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    Nuconarius pseudocapitulatus Li & Zhao & Zhang & Li 2018, comb. n.

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    Nuconarius pseudocapitulatus (Wang, 2003) comb. n. FIGS 5–7 Draconarius pseudocapitulatus WaNG 2003: 545, fIGS 53A–B; WaNG et al. 2010: 89, fIGS 407–427; Zhu et al. 2017: 352, fIGS 219A–D. Types. Holotype: ♀ (HNNU), DANZHU He DRAINAGe, (27.631000°N, 98.621000°E, eLeV. 2700 M), 13.5 AIR KM SSW OF GONGSHAN, GONGSHAN CO., NUjIANG, Yunnan, China, 30 JUNe–5 JULY 2000, D. KAVANAUGH, C.E. GRISWOLD, H.B. LIANG, D. UBICK, H.M. YAN, D.Z. DONG LeG. Paratypes: 1♀ (HNNU), same data as holotype; 1♀ (CAS), Nujiang STATe NATURe ReSeRVe, NO. 12 BRIDGe CAMP AReA (27.715000°N, 98.502000°E, eLeV. 2775M) 16.3 AIR KM W OF GONGSHAN, NUjIANG PReFeCTURe, GAOLIGONG SHAN, Yunnan, China, 15–19 JULY 2000, H.M. YAN, D. KAVANAUGH, C.E. GRISWOLD, H.B. LIANG, D. UBICK, D.Z. DONG LeG. Other records: 37♀♀ 9♂♂ (HNNU AND CAS), GAOLIGONG SHAN, Yunnan, China. Material examined. 1♀ 1♂ (IZCAS-AR 33971), DABADI (27.786267°N, 98.510283°E, eLeV. 3200 M), 41 KM OF DeRUNG-NU AUTONOMOUS COUNTY GONGSHAN, NUjIANG OF THe LISU AUTONOMOUS PReFeCTURe, Yunnan, China, 11 DeCeMBeR 2013, Y. LI & J. LIU LeG. Diagnosis. MALeS OF THIS SPeCIeS CAN Be DISTINGUISHeD FROM N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n. BY THe LONG PATeLLAR APOPHYSIS, SUBeqUAL TO THe LeNGTH OF PATeLLA, WHILe IT IS OBVIOUS SHORT IN N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n.; and cymbial furrow short, less than ½ of the length of cymbium, while it is about ⅓ in N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n. (FIGS 1C, 5C), AND MeDIAN APOPHYSIS ABSeNT (FIGS 1B–C, 5B–C). FeMALeS OF THe SPeCIeS CAN Be DISTINGUISHeD FROM N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n. BY THe SPeRMATHeCAL HeADS WHOSe WIDTH eqUAL TO THe LeNGTH WHILe IN N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n., THe WIDTH OF SPeRMATHeCAL HeADS IS LONGeR THAN THe LeNGTH (FIGS 2B, 6B); THe POSTeRIOR ePIGYNAL SCLeRITe SeMICIRCULAR AND UNCOVeReD WHILe IN N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n., THe POSTeRIOR ePIGYNAL SCLeRITe COVeReD BY THe exTeNDeD POSTeRIOR eDGe OF ATRIUM (FIGS 2A, 6A). Description. Male: See WANG et al. (2010). PHOTOS OF BOTH HABITUS AND PALP ARe PROVIDeD HeRe (FIGS 5–6). Female: See WANG (2003). PHOTOS OF BOTH HABITUS AND ePIGYNe ARe PROVIDeD HeRe (FIG. 6). Variation: TOTAL LeNGTH VARIeS FROM 8.70 TO 10.80. Distribution. YUNNAN, CHINA (FIG. 7).Published as part of Li, Bing, Zhao, Zhe, Zhang, Chuntian & Li, Shuqiang, 2018, Nuconarius gen. n. and Hengconarius gen. n., two new genera of Coelotinae (Araneae, Agelenidae) spiders from Southwest China, pp. 237-263 in Zootaxa 4457 (2) on pages 244-246, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4457.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/134255

    Hengconarius Li & Zhao & Zhang & Li 2018, gen. n.

