primary forest edge, 950 m, at light, 8.iii.2001, J.P. Duffels &amp; M.A. Schouten leg. (ZMAN); 1Ƥ, Crocker Range, 16 miles NW of Keningau, 4.iv.1982, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 433 8ƤƤ, Crocker Range Mts., 50 km E Kota Kinabalu, Gunung Emas, 16.–27.iv.1993, I. Jeniš leg. (NHMW); 13 same label data, but 500–1900 m, 5.–21.v.1995, J. Stolarczyk leg. (NMPC); 13 2ƤƤ, Banjaran Crocker Mts., 16 km SW Gunung Alab, 790–850 m, 4.–9.v.1996, M. Štrba &amp; R. Hergovits leg. (NHMW); 1Ƥ, 105 km S Beaufort, Long Pa Sia area, airstrip Long Pasia, 04°24’N, 115°43’E, 1000 m, at light, 15.iv.1987, v. Tol &amp; Huisman leg. (RMNH); 13, 65 km W Lahad Datu, Sg. Purut camp, 04°57’N, 117°45’E, 250 m, at light, 26.x.1987, J. Huisman &amp; R. de Jong leg. (RMNH); 13, 15 km W of Lahad Datu, Danum valley, light trap, 7.xii.1989, M.J. &amp; J.P. Duffels leg. (ZMAN); 13, 70 km W Lahad Datu, Danum valley, Next to bridge Nature Trail, 150 m, rainforest along narrow stream, at light, M.J. &amp; J.P. Duffels leg. (NMPC); 1Ƥ, same label data, but 13.xii.1989 (ZMAN); Poling, near Ranau, 29.iv.1980, M. &amp; A. Sakai leg. (EUMC); 13, Ranau Distr., Poring Hot Spring, Poring Lodge, 06°02’35’’N, 116°42’19’’E, ca. 650 m, 14.–16.v.2002, T. Kothe leg. (ZSMC); 1Ƥ, West Coast zone, 12 km NNE Ranau, Poring Hot Springs, 06°04’N, 116°42’E, 550 m, at light, 9.–10.xi.1987, J. Huisman &amp; R. de Jong leg. (RMNH); 2 33, Poring Hot Spring, 450–600 m, 9.–11.iii.2007, W. Schawaller leg. (SMNS); 13, 80 km E of Ranau, Telpid, 800 m, xii.1978, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 13 1Ƥ, Tawau [ca. 04°15’N 117°52’E], 20.iii.2006 (NMPC). SARAWAK: 2ƤƤ, 4th Division, Gunung Mulu National Park, at light, iii. 1978, J.D. Holloway et al. leg. (BMNH); 333 1Ƥ, same label data, but 150–200 m, v.–viii.1978, P.M. Hammond &amp; J.E. Marshall leg. (BMNH); 13, Rumah Kabau anak muggot, Ng Sebong Baleh, 25 km E Kapit, iii.1994, J. Kodada leg. (NHMW); 13, Kapit distr., Rumah Ugap vill., Sut. riv., 3.–9.iii.1994, S. Bílý leg. (NMPC); 13, Kapit distr., Sebong, Baleh river, 9.–21.iii.1994, J. Horák leg. (NHMW). PHILIPPINES: LEYTE: 13 (NMPC); 2ƤƤ, 22.viii.2003, J.L. Boundant leg. (MCSN); 13, Cabalian [= San Juan, ca. 10°16’N 125°09’E], coll. W. Schultze (SMTD); 13, Mt. Balocaue, 700 m, local collector leg. (NMPC). LUZON: 13, Mt. Isarog (SMTD); 1Ƥ, Pangasinan [most probably = Pangasanan, ca. 14°58’N 120°42’E], coll. Benesh (SMTS); 2ƤƤ, Sorsogon [ca. 12°58’N 124°00’E] (NHMB); 1Ƥ, Upper Bintacan, Isabela, 30.iv.1983, S. Osada leg. (EUMC); 13, Nueva Viscaya, Sta Fe, datton Pass, 900 m, at light, 3.–8.vi.1985, R.A. Müller leg. (RMNH); 233 1Ƥ, Nueva Vizcaya, vi.2003, I.A. Lumawig leg. (MCSN, NMPC). MINDANAO: 1Ƥ, coll. W. Schultze (SMTD); 13, Davao [ca. 07°04’N 125°36’E], Dr. Platen (MNHN); 13, Davao, iii.1968 (EUMC); 1Ƥ, Davao, 5.xi.1991 (MCSN); 1Ƥ, Davao prov., Baracatan, Mt. Talomo, 1100 m, 3.–6.viii.1985, M. Owada leg. (EUMC); 1Ƥ, Upper Barakatan, Apo Range, 1100 m, 17.viii.1985, M. Tomokuni leg. (EUMC); 1Ƥ, Baracatan, Eagle Centre, N slopes of Mt. Apo, 1100 m, 5.viii.1985, M. Sakai leg. (EUMC); 1Ƥ, Agko, Mt. Apo [ca. 07°01’N 125°16’E], 1000 m, 7.x.1978, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 2ƤƤ, same label data, but 9.iii.1979 (EUMC); 13, Mt. Apo, 8.–10.i.1981, Natives leg. (EUMC); 233, Mt. Apo, iv.2005, I.A. Lumawig leg. (MCSN); 13, Lindaban [ca. 8°17’N 124°48’E], Bukindon, W. Schultze leg. (SMTD); 13, Manila, coll. Schwarz (DEIC); 1Ƥ, Surigao prov., W. Boettiker leg. (SMTD); 13, Surigao [ca. 9°47’N 125°28’E], Baker leg. (SMTD); 13, Surigao, W. Schultze leg. (SMTD); 233 2ƤƤ, Surigao, 15.v.1915 (NMPC, ZMHB); 1Ƥ, Tudaya-Sibulan, 30.vii.1970, T. Okadome leg. (EUMC); 1Ƥ, Gasy, Maitum, S Cotabato, 700 m, 12.viii.1985, M. Sakai leg. (EUMC); 2ƤƤ, South Cotabato, Parker Mts., Salacale, 600–900 m, at light, 2.–12.iv.1985, R.A.Müller leg. (RMNH); 13, South Cotabato, Koronadal Barrio 8, 100– 300 m, 12.–14.vii.1986, R.A. Müller leg. (RMNH); 13 1Ƥ, Bagong Silang, 30 km NW Maramag, 1700 m, 13.–17.v.1996, BOLM leg. (NMPC, SMTD); 733 3ƤƤ, Davao Oriental, Boston, Agtuuganon Mt., Camp 55, 1020 m, 29.-v.-7.vi.1997, Müller, Buenafe &amp; Gorost. leg. (NMPC, RMNH); 13, Surigao del Sur Lianga, 8 km W Diatagon, 08°42’N 126°05’E, 200 m, 3.–7.vii.2005, J.H. Lourens leg. (BMNH); 13 2ƤƤ, Agusan Sur, 10 km SE Trento Sta Maria, 08°01.615’N, 126°12.322’E, 185 m, 27.–28.iv.2008, J.H. Lourens leg. (IRSNB); 13, Davao Oriental, Aliwagwag Primary forest, 07°43.667’N, 126°17.304’E, 90 m, 30.iv.–1.v.2008, J.H. Lourens leg. (IRSNB). MINDORO: 333, Abra de Ilog [ca. 13°27’N 120°43’E], W. Schultze leg. (NMPC, SMTD). NEGROS: 13, vi.1991 (MCSN); 13, v.1996 (NMPC). PALAWAN: 233 1Ƥ, Cleopatra Needle Nat. Park, Tanabag river valley, 300 m, 20.–22.xii.1990, BOLM leg. (NHMB, NMPC). SAMAR: 13, Baker leg. (MNHN); SIBUYAN: 13 1Ƥ, Romblon, vii.1985 (EUMC); 1233 2ƤƤ, Romblon prov., Magdiwang, Pawala river, Tampayan Camp, Ga-ong area, 70–400 m, at light, 19.iii.–7.iv.1987, R.A. Müller leg. (NMPC, RMNH).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or greyish setae covering uniformely body surface, or forming more or less distinct ocellations on elytra (Figs. 8–9).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 13–24 mm; females: 20–26 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna slender, last antennomere rather oval, 2.57–3.58 times as long as wide (Fig. 32), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.71–1.93 times as wide as long. Sides of rather variable shape. In some specimens skewed and straight in anterior half, with indistinct angle near the middle, and hind angles distinctly prominent (Fig. 52). On the other hand almost regularly rounded in some specimens. The disc with two indistinct rounded depressions. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally almost regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, relatively broad, subparallel. Parameral subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is developed. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate (Fig. 72).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Remarks. So far the only  Eulichas species known from the Philippines, thus I was able to identify it, although no syntype was found/recognised in Fairmaire’s collection (MNHN). A variable species. The variety innotatus represents only indistinctly ocellated specimens. It is without any doubt conspecific with typically coloured specimens, and is therefore junior subjective synonym of  E. baeri . However, populations from different Philippine islands, as well as from Borneo, differ in body size, shape of last antennomere and pronotum. In particular, specimens from Borneo have usually more rounded sides of pronotum and more distinct ocellations on elytra, and may represent a separate subspecies. However, as the same characters can also be observed in some specimens from different Philippine Islands, I refrain from its formal description.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. Known from the Greater Sunda Island of Borneo – Brunei, Indonesia (Kalimantan), Malaysia (Sabah, Sarawak), and the Philippines (Leyte, Luzon, Mindanao, Mindoro, Negros, Palawan, Samar).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9487D52FF7BA718F6E4C138	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9467D51FF7BA644F28FC670.text	03AC7D44D9467D51FF7BA644F28FC670.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas gigantea (Fairmaire 1891) Fairmaire 1891	<div><p>Eulichas gigantea (Fairmaire, 1891)</p><p>(Fig. 10)</p><p>Lichas giganteus Fairmaire, 1891: CXXVIII (orig. description, Kaschmir).  Eulichas gigantea (Fairmaire, 1891): Pic 1914: 11 (catalogue); Jäch 1995: 363 (catalogue); Jäch &amp; Hájek 2006: 455 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Kashmir” [Kulu, Himāchal Pradesh, India].