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    Genus Hengconarius Z. Zhao & S. Li gen. n. Type species. Draconarius exilis ZhaNG, Zhu & WaNG, 2005 Etymology. THe GeNeRIC NAMe IS DeRIVeD FROM THe PINYIN "HeNG", ReFeRRING TO THe HeNGDUAN MOUNTAINS WHeRe THe GeNUS IS DISTRIBUTeD AND THe "- conarius " FROM Draconarius. THe GeNDeR IS MASCULINe. Diagnosis. Hengconarius Z. ZhaO & S. LI gen. n. IS SIMILAR TO Sinodraconarius, Nuconarius Z. ZhaO & S. LI gen. n. AND Draconarius. BUT THeY CAN Be DISTINGUISHeD IN DeTAILS AS FOLLOWS: THe NeW GeNUS CAN Be DISTINGUISHeD FROM Sinodraconarius BY A PATeLLAR APOPHYSIS THAT IS NeVeR BIFURCATe AND A CONDUCTOR WHICH IS BIFURCATe; FROM Nuconarius Z. ZhaO & S. LI gen. n. BY THe MeDIAN APOPHYSIS NOT POINTeD, THe CONDUCTOR WITH BASAL LAMeLLA AND THe ePIGYNe WITH MIDDLe SePTUM, THe ANTeRIOR eDGe OF ePIGYNe WRINKLeD AND SCLeROTIZeD, THe POSTeRIOR eDGe OF ePIGYNe SCLeROTIZeD; FROM Draconarius BY THe CYMBIAL FURROW LeSS THAN ½ THe LeNGTH OF CYMBIUM, THe MeDIAN APOPHYSIS SLICe-SHAPeD, ePIGYNAL TeeTH ABSeNT, AND THe SPeRMATHeCAe SIMPLe AND NOT CONVOLUTeD. Description. SMALL TO MeDIUM-LARGe SIZeD, WITH TOTAL LeNGTHS RANGING FROM 6.28 TO 12.91. CARAPACe YeLLOW TO TAN; RADIAL ReGION WITH GReY-GReeN SHORT SeTAe; CHeLICeRAe WITH 3 PROMARGINAL AND 2 ReTROMARGINAL TeeTH. LeG FORMULA 4> 1> 2> 3. MALe PALP: PATeLLAR APOPHYSIS PReSeNT OR ReDUCeD; TWO TIBIAL APOPHYSeS: ReTROLATeRAL TIBIAL APOPHYSIS BROAD AND slice-shaped; lateral tibial apophysis small, whose length and width about ⅓ of the length and WIDTH OF ReTROLATeRAL TIBIAL APOPHYSIS, ReSPeCTIVeLY; CYMBIAL FURROW SHORT, LeSS THAN ½ THe LeNGTH OF CYMBIUM; eMBOLIC BASe BeGINNING AT ABOUT 8 O’CLOCK POSITION; CONDUCTOR BeFURCATe, WITH A SMALL BASAL LAMeLLA AND A CONDUCTOR’S DORSAL APOPHYSIS; MeDIAN APOPHYSIS THIN, USUALLY SLICe-SHAPeD. EPIGYNe: ePIGYNAL TeeTH ABSeNT; THe ANTeRIOR eDGe OF ePIGYNe WRINKLeD AND SCLeROTIZeD; THe POSTeRIOR eDGe OF ePIGYNe SCLeROTIZeD; THe SHAPe OF ATRIUM VARIABLe; ePIGYNAL HOODS LOCATeD ANTeROLATeRALLY; COPULATORY OPeNINGS LOCATeD CeNTRALLY; COPULATORY DUCT exTeNDS HORIZONTALLY; SPeRMATHeCAe SIMPLe AND SePARATeD, THe DISTANCe BeTWeeN SPeRMATHeCAe SUBeqUAL TO THe DIAMeTeR OF SPeRMATHeCA; SPeRMATHeCAL HeADS LOCATeD AT ANTeROLATeRALLY OR IN THe MIDDLe. Natural history. SPeCIeS OF Hengconarius Z. ZhaO & S. LI gen. n. WeRe ALL COLLeCTeD BY HAND OR TRAPPING MeTHODS. THeY WeRe FOUND IN MOIST AND GLOOMY PLACeS IN THe HIGHLANDS (1881 –4089 M), SUCH AS UNDeR STONeS, ROCKS AND IN LeAF-LITTeR. Composition. SO FAR eIGHT SPeCIeS ARe CONSIDeReD IN THe NeW GeNUS: H. dedaensis Z. ZHAO & S. LI sp. n., H. exilis (ZHANG, ZHU & WANG, 2005) comb. n., H. falcatus (XU & LI, 2006) comb. n., H. incertus (WANG, 2003) comb. n., H. latusincertus (WANG, GRISWOLD & MILLeR, 2010) comb. n., H. longipalpus Z. ZHAO & S. LI sp. n., H. longpuensis Z. ZHAO & S. LI sp. n. AND H. pseudobrunneus (WANG, 2003) comb. n. Distribution. SICHUAN, TIBeT AND YUNNAN, CHINA (FIG. 20). Comments. FOR THe DeTAILS OF THe ReLATIONSHIPS IN Hengconarius Z. ZhaO & S. LI gen. n., PLeASe See ZZ630, ZZ913, ZZ929, ZZ 987, SD023 AND SD041 (SOUTHeRN COeLOTeS GROUPS) IN FIGURe 3 AND SUPPLeMeNTARY FIGUReS S4– S 6 OF Z. ZHAO & S. LI (2017).Published as part of Li, Bing, Zhao, Zhe, Zhang, Chuntian & Li, Shuqiang, 2018, Nuconarius gen. n. and Hengconarius gen. n., two new genera of Coelotinae (Araneae, Agelenidae) spiders from Southwest China, pp. 237-263 in Zootaxa 4457 (2) on pages 246-248, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4457.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/134255