</p><p>Type material. Holotype Ƥ (MNHN): “Kulu [printed] //  Lichas /  giganteus / Fairm. K. [handwitten, Fairmaire] // ex Musaeo / W. Rotschild / 1899 [white label with black frame, printed] // TYPE [red label with black frame, printed] // MUSÉUM PARIS / 1952 / COLL. R. OBERTHUR [yellow label, printed] // Holotypus /  LICHAS /  giganteus Fairmaire, 1891 / Jiří Hájek det. 2005 [red label, printed] //  EULICHAS /  gigantea (Fairmaire, 1891) / Jiří Hájek det. 2005 [printed]”.</p><p>Description of holotype female. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring brownish-red. Setation consists of recumbent sparse yellowish setae forming very indistinct ocellations on pronotum and elytra (Fig. 10). [The type specimens is worn dorsally, originally the body pubescence was probably more distinct.]</p><p>Measurements. Female: 31 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna short, last antennomere elongated, ca. 2.8 times as long as wide.</p><p>Pronotum transverse, twice as wide as long. Lateral sides regularly rounded. The disc convex. Punctation consists of moderately large setigerous punctures on the disc, which become coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of large setigerous punctures, and interstitial very fine punctures.</p><p>Ventral part uniformly densely punctured with fine punctures. Last abdominal ventrite laterally almost regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Unknown.</p><p>Remarks. Without a male available for study, the classification of  E. gigantea in  E. sikkimensis species complex is problematic. The only reason for its preliminary classification here is the similarity in habitus with  E. robusta sp. nov.</p><p>Distribution. So far known only from the type locality in Himāchal Pradesh, India.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9467D51FF7BA644F28FC670	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9457D50FF7BA19CF2D0C683.text	03AC7D44D9457D50FF7BA19CF2D0C683.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas incisicollis Pic 1933	<div><p>Eulichas incisicollis Pic, 1933</p><p>(Figs. 11–12, 33, 53, 73)</p><p>Eulichas incisicollis Pic, 1933: 22 (original description, Archipel Malais); Jäch 1995: 363 (catalogue); Ivie &amp; Jäch 2002: 166 (correction of the type locality).</p><p>Type locality. “Archipel Malais: Isle” [“Camerons Island”, = Cameron Highlands, Malaysia].</p><p>Type material. Lectotype Ƥ (BMNH), by present designation: “ Type [printed, round label with red frame] // Pres. by / Imp.Inst.Ent. / Brit. Mus. / 1932-412 [printed] // G. 837 [handwritten vertically along the left side of the label] / Malaya [printed] / Camerons / Island. / 2.4.1930 [handwritten] / Entom. Div. / Agric. Dept. [printed] //  Eulichas /  incisicollis / n sp / (desiré) [Pic’s handwriten] // LECTOTYPE /  EULICHAS (s. str.) /  incisicollis Pic, 1933 / Jiří Hájek det. 2009 [printed, red label]”. Number of syntypes unknown. I designate a lectotype to fix the identity of this species. There are several other species of  Eulichas occurring in Cameron Highlands, and available taxonomic works do not allow an unambiguous identification of specimens.</p><p>Additional material studied. 16 specimens — MALAYSIA: 13, Pahang, Cameron Highlands, 4800– 5500 ft., 8.vi.1935, H.M. Pendlebury leg. (MNHN); 1Ƥ, Pahang, Cameron Highlands, Tanah Rata, 4800 ft., 12.ii.1926 (BMNH); 1Ƥ, same label data, but 20.vii.1938, H.M. Pendlebury leg. (BMNH); 1Ƥ, same label data, but 25.ii.1970, S. Suzuki leg. (NMPC); 1Ƥ, same label data, but 4.iii.1970, S. Suzuki leg. (EUMC); 13, same label data, but 1.-6-iv.1990, A. Riedel leg. (SMNS); 13, same label data, but 1600 m, 11.–27.ii.2000, J. Horák leg. (NMPC); 13, same label data, but 1400 m, v.2000, L. Černý leg. (NMPC); 1Ƥ, same label data, but 1500–1700 m, 1.–13.ii.2003, M. Obořil leg. (NHMW); 1Ƥ, same label data, but P. Pacholátko leg. (NMPC); 13, same label data, but i.2006, P. Viktora leg. (NMPC); 13, Cameron Highlands, i.1985, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 13, Pahang, Cameron Highlands, 2 km S Tanah Rata, on Tapah Road, montane rainforest, at light, 29.iii.1993, O. Merkl &amp; I. Szikossy leg. (HNHM); 1Ƥ, Pahang, Kampung Kuala Boh, 4°27.9’N 101°34.8’E, 850–1050 m, 26.iii.–3.iv.2001, M. Štrba &amp; R. Hergovits leg. (NMPC); 13 1Ƥ, [Perak], Taiping [ca. 04°51’N 100°43’E], 6.v.1981, ex coll. S. Riese (MCSN).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellow or whitish setae forming indistinct ocellations on pronotum, and very characteristic ocellations on elytra (Fig. 11–12).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 21–28 mm; females: 33–37 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna slender, short compared to other species – reaching only the middle of body length. Last antennomere narrowly oval, 2.70–3.15 times as long as wide (Fig. 33), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.95–2.11 times as wide as long. Sides skewed and straight in anterior two thirds, then with obtuse angle, distinct incision subbasally, and prominent hind angles (Fig. 53). Pronotum with two rounded shallow depressions on the disc, and indistinct depressions medially also along anterior and posterior margin. Punctation consists of sparse regularly distributed setigerous punctures.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, slender, their inner side attenuating regularly to subapical hook. Parameral subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is developed. Median lobe slender, rather subparallel (Fig. 73).</p><p>Female. Distinctly larger than male. Antenna shorter, and more slender. Lateral incision of pronotum more distinct.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. So far known only from the Cameron Highlands on the Malay Peninsula.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9457D50FF7BA19CF2D0C683	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9447D57FF7BA1D7F44DC499.text	03AC7D44D9447D57FF7BA1D7F44DC499.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas oborili Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas oborili Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 13, 34, 54, 74)</p><p>Type locality. Thailand, Nan prov., Ban Bo Klua env.</p><p>Type material. 3 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “ THAILAND 13.–26.V.2002 / NAN Prov. / BAN BO KLUA env. / P. Prûdek &amp; M. Obořil leg. [printed]”. Paratypes: 2ƤƤ (nos. 1–2), same data as holotype (NMPC).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brown to brown-blackish. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish grey setae forming characteristic ocellations on pronotum, elytra and abdominal sternites (Fig. 13).</p><p>Measurements. Male: 23 mm; females: 27–28 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere nearly rectangular with apical elongation, ca. 3.65 times as long as wide (Fig. 34), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.81–1.90 times as wide as long. Sides almost regularly rounded (Fig. 54). The disc with two oval shallow depressions. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, slender, parallel sided, with relatively short apical part. Their subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is well developed and prominent. Median lobe lanceolate, slightly exceeding parameres (Fig. 74).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Differential diagnosis. In habitus,  E. oborili sp. nov. is similar to  E. siamensis sp. nov. and  E. similis sp. nov. of the  E. uniformis complex, but it is more elongate and subparallel. It could be easily recognised by the shape of aedeagus.  E. oborili sp. nov. has slender, parallel sided parameres without subbasal hook, and distinctly lanceolate median lobe exceeding the apex of parameres.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected under the bark of tree with fermenting sap, near a stream (M. Obořil pers. comm., 2005).</p><p>Distribution. So far known only from the type locality in northern Thailand.</p><p>Etymology. The new species is dedicated to one of its collectors, my friend Martin Obořil (Brno, Czech Republic), a specialist on  Buprestidae .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9447D57FF7BA1D7F44DC499	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9437D55FF7BA225F2DBC6A9.text	03AC7D44D9437D55FF7BA225F2DBC6A9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas robusta Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas robusta Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 14, 35, 55, 75)</p><p>Type locality. Malaysia, Pahang, Bukit Fraser, ca. 03°43’N 101°44’E, 1500 m.</p><p>Type material. 130 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “ Malaysia 1500m / Bukit Fraser / 22.– 28. 11. 1998 / R. Kocina lgt. [printed]”. Paratypes: 233 (nos. 1–2) 1Ƥ (no. 3), same label data as holotype (NMPC); 13 (no. 4) 2ƤƤ (nos. 5–6), “ MALAYSIA 24.11.[19]98 / Bukit fraser hill / H. Habal lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 7), “ MALAYSIA / BUKIT FRASER / 1. – 5. 5. 2003 / B. Makovský lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 533 (nos. 8–12), “ MALAYSIA / BUKIT FRASER / 25. – 31.3 2004 / M. Machytka lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 633 (nos. 13–18) 1Ƥ (no. 19), same label data, but “B. Makovský lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 20), “ MALAYSIA / BUKIT FRASER / 8. – 14. 4. 2008 / B. Makovský lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 21), “W. Malaysia: 1140 m / Fraser’s Hill, / Jeriau Road / 5–12.viii.1986 [printed] // G.S.Robinson / BM 1986–299 [printed]” (BMNH); 1Ƥ (no. 22), “W. Malaysia: Pahang / Fraser’s Hill,ca 1300m /17–21.3.[19]93, light trap / Löbl&amp;Calame, #14 [printed]” (MNHG); 13 (no. 23), “ WEST MALAYSIA, PAHANG / 7.–10. 1. 1995 / FRASER’S HILL, 1500 m / 110 km N KUALA LUMPUR / lgt.S.BECVAR j. &amp; s [printed]” (BMNH); 633 (nos. 24–29), “ Malaysia: 10.V. / Fraser’s Hill / S.Snäll lgt. 1996 [printed]” (SSCT); 533 (nos. 30–34), “ Malaysia Pahang Fraser’s / Hill 1200m 23–25.3 1992 light / B Gustafsson, H et H Hippa / G Sellerholm [printed]” (NHRS); 1Ƥ (no. 35), “ MALAYSIA - Pahang / Banjaran Benom / Lata Jarom / 6.– 8.3.1997 / Ivo Jeniš leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 36), same label data, but “Oliver Dulík leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 37–38) 2ƤƤ (nos. 39–40), “ MALAYSIA iii.1999 / Pahang &amp; Kelantan prov. / Cameron Highlands. / lgt. local collector [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 41), “Weiden / Opf. [printed] / Cameron / Highlands [handwritten] / [on side:] STRÖHLE [printed]” (VKCZ); 13 (no. 42), “ Malaysia / Pahang / Cameron Hids / 1000–1600ft / III– VII/1978 / C.M.Brandstetter [printed]” (SMNS); 13 (no. 43), “ MALAYSIA / Tanah Rata / V. 1987. / leg. B. Molnár [handwritten]” (HNHM); 13 (no. 44), “ MALAYSIA - Perak / Cameron Highlands / Tanah Rata / 13. – 16.3.1997 / Ivo Jeniš leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 45–46) 1Ƥ (no. 47), “ MALAYSIA W / CAMERON highl. / TANAH RATA env. / 23.– 26.3.2000 / Lgt. M. SNÍŽEK [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 48) 1 Ƥ (no. 49), “ MALAYSIA West, PAHANG / Cameron Highlands / TANAH RATA, 1200–1500m / 3.ii.– 19.ii. 2005 / Cechovsky Petr lgt [printed]” (VKCZ); 13 (no. 50), “ MALAYSIA / TANAH RATA / 2. – 8. 4. 2008 / B.MAKOVSKÝ Lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 51), “ 28 VII 1991 U.V 750. / Rte TAPAH – TANAH RATA / PK 40 CAMERON HIGHLANDS / MALAYA Leg. J.HAXAIRE [printed]” (NHMW); 13 (no. 52), “W Malaysia - Perak / road Tapah - Ringlet / 10km S of Ringlet mt. 900 / 14–19.IV.1999 / leg. A. Ballerio [printed]” (NMPC); 333 (nos. 53–55), “ MALAYSIA W / CAMERON Highlands / RINGLET env. / 15.4.2000 / LGT. M. SNÍŽEK [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 56), “ MALAYSIA - PERAK Distr. 20.– 23.XI.2000 / Cameron Highlands / RINGLET env. / F. &amp; L. Kantnerovi leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 533 (nos. 57–61) 1Ƥ (no. 62), “ MALAYSIA W., PERAK / 40km SE of IPOH, 900 m / Banjaran Tai Wangsa / RINGLET, 29.iii.–15.iv. / 2004 Čechovsky Petr lgt. [printed]” (NMPC, VKCZ); 13 (no. 63) 1Ƥ (no. 64), “ MALAYSIA –W; PERAK, ~ 900m; / 40 km SE IPOH; 4°25’N 101°23’E / Cameron Highlands; RINGLET; / M. Říha leg. 25.iv.–5.v.2001 [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 65), “ MALAYSIA, Pahang distr. / Cameron Highlands, 2001 / KAMPUNG KUALA BOH vill. env. / 4°27’N, 101°34’E, 850–1050m / R. Hergovits leg. 26. III.–3. IV. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 66), “ MALAYSIA, Pahang distr. / Cameron Highlands, / KAMPUNG KUALA BOH vill. env., / N 4°27,9’, E 101°34,8’, 850–1050m, / 26. III.–3. IV. 2001 / K. Bucsek leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 333 (nos. 67–69), “ MALAYSIA / Cameron / Highlands [printed]” (ZSMC); 13 (no. 70), “W. Malaysia / Cameron / Highlands / 2000 ft. above / sea level. 18.2.[19]73 / C.C.Chua [handwritten] // Brit. Mus. / 1975-573 [handwritten]” (BMNH); 13 (no. 71), same label data, but “5.3.[19]75” (BMNH); 433 (nos. 72–75), “W – MALAYSIA / Cameron IV. / Highland 1987 [printed]” (NHMW); 633 (nos. 76–81) 2ƤƤ (nos. 82–83), “ Cameron Highlands / MALAYSIA / late April 1987 [printed]” (EUMC); 13 (no. 84), “Perak [handwritten] / Fry Coll. / 1905-100. [printed]” (BMNH); 13 (no. 85), “64723 [handwritten] / Perak [printed] / Fry Coll. / 1905-100. [printed]” (BMNH); 13 (no. 86), “ MALAYA [printed] / Perak / Gunong Kledang / 2500’ / 12 Feb 1959 [handwritten] / H. T. Pagden [printed] // C.I.E. COLL. / NO. [printed] 16488 [handwritten] //  Eulichas sp. /?  subocellata / Fairm. [handwritten] / R.D.Pope det. 1959 [printed] // Pres by / Com inst Ent / B M 1959-499 [printed]” (BMNH); 13 (no. 87), W MALAYSIA, Perak distr., / 48 km NNE of IPOH, 2001 / FELDA LASAH vill. env., / 5°02’N, 101°12’E, 120–390 m / R. Hergovits leg. 13–21.III. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 88), “W MALAYSIA, Perak distr., / FELDA LASAH vill. env., 48 km NNE of IPOH / N 5° 02,3’, E 101° 12,3’, 120–390 m, / 13.–21.III.2001 / P. Šomody leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 89), “ MALAYSIA - Perak / Banjaran Bintang / Maxwell Hill (Taiping) / 18. – 19.2.1997 / Ivo Jeniš leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 90), same label data, but “lgt. Oliver Ďulík [printed]” (VKCZ); 13 (no. 91), “MALAYSIA-Perak / Bukit Larut / 23.– 25.2.2000 / K. Deneš jun. lgt. [printed]” (VKCZ); 333 (nos. 92–94), “ WEST MALAYSIA, Perak / BUKIT LARUT (Maxwell Hill) / Taiping–Bintang Mts., (WGS84) / 04° 51’ 37’’N, 100° 47’ 56’’E / 9./ 13.7.2001, alt. 1100–1400m / lgt. R.Fouqué &amp; H.Barlová [printed]” (NMPC); 233 (nos. 95–96), “ Malaysia, Perak / Taiping, Bukit Larut 1036 m / 16.–17. 2. 1998 / V. Tichý lgt. [printed]” (NKME); 13 (no. 97), “Taiping / Malaysia / 3.1975 [handwritten] //  Eulichas /  funebris / Westwood. / det. Stig Lundberg [handwritten]” (NHRS); 13 (no. 98), “ Malaysia / Taiping / May 1987 [handwritten]” (MCSN); 2ƤƤ (nos. 99–100), “ MALAYSIA / Taiping / X.1979 [handwritten]” (MSCN); 1Ƥ (no. 101), “Taiping- Malaysia / VI-1982 [handwritten]” (MSCN); 6ƤƤ (nos. 102–107), “ MALAYSIA / Taiping / V.1987 [handwritten]” (MSCN, NMPC); 13 (no. 108), “ MALAYSIA - Kelantan / Banjaran Titi Wangsa / Kampong Lawa env. / 24. – 26.2.1997 / Ďulík &amp; Jeniš leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 633 (nos. 109–114) 1Ƥ (no. 115), “ MALAYSIA 10.–16.iv.1999 / Kelantan prov. / Kampong Raja env. / lgt. Mir. Janalík [printed]” (NMPC, VKCZ); 13 (no. 116), same label data, but “lgt. Vít Kabourek [printed]” (VKCZ); 433 (nos. 117–120), “ MALAY PENIN: [printed] / Selangor F.M.S. / Bukit Kutu 3457’ / April 1915 [handwritten] // Ex F.M.S. / Museum. / B.M. 1955-354. [printed]” (BMNH); 13 (no. 121), “ MALAY PENIN: / Selangor. / Bukit Kutu [printed] / at light 3500 ft. / April 17th 1926 [handwritten] / H.M.Pendlebury. [printed] / [on reverse:] Ex. Coll: / F.M.S. Museum. [printed] // Ex F.M.S. / Museum. / B.M. 1955-354. [printed]” (BMNH); 233 (nos. 122– 123), same label data, but “ April 20th ” (BMNH); 13 (no. 124), “ Malaysia [handwritten]” (MSCN); 13 (no. 125), “Pi Tam [Nakhon Si Thammarat prov., ca. 08°44’N 99°39’E] / S. Thailand / 8.VIII.1987 / M. Satô leg. [printed]” (EUMC); 13 (no. 126) 3ƤƤ (nos. 127–129), “Saraburi [handwritten] / Thailand / leg. Sab. Steinke [printed] / [on side:] 1989 / XI. [handwritten]” (NMPC, SMNS).