    Neowuia Li & Murányi, 2017, nom. n.

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    Neowuia nom. n. http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid: Plecoptera.speciesfile.o rg:TaxonName:500645 Wuia Li & Murányi, 2015 — Li & Murányi 2015: 44. (original description of male and female). Type species: Wuia qinlinga Li & Murányi, 2015, by original monotypy. Type species. Neowuia qinlinga (Li & Murányi, 2015) comb. n., by inherited monotypy. Etymology. The new name remains in honor of Prof. Cheng-Fu Wu, completed with the prefix ‘neo’. Gender feminine.Published as part of Li, Weihai & Murányi, Dávid, 2017, Neowuia, A Replacement Name For Preoccupied Wuia Li & Murányi, 2015 (Plecoptera: Perlodidae), pp. 96-97 in Illiesia 13 (9) on pages 96-97, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.476114

    Nuconarius capitulatus Li & Zhao & Zhang & Li 2018, comb. n.

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    Nuconarius capitulatus (Wang, 2003) comb. n. FIGS 3–4, 7 Draconarius capitulatus WaNG 2003: 524, fIGS 18A–B; WaNG et al. 2010: 24, fIGS 44–45, 48–53, 57–58 (♀ ONLY, ♂ mISmaTchEd); Zhu et al. 2017: 242, fIGS 126A–B (♀ ONLY, ♂ mISmaTchEd). Types. Holotype: ♀ (HNNU), PIANMA YAKOU (25.966667°N, 98.683333°E, eLeV. 3200 M), PASS OVeR GAOLIGONGSHAN, NUjIANG PReFeCTURe, Yunnan, China, 11 OCTOBeR 1998, C. GRISWOLD, D. KAVANAUGH, C. LONG LeG. Paratypes: 5♀♀ (HNNU and CAS), same data as holotype; 1♀ (CAS), Nujiang State Nature Reserve, No. 12 BRIDGe CAMP AReA (27.715000°N, 98.502000°E, eLeV. 2775 M), 16.3 AIR KM W OF GONGSHAN, NUjIANG PReFeCTURe, GAOLIGONG SHAN, Yunnan, China, 15–19 JULY 2000, H. YAN, D. KAVANAUGH, C.E. GRISWOLD, H. LIANG, D. UBICK, D. DONG LeG. Other records: 27♀♀ (HNNU AND CAS), GAOLIGONG SHAN, Yunnan, China. Material examined. 1♀ 1♂ (IZCAS-AR 33970), FeNGxUe YAKOU (25.972667°N, 98.683933°E, eLeV. 3113 M), PIANMA TOWNSHIP, LUSHUI COUNTY, NUjIANG OF THe LISU AUTONOMOUS PReFeCTURe, Yunnan, China, 8 DeCeMBeR 2013, Y. LI & J. LIU LeG. Diagnosis. MALeS OF THIS SPeCIeS CAN Be DISTINGUISHeD FROM N. brevipatellatus Z. ZHAO & S. LI sp. n. BY THe LONG PATeLLAR APOPHYSIS, AS LONG AS THe