</p><p>Additional material studied (doubtful localisation). 13, Philippines, Luzon, Sta Lucia Dolores Quezon, 500 m, at light, 25.vii.1991, J. Haxaire leg. (NHMW).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or yellow greyish setae forming indistinct ocellations on pronotum, and characteristic ocellations on elytra (Fig. 14).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 26–33 mm (holotype 32 mm); females: 32–37 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere rectangular, with apical elongation, 3.19–3.63 times as long as wide (Fig. 35), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 2.01–2.04 times as wide as long. Sides almost regularly rounded (Fig. 55). The disc with two indistinct rounded depressions. Punctation consists of sparse fine setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally with distinct sinuation before apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, broad, slightly attenuating to subapical hook. Their subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is well developed and prominent. Median lobe lanceolate (Fig. 75).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Differential diagnosis.  Eulichas robusta sp. nov. can be easily recognised from other Malayan species based on its large body size, regularly rounded sides of pronotum, and predominantly by the characteristic shape of aedeagus: Broad parameres with robust apical part, and distinctly lanceolate median lobe. However, the new species is very similar to  E. gigantea known only from the female holotype. The only usable chatacter to distinguish between these species is the shape of pronotum, which is more rounded laterally in  E. gigantea . Nevertheless, both species occur nearly 4.000 km from each other, and I do not expect them to be conspecific.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. Known from number of localities in Malay Peninsula (Kelantan, Pahang, Perak, Selangor), and two localities in southern Thailand (Nakhon Si Thammarat, Saraburi).</p><p>Etymology. The Latin word for “robust” refers to generally large habitus of the species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9437D55FF7BA225F2DBC6A9	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9417D54FF7BA1F5F7B9C5B1.text	03AC7D44D9417D54FF7BA1F5F7B9C5B1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas sausai Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas sausai Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 15, 36, 56, 76)</p><p>Type locality. Malaysia, Pahang, ca. 30 NE of Raub, Lata Lembik, ca. 03°56’N 101°38’E, 200– 400 m.</p><p>Type material. 6 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “ MALAYSIA, Pahang distr., / 30km NE RAUB, LATA LEMBIK / 3°56’N; 101°38’E, 200–400 m / 22.IV–1.V., 8–15.V.2002 / E. Jendek &amp; O. Šauša leg. [printed]”. Paratypes: 13 (no. 1), “ Malaysia –Taman Negara [Nat. Park] / Kuala Tahan [Pahang distr.] / 22 March 1988 / leg. G. Hangay [printed]” (HNHM); 13 (no. 2) 1Ƥ (no. 3), “N.O: Sumatra / Deli [= Medan, ca. 03°35’N 98°40’E] / L.Martin S. [yellow label, printed] // 86991 [handwritten]” (ZMHB); 233 (nos. 4–5). “Sumatra / Indragiri / J. Bouchard / 1905. [printed] // MUSÉUM PARIS / 1952 / COLL. R. OBERTHUR [yellow label, printed]” (MNHN).</p><p>Additional material studied. 2 specimens — INDONESIA: SUMATRA: 13 NE Sumatra, R. Taylor (BMNH). MALAYSIA: 1Ƥ, Sungkai reserve, 1.–10.vii.1918, ex F.M.S. Museum (BMNH).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or yellow greyish setae forming indistinct ocellations on pronotum, and characteristic ocellations on elytra (Fig. 15).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 20–24 mm (holotype 24 mm); females: 25–30 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere rather oval, with apical elongation, 2.56–3.63 times as long as wide (Fig. 36), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.92–1.97 times as wide as long. Sides almost regularly rounded (Fig. 56). The disc with two indistinct rounded depressions. Punctation consists of sparse fine setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, slender, slightly attenuating to subapical hook. Their subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is well developed, slightly prominent. Median lobe slender, rather subparallel (Fig. 76).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Differential diagnosis.  E. sausai sp. nov. is similar to  E. serricornis sp. nov. in habitus. However, it can be distinguished at first sight by the elytral ocellations forming more or less distinct transverse fasciae. In addition,  E. sausai sp. nov. has less serrate antennomeres 3–10 and shorter antennomere 11, parameres attenuating regularly to the subapical hook, and median lobe is subparallel, attenuating only in the apical third of its length.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Specimens from Malaysia were collected at light.</p><p>Distribution. The species is so far known only from several localities in Malay Peninsula and Sumatra Island.</p><p>Etymology. The new species is dedicated to one of its collectors, Ondrej Šauša (Bratislava, Slovakia), a specialist on  Elateridae .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9417D54FF7BA1F5F7B9C5B1	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9407D6AFF7BA2C3F573C4D4.text	03AC7D44D9407D6AFF7BA2C3F573C4D4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas serricornis Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas serricornis Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 16, 37, 57, 77, 85)</p><p>Type locality. Malaysia, Perak, ca. 48 km NNE of Ipoh, Felda Lasah vill., ca. 05°02.3’N 101°12.3’E, 120– 390 m.</p><p>Type material. 60 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “W MALAYSIA, Perak distr., / FELDA LASAH vill.env., 48 km NNE of IPOH / N 05° 02,3’, E 101° 12,3’, 120–390 m, / 13.–21.iii.2001 / M. Štrba leg. [printed]”. Paratypes: 333 (nos. 1–3), same label data as holotype (NMPC); 633 (nos. 4–9), same label data, but “P. Šomody leg.” (NMPC); 13 (no. 10), “ PERAK, F. M. S. / Batang Padang / Jor Camp [printed] 1800 [handwritten] ft. [printed] / March 16th [handwritten] 1923 / H. M Pendlebury [printed] / [on reverse:] Ex Coll: / F. M. S. / Museums. // Ex F.M.S. / Museum. / B.M. 1955-354. [printed]” (BMNH); 13 (no. 11), same label data, but “ June 4th 1923 ” (BMNH); 13 (no. 12), same label data, but “light Feb. 26th 1924 ” (BMNH); 13 (no. 13), same label data, but “ Jan 26th 1925 ” (BMNH); 13 (no. 14), “ PERAK F.M.S. / Batang Padang, / KUALA WOH / Mar: [printed] 20th [handwritten] 1940 [printed] / [on reverse:] Selangor Mus: / Collectors. [printed] // Ex F.M.S. / Museum. / B.M. 1955-354. [printed]” (BMNH); 13 (no. 15) 1Ƥ (no. 16), “Tapah- Tanah R / W MALAYSIA / 1976 VII / Native coll. [printed]” (EUMC); 1Ƥ (no. 17), “ 12 II 2001 / 19miles Cameron / High Land Maley. / A. et R. ABE leg. [printed]” (EUMC); 333 (nos. 18–20), “ MALAYSIA, PERAK / Cameron Highlands / BATU (= MILE) 19 vill. env. / 04°22.2’N, 101°20.0’E; 590 m / Jiří Hájek leg. 25.iv.–11.v.2009 [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 21), “ Cameron High / Malaysia / III. 1974 / Nat. coll.</p><p>[handwritten]” (EUMC); 333 (nos. 22–24), “ Cameron Highlands / MALAYSIA / late April 1987 [printed]” (EUMC); 13 (no. 25), “PAHANG, F. M. S. / Lubok Tamang [printed] / 3.500 [handwritten] ft. [printed] / June 11th [handwritten] 1923 / H. M. Pendlebury. [printed] / [on reverse:] Ex Coll / F. M. S. / Museums. [printed] // Ex F.M.S. / Museum. B.M. 1955-354 [printed]” (BMNH); 333 (nos. 26–28), “ MALAYSIA - Pahang / Banjaran Benom / Lata Jarom / 6.– 8.3.1997 / Ivo Jeniš leg. [printed]” (IJCM, NMPC); 13 (no. 29), “ MALAYSIA Pahang Distr. / 30 km NE RAUB, Lata Lembik / (3°56’N, 101°38’E), 200–400 m / 22.IV.–1.V., 8.–15.V.2002 / E. Jendek &amp; O. Šauša leg. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 30), “ Malaysia, Pahang, Fraser’s / Hill, 1200 m 20.2 1991 light / B. Gustafsson, H et H Hippa / G. Sellerholm [printed]” (NHRS); 13 (no. 31), “ TAMAN NEGARA NP / Kuala Juram, E. of Merapoh / 4°39’ N 102°08’ E / 13.III.1999 // MALAYSIA / Pahang / J.P. &amp; M.J. Duffels, / M.Zaidi &amp; M.Y. Ruslan // edge primary rainforest / (near dormitory) / at light [printed]” (ZMAN); 13 (no. 32), “ MALAY PENIN: [printed] / Kelantan / Ledlad / 23.2. 1936 [handwritten] / / Ex F.M.S. / Museum. / B.M. 1955-354 [printed]” (BMNH); 433 (nos. 33–36), “ MALAYSIA 10.– 16.iv.1999 / Kelantan prov. / Kampomg Raja env. / lgt. Mir. Janalík [printed]” (NMPC, VKCZ); 13 (no. 37), “ MALAYSIA W., KELANTAN / Road between Kampong Raja / and Gua Musang, 1400–1700m / (Ladang Pandrak), 1–28.iv.2006 / 4°63’N- 101°45’E – 4°88’N- / 101°95’E, Cechovsky Petr lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 333 (nos. 38–40), “ MALAYSIA / Cameron / Highlands [printed]” (ZSMC); 233 (nos. 41–42), “Taiping - Malaysia / X-1980 // Dono S. Riese / 1984 [handwritten]” (MCSN); 333 (nos. 43–45), “ Malaysia [handwritten]” (MCSN); 13 (nos. 46), “ Malaysia / Ulu Gombak / Kuala Lumpur [printed] / July 21. 1971 [handwritten] / R. E. Parrott [printed]” (CNCO); 13 (no. 47) 1Ƥ (no. 48), same label data, but “ July 22. 1971 ” (CNCO); 13 (no. 49), same label data, but “ 19-VIII-. 1971” (CNCO); 13 (no. 50), same label data, but “ AUG 19. 1971 ” (CNCO); 1Ƥ (no. 51), same label data, but “ AUG 21. 1971 ” (CNCO); 1Ƥ (no. 52), same label data, but “ AUG 22. 1971 ” (CNCO); 433 (nos. 53–56) 3ƤƤ (nos. 57–59), same label data, but “ AUG 24. 1971 ” (CNCO, NMPC).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellow greyish, or whitish setae forming indistinct ocellations on pronotum, and characteristic ocellations on elytra (Fig. 16).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 20–24 mm (holotype 23 mm); females: 26–30 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, antennomeres 3–10 distinctly serrate, last antennomere filiform, 4.01–5.10 times as long as wide (Fig. 37), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.91–2.04 times as wide as long. Sides almost regularly rounded (Fig. 57). The disc with two oval shallow depressions. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, parallel sided, slender – the most slender in the middle of their length. Their subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is well developed. Median lobe slender, rather subparallel (Fig. 77).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Differential diagnosis. The new species is similar to other Malayan species of  Eulichas, in particular to  E. robusta sp. nov. and  E. sausai sp. nov. From the first mentioned species, it differs in its smaller body size; from all species,  E. serricornis sp. nov. differs significantly in the distinctly serrate antennomeres 3–10, and long, nearly filiform antennomere 11.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Most specimens were collected at light. At the locality “Batu 19” (Cameron Highlands, Perak, Malaysia), it was found sitting on vegetation near the riverbank (ca. 6–8 m wide, mostly with sandy bottom) in mountain rainforest, at the altitude ca. 590 m a.s.l. (Fig. 86).</p><p>Distribution. So far known only from several localities in Kelantan, Pahang and Perak provinces in the Malay Peninsula.</p><p>Etymology. The name is derived from Latin words for “serrate” and “cornu” [= antenna], which refer to the characteristic shapes of antennomeres of the new species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9407D6AFF7BA2C3F573C4D4	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D97E7D69FF7BA27EF2F8C558.text	03AC7D44D97E7D69FF7BA27EF2F8C558.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas sikkimensis (Pic 1913) Pic 1913	<div><p>Eulichas sikkimensis (Pic, 1913)</p><p>(Figs. 17, 38, 58, 78)</p><p>Lychas sikkimensis Pic, 1913: 108 (original description, Indes: Sikkim).</p><p>Lycas seillierei Pic, 1915: 7 (original description, Himalaya).</p><p>Eulichas sikkimensis (Pic, 1913): Pic 1914: 11 (catalogue); Jäch 1995: 363 (lectotype designation, catalogue).  Eulichas sellierei (Pic, 1915): Jäch 1995: 363 (lectotype designation, in synonymy).</p><p>Type locality. “Indes: Sikkim” ( E. sikkimensis); “Himalaya” ( E. sellierei).</p><p>Type material.  Lychas sikkimensis: Lectotype 3 (MNHN), designated by Jäch (1995): “Sikkim [printed] // Muséum Paris / Coll. M. Pic [printed] // TYPE [red label, printed] //  Lychas /  sikkimensis / Pic / type [handwritten] // LECTOTYPUS /  Eulichas /  sikkimensis PIC / des. M. Jäch 1995 [red label, handwritten]”.  Lycas seillierei: Lectotype 3 (MNHN), designated by Jäch (1995): “Himalaya / oriental [printed] // Type [handwritten] // TYPE [red label, printed] // Muséum Paris / Coll. M. Pic [printed] // Seillieri / Pic [handwritten] // LECTOTYPUS /  Eulichas /  seillierei PIC / des. M. Jäch 1995 [red label, handwritten] //  Eulichas /  sikkimensis PIC / det. Jäch [handwritten]”. Paralectotype: 13, same label data as lectotype (MNHN).</p><p>Additional material studied. 35 specimens — BHUTAN or INDIA: 433 5ƤƤ, British Bootang, 1898, L. Durel (MNHN). INDIA: 433, Sikkim, Gopaldhara, H. Stevens leg. (BMNH); 13, Uttaranchal, West Bhatkot, Kumaon, 4000 ft. [ca. 1220 m], v.1920 (BMNH); 1Ƥ, West Bengal, Kurseong env. [Kārsiyāng, ca. 26°53’N 88°16’E] (NMPC); 13 2ƤƤ, same label data, but P. Braet leg. (IRSNB); 233 4ƤƤ, West Bengal, Mungphu [most probably = Mangpu, ca. 26°58’N 88°21’E], coll. Atkinson (BMNH, NMPC); 13, West Bengal, Darjeeling [distr.], Chibo Busty, 900 m, 24.iv.1986, Ch.J. Rai (NHMB); 1Ƥ, West Bengal, Darjeeling [distr.], Kalimpong env., 600 m, 8.v.1981 (NMPC); 2ƤƤ, West Bengal, Darjeeling [distr.], Kalimpong, Khangebung, 1400 m, 30.iv.1987, N. Dangal leg. (NHMW); 13, West Bengal, Darjeeling distr., Darjeeling, Sing Bari, 1600 m, 8.ix.1990, N. Dangal leg. (NHMW). NEPAL: 13, Danda Pakhar, 1600–2500 m, 1.vi.1977, M. Brancucci leg. (NMPC); 233, Solu-Khumbo, Mt. Everest, Nuan Thala, 1800 m, 23.iii.1988, Pasang leg. (NHMW); 13, Myagdi distr., Hille-Ghorepani, Dhawlagiri, 1600–2600 m, 10.vi.1986, C. Holzschuh leg. (NHMB); 13, Bagmati distr., Nuwākot, Pāti Bhanjyāng [ca. 27°51’N 85°27’E], 1900 m, 16.– 18.vi.1989, M. Brancucci leg. (NHMB).</p><p>Doubtful localisation: 13, Japan (SMTD).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring from brownish-red to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or greyish setae covering uniformly body surface, or forming very indistinct ocellations on elytra (Fig. 17).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 16–19 mm; females: 20–22 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna slender, last antennomere filiform, 3.75–4.25 times as long as wide (Fig. 38), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.81–2.03 times as wide as long. Sides almost straight, in some specimens with indistinct obtuse angle behind the middle (Fig. 58). Pronotum with two oval shallow depressions on the disc, and indistinct depressions medially also along anterior and posterior margin. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally with indistinct sinuation before apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, broad, their subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is developed and obtuse. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate (Fig. 78).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Distribution. The species is known from upland areas of Nepal and northern India (Uttaranchal, Sikkim, West Bengal). The occurrence in Bhutan needs to be verified by precisely localised specimens.