PATeLLA, WHILe THe PATeLLAR APOPHYSIS OBVIOUSLY SHORT IN N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI (FIGS 1C, 3C), A SHORT CYMBIAL FURROW, ABOUT ½ THe LeNGTH OF CYMBIUM, WHILe IT IS ABOUT ⅓ IN N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n (FIGS 1C, 3C). FeMALeS OF THIS SPeCIeS CAN Be DISTINGUISHeD FROM N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n. BY THe SPeRMATHeCAL HeADS WHOSe HeIGHT IS LONGTeR THAN THe WIDTH BUT IN N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n., THe WIDTH OF SPeRMATHeCAL HeADS IS LONGeR THAN THe HeIGHT; THe WIDTH OF SPeRMATHeCAL BASeS IS SUBeqUAL TO ½ THe WIDTH OF ANTeRIOR SPeRMATHeCA, BUT ABOUT 1½ AS IN N. brevipatellatus sp. n.; AND THe DISTANCe BeTWeeN THe MIDDLe PART OF SPeRMATHeCAe IS LeSS THAN ¼ OF THe WIDTH OF SPeRMATHeCAL BASeS, BUT SUBeqUAL TO ½ AS IN N. brevipatellatus Z. ZhaO & S. LI sp. n. (FIGS 2B, 4B). Description. Male: DeSCRIBeD HeRe FOR THe FIRST TIMe. TOTAL LeNGTH 11.86. CARAPACe 6.09 LONG, 4.17 WIDe. ABDOMeN 5.77 LONG, 4.08 WIDe. EYe SIZeS AND INTeRDISTANCeS: AME 0.23, ALE 0.28, PME 0.24, PLE 0.27; AME– AME 0.08, AME–ALE 0.08, AME–PME 0.15, ALE–PLE 0, PME–PME 0.12, PME–PLE 0.20. LeG MeASUReMeNTS: I 20.71 (6.81, 5.56, 5.31, 3.03); II 20.42 (6.78, 5.56, 5.05, 3.03); III 19.94 (7.32, 5.05, 4.79, 2.78); IV 21.21 (8.08, 5.05, 5.05, 3.03). PALP: PATeLLAR APOPHYSIS SHORTeR THAN THe LeNGTH OF PATeLLA, AND WITH A BeNT eND, (FIG. 3A); CYMBIAL FURROW BeING ABOUT ½ THe LeNGTH OF CYMBIUM (FIG. 3C); eMBOLUS BeGINNING AT 7 TO 7:30 O’CLOCK POSITION (FIG. 3B); MeDIAN APOPHYSIS PReSeNT, NOT SPOON-SHAPeD (FIGS 3B–C). Female: See WANG (2003). PHOTOS OF BOTH HABITUS AND ePIGYNe ARe PROVIDeD HeRe (FIG. 4). Variation: TOTAL LeNGTH VARIeS FROM 9.44 TO 11.86. Distribution. YUNNAN, CHINA (FIG. 7).Published as part of Li, Bing, Zhao, Zhe, Zhang, Chuntian & Li, Shuqiang, 2018, Nuconarius gen. n. and Hengconarius gen. n., two new genera of Coelotinae (Araneae, Agelenidae) spiders from Southwest China, pp. 237-263 in Zootaxa 4457 (2) on pages 242-244, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4457.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/134255