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D97E7D69FF7BA27EF2F8C558	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D97D7D68FF7BA2CEF2AAC558.text	03AC7D44D97D7D68FF7BA2CEF2AAC558.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas sundaensis Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas sundaensis Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 18–19, 39, 59, 79)</p><p>Type locality. Indonesia, Sumatra Isl. Lampung prov., Bukit Barisan Selatan Nat. Park, 5 km SW of Liwa, ca. 05°04’S 104°04’E, 600 m.</p><p>Type material. 6 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “S SUMATRA: Lampung prov. / BUKIT BARISAN SELATAN N.P.; / 5°4’S 104°4’E; ± 600m; 5km SW / Liwa; J. Bezdĕk leg.; 7.–17.ii.2000 [printed]”. Paratypes: 13 (no. 1), same label data as holotype (NMPC); 13 (no. 2), “ SOUTH SUMATRA / Lampung Prov. / Wonosoko, Sdajo / lgt. P. Moric 12.iii.2000 [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 3), “W. Sumatera, 500–800 m / HARAU VALLEY env. / 6–7.2005, loc coll [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 4), “W. SUMATERA / Mt. Sanggul, 1200 m / Landai, 6 – 7.2004 [printed]” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 5), “West Sumatera / MT. TALANG / 3–4.2005, 1000–1500m [printed]” (NMPC).</p><p>Additional material studied. 4 specimens — INDONESIA: JAVA: 13 (MNHN); 13 1Ƥ, West Java, Tjikurai Mt., 4000’, 1892, H. Fruhstorfer (MNHN, NMPC); 1Ƥ, West Java, Gunung Papandayan Mt. (RMNH).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring brownish-red in old speciemens from Java, and from brown to brown-blackish in recently collected material. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish setae covering uniformly pronotum, and forming indistinct ocellations on elytra (Fig. 18–19).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 18–23 mm (holotype 23 mm); females: 22–27 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna slender, last antennomere filiform, 4.57–6.86 times as long as wide (Fig. 39), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.73–1.87 times as wide as long. Sides regularly rounded in anterior half, then very slightly incised; hind angles distinctly prominent (Fig. 59). Pronotum with two indistinct rounded depressions on the disc. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres simple, relatively slender, subparallel. Their apical part (between subapical hook and apex) is relatively short. Subbasal parameral hook is missing, but the subapical hook is developed, slightly prominent. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate (Fig. 79).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Remarks. Four old specimens from Java, which represent the only known  Eulichas from Java so far, differ from the typical specimens in slightly smaller body length, brownish-red colouration of cuticle, and almost uniform body setation without any ocellations. As I was not able to resolve whether this is only intraspecific variability, I did not designate them as paratypes.</p><p>Differential diagnosis.  E. sundaensis sp. nov. is not similar to any other species of the  E. sikkimensis species complex. It could be easily distinguished based on rather long pronotum with sides almost rounded anteriorly; slender antenna with long filiform last antennomere; slender, parallel sided parameres with short apical part; and slender, narrowly lanceolate median lobe.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Specimens from southern Sumatra were collected at light (J. Bezdĕk pers. comm., 2000), while specimens from western Sumatra were swept from vegetation at night (S. Jákl pers. comm., 2008).</p><p>Distribution. A species known from several localities in western and southern Sumatra, and western Java.</p><p>Etymology. The name is derived from “Sunda” Islands, where the new species occurs.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D97D7D68FF7BA2CEF2AAC558	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D97C7D68FF7BA2E0F42FC24C.text	03AC7D44D97C7D68FF7BA2E0F42FC24C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas wewalkai Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas wewalkai Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 20, 40, 60, 80)</p><p>Type locality. Nepal, 30 km NW of Pokhara, Birethanti, 1100 m.</p><p>Type material. Holotype 3 (NHMW), labelled: “ Nepal, 30 km NW Pokhara / Birethanti 1100 m / leg. Wewalka 4.5.1984 (N3) [printed]”.</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish-grey setae forming very indistinct ocellations on pronotum and elytra (Fig. 20).</p><p>Measurements. Male: 14 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse, irregularly distributed moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere slightly club shaped, 2.63 times as long as wide (Fig. 40), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.76 times as wide as long. Sides almost straight in anterior half, with obtuse angle behind the middle, and prominent hind angles (Fig. 60). Pronotum with two rounded shallow depressions on the disc, and an indistinct depression also medio-basally. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and very fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally with indistinct sinuation before apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres simple, slender, somewhat constricted near the middle. Their subbasal hook is missing, but the subapical hook is well developed. Median lobe broadly lanceolate (Fig. 80).</p><p>Female. Unknown.</p><p>Differential diagnosis.  E. wewalkai sp. nov., although of smaller size, is very similar to  E. sikkimensis and  E. uniformis in habitus. It can be distinguished from  E. uniformis based on absence of a parameral subbasal hook, and from  E. sikkimensis based on shorter last antennomere, slender parameres constricted near the middle, and broadly lanecolate median lobe.</p><p>Distribution. So far known only from the type locality in mountain area of central Nepal.</p><p>Etymology. The new species is dedicated to its collector, my colleague Günther Wewalka (Vienna, Austria), a specialist on  Dytiscidae .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D97C7D68FF7BA2E0F42FC24C	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D97C7D6EFF7BA5E9F390C567.text	03AC7D44D97C7D6EFF7BA5E9F390C567.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas fasciolata	<div><p>The  Eulichas fasciolata species complex</p><p>The complex contains four species from the Greater Sunda Island of Borneo. They differ from all other  Eulichas species in the relatively short parallel sided parameres with a characteristic twisted apex. The subapical parameral hook is well developed, the subbasal hook is reduced. The median lobe is narrowly lanceolate, always longer than the parameres. The phallobase is about the same length as parameres and median lobe combined.</p><p>Eulichas fasciolata (Fairmaire, 1898)</p><p>(Figs. 21, 41, 61, 81)</p><p>Lichas fasciolata Fairmaire, 1898: 388 (original description, Kina-Balu).</p><p>Eulichas fasciolata (Fairmaire, 1898): Pic 1914: 11 (catalogue); Jäch 1995: 363 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Kina-Balu” [Sabah state, Malaysia].</p><p>Type material. Not found in MNHN.</p><p>Additional material studied. 121 specimens — MALAYSIA: SABAH: 1Ƥ (SMTD); 2ƤƤ, coll. C. Felsche (SMTD); 2633 13ƤƤ, Kinabalu (DEIC, HNHM, MNHN, NHMB, SMTD); 633 8ƤƤ, Mount Kinabalu, v.–viii.1903, J. Waterstradt (MNHN, RMNH); 233, Kinabalu National Park, Poring, 500 m, 29.xi.–2.xii.1996, W. Schawaller leg. (SMNS); 433 2ƤƤ, Crocker Range [Mts.], iv.1990 (MCSN); 433, Crocker Range Mts., 50 km E Kota Kinabalu, Gunung Emas [Mt.], 16.–27.iv.1993, I. Jeniš leg. (IJCN, NHMW, NMPC); 13, Keningau, 800 m, iv.1987 (NMPC); 633 1Ƥ, Crocker Range, Keningau, v.1993 (NMPC); 13, 8, 5 miles NW of Keningau, Kimanis road, at light, 11.v.1982, D. Burckhardt leg. (MNHG); 333, Keningau – Kimanis, km 25, iv.1994 (NHMW); 13, NW of Keningau, C.R.Park, Kimanis road, 10–15 km oberh., Park HQ, 05°26’N 116°05’E, 1100–1300 m, 2.