    Chrysoteuchia furva Li & Li, sp. n.

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    Chrysoteuchia furva Li & Li, sp. n. (Figs. 5, 9, 12) Type material. Holotype ɗ, China: Erlonghe, Liupanshan (35 ° 25 ́N, 106 °07́E), Ningxia Huizu Autonomous Region, 4.vii. 1983, collector unknown, genitalia slide No. LWC08450. Paratype: 1 Ψ, Guandonggou, Kangxian (33 ° 12 ́N, 105 ° 22 ́E), Gansu Province, 18.vi. 1992, collector unknown. Diagnosis. This species resembles C. shafferi Li & Li, sp. n. in the wing pattern. It can be distinguished easily from the latter by the basal half of costa bearing a rectangular protuberance, the sacculus with a sclerotized nearly S-shaped pleat in distal half, and the phallus with two rows of small spinelike cornuti in the male genitalia; by the absence of the lamella vaginalis, and the corpus bursae with a rounded signum in the female genitalia. In C. shafferi, the costa lacks the protuberance, the sacculus bears a strong distal prong, and the phallus has no cornutus; the lamella postvaginalis is developed, and the corpus bursae has a peanut-shaped signum. This species is also similar to C. lolotiella (Caradja, 1927) in the wing pattern and the female genitalia, but can be distinguished from it by the costa with dorsally straight protuberance and the phallus with two rows of cornuti in the male genitalia. While in C. lolotiella, the protuberance of costa is angled dorsally and the phallus has one row of cornuti. Description. Adult (Fig. 5): Forewing length 9.5 –11.0 mm. Frons, vertex, labial palpus and maxillary palpus black. Antenna black, ciliated with white ventrally. Patagium, tegula and thorax blackish brown. Forewing blackish brown, with three black spots in medial area: first one set near upper corner of cell, second one at about middle of fold, third one at basal two fifths of dorsum; subterminal fascia represented by seven black spots evenly distributed from distal 1 / 5 near costa to before tornus, anterior three oblique outwards, posterior four oblique inwards; cilia blackish brown. Hindwing black; cilia with basal one third blackish brown, distal two thirds greyish white. Legs black. Abdomen black from one to six segments, the rest yellow. Male genitalia (Fig. 9): Uncus long and thin, straight, tapering to pointed apex. Gnathos about two thirds length of uncus, upcurved slightly, pointed apically. Tegumen about three times as long as gnathos. Valva broad and short, gradually narrowed towards rounded apex; costa with setose rectangular protuberance in basal half armed with sclerotized pleats, inner side of protuberance situated small thumblike process. Sacculus developed; distal half with sclerotized nearly S-shaped pleat dorsally. Pseudosaccus thumb-shaped. Saccus broad, concave at middle on anterior margin. Juxta ovate. Phallus curved slightly, shorter than valva; with two rows of small spinelike cornuti: one row comprised eight cornuti pointing to base of phallus; another row comprised ten cornuti, nine pointing to tip of phallus and one pointing to base of phallus. Female genitalia (Fig. 12): Tergite VIII nearly as long as apophysis posterioris. Antrum strongly sclerotized, much thicker than ductus bursae, gradually thickened towards ostium bursae; lateral margin of anterior part concave. Ductus bursae long and thin, nearly straight, membranous; ductus seminalis arising from posterior one fourth of ductus bursae. Corpus bursae rounded; signum small and rounded, placed at posterior one third. Distribution. China (Gansu, Ningxia). Etymology. The specific name is derived from the Latin furvus = dingy, in reference to the mainly blackish ground color of adult.Published as part of Li, Houhun & Li, Weichun, 2010, Four new species of the genus Chrysoteuchia Hübner (Lepidoptera: Crambidae: Crambinae) from China, pp. 33-46 in Zootaxa 2485 on page 38, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19550