–4.ix.1998, D. Bratsch &amp; C. Häuser leg. (SMNS); 433 3ƤƤ, Crocker Range, 16 miles NW of Keningau, 8.ix.1982, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 13, same label data, but 12.ii.1982 (EUMC); 2 33, same label data, but 1400 m, 2.–26.iv. 1984 (EUMC); 1Ƥ, same label data, but 4.iv.1984 (EUMC); 13, same label data, but 9.iv.1984 (EUMC); 13, same label data, but 20.iv.1984 (EUMC); 13, Bunsit, 13.iii.1983, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 233, 105 km S Beaufort, Long Pasia Area, airstrip Long Pasia, 04°24’N, 115°43’E, 1000 m, at light, Recultivated area, 16.iv.1987, J. van Tol &amp; J. Huisman leg. (RMNH); 333, 70 km W of Lahad Datu, Danum valley, 150 m, at light, 13.xii.1989, M.J. &amp; J.P. Duffels leg. (ZMAN); 13, Batu Punggul [ca. 04°38’N 116°35’E], Banjaran Maitland, 25.–27.v.1995, I. Jeniš leg. (MNHG); 13, 50 km S Tomani, 4.v.1999, M. Snížek leg. (VKCZ); 1Ƥ, Trus Madi, 2200 m, 22.iv.1990, Martini leg. (NMPC); 233 1Ƥ, Mount Trus Madi, 1100 m, iv.2000, K. &amp; B. Martini leg. (VKCZ); 633, Mt. Trus Madi, v.2004, S. Chew leg. (NMPC); 13, same data, but 3.iii.2005 (BMNH); 233, Mamut, 17.v.1979, N. Nishikawa leg. (EUMC); 13, Sepilok, Sandakan, 6.ix.1982, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 13, 80 km E of Ranau, Telupid, 800 m, 20.iv.1979, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 13, Tinamantawaran, near Ranau, 16.iv.1983, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC). SARAWAK: 13, Gunong Mulu National Park, 150 m, at light, ii.1978, J.D. Holloway et al. (BMNH); 2ƤƤ, same label data, but 4th Division, 150–200 m, v.–viii.1978, P.M. Hammond &amp; J.E. Marshall leg. (BMNH).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring redish-brown to brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent brownish-yellow setae covering uniformly head, pronotum and ventral part, and forming rather indistinct ocellations on elytra (Fig. 21).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 23–32 mm; females: 30–35 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere narrowly oval, 3.19–3.58 times as long as wide (Fig. 41), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.90–1.91 times as wide as long. Sides almost straight, in some specimens with indistinct sinuation behind the middle, hind angles prominent (Fig. 61). The disc convex with two lateral and one basal shallow depression. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres parallel sided, with twisted emarginated apex; their distal part rather short. Median lobe lanceolate, with thin apical part; exceeding parameres (Fig. 81).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Remarks. Although the type material of the species was not found/recognised in the MNHN, the large number of additional specimens from Kinabalu deposited in various collections has allowed confident identification and redescription of the species.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light in the primary forest.</p><p>Distribution. Known from the Malay part of the Greater Sunda Island of Borneo – Sabah and Sarawak.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D97C7D6EFF7BA5E9F390C567	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D97A7D6EFF7BA28FF45AC1FB.text	03AC7D44D97A7D6EFF7BA28FF45AC1FB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas jakli Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas jakli Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 22, 42, 62, 82)</p><p>Type locality. Indonesia, southern Kalimantan, Kandangan district, 17 km NE of Loksado.</p><p>Type material. Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “ INDONESIA / S. Kalimantan / Kandangan district // 17 km NE Loksado / 15.11.[19]97/15.1.[19]98 / St. Jákl lgt [printed]”.</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent brownish-yellow setae covering uniformly head, pronotum and ventral part, and forming typical ocellations on elytra (Fig. 22).</p><p>Measurements. Male: 21 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere filiform with apical elongation, 4.71 times as long as wide (Fig. 42), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.95 times as wide as long. Sides almost straight with indistinct obtuse angle behind the middle, hind angles prominent (Fig. 62). The disc convex. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase of the same length as parameres. Parameres broad, with twisted apex; their distal part relatively long. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate, exceeding parameres (Fig. 82).</p><p>Female. Unknown.</p><p>Differential diagnosis.  E. jakli sp. nov. could be easily distinguished from all other species of the  E. fasciolata complex based on small body length, the very thin and long last antennomere, and characteristic shape of aedeagus with long distal part (between apex and subapical hook) of parameres.</p><p>Distribution. So far known only from the type locality in southern Kalimantan, Indonesia.</p><p>Etymology. The new species is dedicated to its collector, my friend Stanislav Jákl (Praha, Czech Republic), a specialist on  Cetoniidae .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D97A7D6EFF7BA28FF45AC1FB	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D97A7D6DFF7BA503F390C38C.text	03AC7D44D97A7D6DFF7BA503F390C38C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas subocellata (Fairmaire 1898) Fairmaire 1898	<div><p>Eulichas subocellata (Fairmaire, 1898)</p><p>(Figs. 23, 43, 63, 83)</p><p>Lichas subocellata Fairmaire, 1898: 388 (original description, Kina-Balu).</p><p>Eulichas subocellata (Fairmaire, 1898): Pic 1914: 11 (catalogue); Jäch 1995: 363 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Kina-Balu” [Sabah state, Malaysia].</p><p>Type material. Lectotype Ƥ (MNHN), by present designation: “Kina-Balu / Bornéo. [printed] // TYPE [red label, printed] // MUSÉUM PARIS / 1952 / COLL. R. OBERTHUR [yellow label, printed] //  Lichas / subocellatus / Fairm. [handwritten] // LECTOTYPUS /  LICHAS /  subocellata Fairmaire, 1898 / Jiří Hájek des. 2002 [red label, printed] //  EULICHAS (s. str.) /  subocellata (Fairmaire, 1898) / Jiří Hájek det. 2002 [printed]”. Paralectotypes: 1Ƥ, same label data as lectotype; 2ƤƤ: “  Kina Balu. / N. Borneo. [printed] // MUSÉUM PARIS / 1952 / COLL. R. OBERTHUR [yellow label, printed] // SYNTYPE [red label, printed]”, and the respective paralectotype label (MNHN). Number of syntypes unknown. I designate a lectotype to fix the identity of this species, as available taxonomic works do not allow an unambiguous identification of specimens.</p><p>Additional material studied. 113 specimens — MALAYSIA: SABAH: 733 7ƤƤ, Kinabalu (DEIC, HNHM, IRSNB, MNHN, SMTD, ZMHB); 2ƤƤ, same label data, but 1500 m, H. Rolle (DEIC, HNHM); 233 4ƤƤ, Mount Kinabalu [ca. 06°04’N, 116°36’E] (BMNH); 833 8ƤƤ, same label data, but v.–viii.1903, J. Waterstradt (BMNH, MNHN, NHMB, RMNH); 13, Gunung Kinabalu, Sg. Liwagu nr Kundasang bridge, 06°00’N, 116°34’E, 1185 m, 23.xi.1986, J. Huisman leg. (RMNH); 733 5ƤƤ, Kinabalu NP, Sayap, 1000 m, 25.–29.XI.1996, W. Schawaller leg. (NMPC, SMNS); 13, Kinabalu Nat. Park, Sayap, 6°10’N 116°34’E, primary forest edge, 950 m, at light, 8.iii.2001, J.P. Duffels &amp; M.A. Schouten leg. (ZMAN); 333, Tinamantawaran, near Poring, Ranau, i.1983; 1Ƥ, S of Tambunan, 650 m, 4.–5. &amp; 13.vii.1991, J. Haxaire leg. (NHMW); 13, Crocker Range Mts., E. Khoo leg. (VKCZ); 1Ƥ, Crock[er] Range, 17.ii.1989 (MCSN); 13, same label data, but iv.1990 (EUMC); 13, same label data, but 5.v.2005, S. Chew leg. (BMNH); 13, Crocker Range, 16 Mail [miles?] NW of Keningau, 1400 m, 20.iv.1984, S. Nagai leg. (EUMC); 13, same label data, but 2.–13.v.1984 (EUMC); 1833 1Ƥ, Crocker Range Mts., 50 km E Kota Kinabalu, Gunung Emas [Mt.], 16.–27.iv.1993, I. Jeniš leg. (IJCN, NHMW); 13, Crocker Mt., Gunong Emas, 6.–21.v.1995, I. Jeniš leg. (NMPC); 1Ƥ, same data, but J. Stolarczyk leg. (NMPC); 13, Kundasang, 1500 m, 4.–8.ix.1994, C.L. Li leg. (NHMW); 1233, Banjaran Crocker Mts., 16 km SW Gunung Alab, 790–850 m, 4.–9.v.1996, M. Štrba &amp; R. Hergovits leg. (NHMW, NMPC); 1Ƥ, Mt. Trus Madi, v.2004, S. Chew leg. (NMPC); 533 2ƤƤ, same data, but 3.iii.2005 (BMNH, NMPC); 13, Tawau hill, along Sungai Tawau near trail to Air Panas, 300 m, at light, 28.iii.2001, J.P. &amp; M.J. Duffels leg. (ZMAN); 13, Tawau, 20.iii.2006 (NMPC). SARAWAK: 333, Mt. Dulit, moss forest, 22.x.1932, Oxford University Expedition: B.M. Hobby &amp; A.W. Moore (BMNH); 633, 4th Division, Gunung Mulu National Park, at light, 150–200 m, v.–viii.1978, P.M. Hammond &amp; J.E. Marshall leg. (BMNH); 333 1Ƥ, 105 km S Beuafort, Long Pasia Area, Sg. Maga nr confl. Sg. Pasia, 04°26’N, 115°40’E, 1210 m, at light, along larger fast running stream in lower montane evergreen rain forest, 2.–7.iv.1987, J. van Tol &amp; J. Huisman leg. (RMNH).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring dark brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent grey-whitish setae forming indistinct ocellation on head, pronotum and ventral part, and characteristic distinct ocellations on elytra (Fig. 23).</p><p>Measurements. Males: 24–26 mm; females: 31–34 mm (lectotype 33 mm).</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender. Last antennomere narrowly oval with apical elongation, 3.40–4.46 times as long as wide (Fig. 43), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.95–2.09 times as wide as long. Sides slightly, almost regularly rounded (Fig. 63). The disc convex, in some specimens with irregular shallow depressions. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres parallel sided, with twisted emarginated apex; their distal part rather short. Median lobe narrowly lanceolate, with thin apical part; exceeding parameres (Fig. 83).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Collection circumstances. Collected at light in the primary forest.</p><p>Distribution. Known from the Malay part of the Greater Sunda Island of Borneo – Sabah and Sarawak.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D97A7D6DFF7BA503F390C38C	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9797D6CFF7BA4F3F304C321.text	03AC7D44D9797D6CFF7BA4F3F304C321.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas villosa Hajek	<div><p>Eulichas villosa Hájek,  sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 24, 44, 64, 84)</p><p>Type locality. Malaysia, Sabah, Gunung Emas Mt., 1700 m.</p><p>Type material. 18 specimens — Holotype 3 (NMPC), labelled: “Malaysia-Borneo / Sabah 21.3.– 20.4.1996 / GUNUNG EMAS 1700m / lgt. J. Kadlec [printed]”. Paratypes: 13 (no. 1) 2ƤƤ (nos. 2–3), same label data as holotype (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 4), “Borneo 15/ 27.4.1993 / Sabah Crocker Mt. / Gunong Emas env. / Jenis &amp; Strba leg [printed]” (NHMW); 233 (nos. 5–6), “BORNEO-SABAH / Crocker Mt. 500–1900m / Gunong Emas / 6.– 21.5.1995 / Ivo Jeniš leg. [printed]” (MHNG, NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 7), “GUNUNG EMAS / 7.2.[19]99 / BORNEO / LEG.KONDLER [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 8), BORNEO / GUNUNG ALAB / 19. – 24. 4. 2006 / B.MAKOVSKY Lgt. [printed]” (NMPC); 13 (no. 9), “(Malaysia) / headquarters / (alt. 1500– 1700m) / Mt. Kinabalu / Sabah / III/27.1976 / S. NAGAI leg. [printed]” (EUMC); 1Ƥ (no. 10), samel label data, but “IV-15.1976” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 11), “(EAST MALAYSIA) / Park Headquarters / near Mt. Kinabalu / Sabah, (alt. 1700m) [printed] / III - 25. [handwritten] 1979 / SHINJI NAGAI leg. [printed]” (EUMC); 13 (no. 12), “Headquarters / Borneo Sabah / April 18, 1979 / N. Nishikawa [printed] //  Eulichas /  subocellata / (Fairmaire) [handwritten] / DET. M. SATO 1980 [printed]” (EUMC); 1Ƥ (no. 13), same label data, but “ April 25 ” (EUMC); 1Ƥ (no. 14), “(N BORNEO) / Headquarter / Mt. Kinabalu / 3. V. 1980 / M. &amp; A. Sakai [printed]” (EUMC); 1Ƥ (no. 15), same label data, but “ 4. V. 1980 ” (EUMC); 13 (no. 16), same label data, but “ 6. V. 1980 ” (NMPC); 1Ƥ (no. 17), “BORNEO SABAH Mt. / Kinabalu Nat.Pk. / HQ 1560 m 15–24. / V. [19]87 A.Smetana [printed]” (MHNG).</p><p>Description. Habitus elongate, fusiform. Body colouring brown. Pale part of setation consists of recumbent yellowish or greyish setae covering uniformly head, pronotum and ventral part, and forming rather indistinct ocellations on elytra (Fig. 24).</p><p>Measurements. Male: 24–27 mm (holotype 26 mm); females: 29–33 mm.</p><p>Head punctation consists of sparse moderately large setigerous punctures. Antenna long, slender, last antennomere almost filiform, 3.80–4.44 times as long as wide (Fig. 44), its ventral side smooth.</p><p>Pronotum trapezoidal, ca. 1.87–2.00 times as wide as long. Sides almost straight, with indistinct sinuation behind the middle, hind angles prominent (Fig. 64). The disc convex with two lateral and one basal shallow depression. Punctation consists of sparse moderately coarse setigerous punctures on the disc, which become slightly coarser and denser laterally.</p><p>Elytra with numerous longitudinal rows of moderately large punctures, and fine interstitial setigerous punctures.</p><p>Ventral part with fine punctures, which are sparse medially and become larger and denser laterally. Last abdominal ventrite laterally regularly rounded to apex.</p><p>Male. Aedeagus with phallobase shorter than parameres. Parameres slightly narrowed in the middle, with twisted emarginated apex. Median lobe lanceolate, slightly constricted before apex; exceeding parameres (Fig. 84).</p><p>Female. Similar to male in habitus, but larger. Antenna shorter, and more slender.</p><p>Differential diagnosis. The new species is very similar to  E. fasciolata . However,  E. villosa sp. nov. is sligthly smaller and more slender, with denser body setation; antennomeres are slender and more elongate. In addition,  E. villosa sp. nov. differs in the shape of aedeagus: parameres are slightly narrowed medially, their subapical hook is less prominent; median lobe is more slender, slightly constricted before apex.</p><p>Distribution. So far known only from several mountain localities in Sabah, Malaysia.</p><p>Etymology. The Latin word for “villose” refers to peculiar dense body setation of the species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9797D6CFF7BA4F3F304C321	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
03AC7D44D9777D63FF7BA397F2DEC6B8.text	03AC7D44D9777D63FF7BA397F2DEC6B8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eulichas trapezicollis (Fairmaire 1891) Fairmaire 1891	<div><p>Eulichas trapezicollis (Fairmaire, 1891)</p><p>Lichas trapezicollis Fairmaire, 1891: CXXIX (original description, Darchiling).</p><p>Eulichas trapezicollis (Fairmaire, 1891): Pic 1914: 11 (catalogue); Jäch 1995: 363 (catalogue).</p><p>Type locality. “Darchiling” [Darjeeling district, West Bengal, India].</p><p>Remarks.  Eulichas trapezicollis is almost certainly a senior synonym of  E. sikkimensis or  E. uniformis, which both occur in Darjeeling. Both species are very similar in habitus, and could be reliably distinguished only based on shape of last antennomere or male genitalia. Unfortunately the original description did not mention any of these diagnostic characters, and the type material of  E. trapezicollis seems to be lost. Therefore I am not able to establish the formal synonymy. Type specimens should be deposited in MNHN, but I failed to find them there during my visits. However, I still believe, that more searching could reveal them, and therefore do not designate a neotype, but leave the status of  E. trapezicollis unresolved.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC7D44D9777D63FF7BA397F2DEC6B8	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	Hájek, Jiří	Hájek, Jiří (2009): Revision of the genus Eulichas Jacobson, 1913 (Coleoptera: Eulichadidae) II. E. dudgeoni species group. Zootaxa 2192: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.189396