    Chrysoteuchia shafferi Li & Li, sp. n.

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    Chrysoteuchia shafferi Li & Li, sp. n. (Figs. 6, 10, 13) Type material. Holotype ɗ, China: Pingheliang, Ningshan (33 ° 11 ́N, 108 ° 12 ́E), Shaanxi Province, 2100– 2400 m, 10.vi. 1987, leg. Houhun Li, genitalia slide No. LWC08447. Paratypes: 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ, same data as holotype. Diagnosis. This species resembles C. lolotiella (Caradja, 1927) in the wing pattern, but its genitalia are conspicuously different from those of the latter species. In the new species, the costa lacks the protuberance, the sacculus has a strong distal prong far exceeding costa and the phallus does not have a cornutus in the male genitalia; the lamella postvaginalis is developed and the signum is peanut-shaped in the female genitalia. Whereas the costa of C. lolotiella bears a distinct protuberance, the sacculus lacks the distal prong, and the phallus bears many small spinelike cornuti; the lamella vaginalis is absent and the signum is rounded. It is also very similar to C. furva Li & Li, sp. n. in the wing pattern, but can be distinguished easily by the genitalia. Description. Adult (Fig. 6): Forewing length 8.5–9.5 mm. Frons, vertex, labial palpus and maxillary palpus black. Antenna black, ciliated with white ventrally. Patagium, tegula and thorax blackish brown. Forewing blackish brown, with three black spots in medial area: first one set near upper corner of cell, second one at middle of fold, third one at middle of dorsum; subterminal fascia represented by seven black spots evenly distributed from distal 1 / 4 near costa to distal 1 / 4 of dorsum, anterior three oblique outwards, posterior four oblique inwards; cilia blackish brown. Hindwing black, cilia with basal one third blackish brown, distal two thirds white. Legs black. Abdomen with anterior half black, posterior half yellow. Male genitalia (Fig. 10). Uncus long and thin, curved down slightly, pointed apically. Gnathos about three fourths length of uncus, upcurved slightly, tapering to pointed tip. Tegumen about twice as long as gnathos. Valva wider in basal two thirds, narrowed to bluntly rounded apex in distal one third; costa long and narrow, concave slightly at base. Sacculus long and narrow, ventrally convex; strong distal prong reaching upward and far exceeding costa. Pseudosaccus thumb-shaped. Saccus broad, concave at middle on anterior margin. Juxta broad V-shaped. Phallus slightly shorter than valva, basally thick, gradually produced to long and thin apical spine; apical spine with small triangular prong; cornutus absent. Female genitalia (Fig. 13). Tergite VIII slightly longer than apophysis posterioris. Lamella postvaginalis broad and short, slightly broader than antrum, convex at middle on posterior margin, wrapped with dense tiny spines posterolaterally. Antrum strongly sclerotized, gradually thickened towards ostium bursae. Ductus bursae long and thin, membranous; ductus seminalis arising from posterior one fifth of ductus bursae. Corpus bursae ovate; signum peanut-shaped, placed at posterior one third. Distribution. China (Shaanxi). Etymology. This species is named in honour of the late Michael Shaffer, who contributed profoundly to the research of Pyraloidea for more than 50 years in the Natural History Museum (BMNH), London.Published as part of Li, Houhun & Li, Weichun, 2010, Four new species of the genus Chrysoteuchia Hübner (Lepidoptera: Crambidae: Crambinae) from China, pp. 33-46 in Zootaxa 2485 on pages 39-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19550

    Draconarius budanlaensis Li & Zhao & Chen & Wu & Li 2019, sp. n.

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    Draconarius budanlaensis Z. Zhao & S. Li, sp. n. Figs 2, 8 Type material. Holotype ♀ (IZCAS-Ar39617): Budanla Mountain (N29.02890º, E92.35338º, 4930 m), Nyalam County, Shigatse, Tibet, China, 10. VIII. 2014, Y.C. Li leg. Etymology. The specific name refers to the type locality, Budanla Mountain; adjective. Diagnosis. Draconarius budanlaensis sp. n. is most similar to D. yadongensis (Hu & Li, 1987). The epigyne of both species has broad teeth that are widely separated; atrium flat and wide; spermathecae close together medially. The two species differ by the locations of the epigynal teeth (laterally in D. budanlaensis sp. n. in Fig. 2A and centrally in D. yadongensis in fig. 20.1 in Hu & Li 1987); the shape of the epigynal teeth (broad and short in D. budanlaensis sp. n. in Fig. 2A and as wide as long in D. yadongensis in fig. 20.1 in Hu & Li 1987), and the length of the posterior margin of the atrium (1/3 as long as wide in D. budanlaensis sp. n. in Fig. 2A and 5 times wider than long in D. yadongensis in fig. 20.1 in Hu & Li 1987). Description. Female (IZCAS-Ar39617). Carapace and legs brown. Clypeus, endites, labium and sternum black-brown. Abdomen grey-brown. The colour of spinnerets equals the carapace. Abdomen with five chevronshaped patterns. Total length 14.10. Carapace 6.41 long, 4.16 wide. Abdomen 7.69 long, 3.95 wide. Eye sizes and interdistances: AME 0.16, ALE 0.20, PME 0.18, PLE 0.19; AME–AME 0.21, AME–ALE 0.17, AME–PME 0.22, ALE–PLE 0, PME–PME 0.29, PME–PLE 0.28. Leg measurements: I 16.79 (4.49, 5.77, 3.92, 2.61); II 15.69 (4.16, 5.13, 3.80, 2.60); III 15.54 (4.01, 4.81, 4.16, 2.56); IV 19.48 (4.80, 6.09, 5.38, 3.21). Epigyne: about 1.5 times wider than long, with 2 broad teeth that are about 3 times wider than long, situated anteriorly and widely separated, hoods distinct, atrium flat and wide, about 1.7 times wider than long, posterior margin of atrium 3 times wider than long; spermathecae longer than wide, spermathecal heads originating anteriorly from the spermathecae; fertilization ducts 3 times wider than long (Fig. 2 A–B). Male. Unknown. Distribution. Known only from Tibet, China (Fig. 8).Published as part of Li, Bing, Zhao, Zhe, Chen, Haifeng, Wu, Zhiyan & Li, Shuqiang, 2019, Four new species of the genus Draconarius Ovtchinnikov, 1999 (Araneae, Agelenidae) from the Tibetan Plateau, China, pp. 141-154 in Zootaxa 4648 (1) on page 143, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4648.1.7, http://zenodo.org/record/335395

    Hengconarius pseudobrunneus Li & Zhao & Zhang & Li 2018, comb. n.

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    Hengconarius pseudobrunneus (Wang, 2003) comb. n. FIGS 19–20 Draconarius pseudobrunneus WaNG 2003: 544, fIGS 52A–B; WaNG et al. 2010: 85, fIGS 361–406, 548; Zhu et al. 2017: 350, fIGS 218A–D. Types. Holotype: ♀ (HNNU), DANZHU He DRAINAGe, (27.631000°N, 98.621000°E, eLeV. 2700 M), 13.5 AIR KM SSW OF GONGSHAN, GONGSHAN CO., NUjIANG, Yunnan, China, 30 JUNe 2000 – 5 JULY 2000, D. KAVANAUGH, C.E. GRISWOLD, H.B. LIANG, D. UBICK, H M. YAN, D.Z. DONG LeG. Paratypes: 3♀♀ (HNNU AND CAS), SAMe DATA AS HOLOTYPe. Other records: 21♀♀ 36♂♂ (HNNU AND CAS), GAOLIGONG SHAN, Yunnan, China. Material examined. 1♀ (IZCAS-AR 33983), 6 KM E OF PIANMA TOWNSHIP (26.002433°N, 98.659067°E, eLeV. 2422 M), LUSHUI COUNTY, NUjIANG OF THe LISU AUTONOMOUS PReFeCTURe, Yunnan, China, 7 DeCeMBeR 2013, Y. LI & J. Liu leg.; 1♀ (IZCAS-Ar33984), Luoshuidong (24.96838°N, 98.81840°E, elev. 1881 m), Jiangdong Village, GUDONG TOWNSHIP, TeNGCHONG COUNTY, BAOSHAN CITY, Yunnan, China, 26 NOVeMBeR 2013, Y. LI & J. LIU LeG. Diagnosis. H. pseudobrunneus IS SIMILAR TO H. incertus AND H. latusincertus IN ePIGYNe SHAPe BUT CAN Be DISTINGUISHeD FROM H. incertus BY THe MeDIALLY SITUATeD SPeRMATHeCAL HeADS, AND FROM H. latusincertus BY THe NARROW ATRIUM, CLeAR COPULATORY DUCT AND NARROW SPeRMATHeCAe (FIGS 19A–B). Description. See WANG (2003). PHOTOS OF BOTH HABITUS AND ePIGYNe ARe PROVIDeD IN THIS STUDY (FIG. 19). Variation: TOTAL LeNGTH VARIeS FROM 6.28 TO 11.23. Distribution. YUNNAN, CHINA (FIG. 20).Published as part of Li, Bing, Zhao, Zhe, Zhang, Chuntian & Li, Shuqiang, 2018, Nuconarius gen. n. and Hengconarius gen. n., two new genera of Coelotinae (Araneae, Agelenidae) spiders from Southwest China, pp. 237-263 in Zootaxa 4457 (2) on pages 258-259, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4457.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/134255

    Kamimuria hunanensis Li & Li 2022, sp. n.

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    Kamimuria hunanensis Li & Li, sp. n. (Figs. 1A, 1B, 2, 6A, 7A, 8) Adult habitus. General color dark brown (Fig. 1A). Head mostly brownish with black subquadrate interocellate patch (Fig. 2A). M-line and tentorial calluses distinct. Antennae dark brown, palpi yellow brown. Pronotum brown with distinct rugosities darker than background color, anterior and lateral margins and midline brown (Fig. 2A). Legs: femora basally yellow to yellow brown, distally dark brown, tibiae and tarsi dark brown; the femoral yellow band widened in mid- and hindlegs and variable in individuals (Figs. 1A, 1B). Wing membrane brownish, veins dark brown (Fig. 6A). Male (Fig. 2A–2C). Forewing length 21.1–24.9 mm, hindwing length 18.1–21.2 mm (n=5). Hemitergal lobe long and slender, ca 4X as long as the wide. In dorsal view, hemitergal lobe strongly recurved, covering posterior part of tergum 9; hemitergal lobe in lateral view gradually and gently upcurved apically, apex with dorsal and ventral spinules (Figs. 2B, 2C). Tergum 9 with dark mesal sclerite bearing sensilla basiconica covering at least ⅔ length of tergum 9 between lateral margins and the sclerite present paler area. Tergum 8 with similar sized sensilla basiconica patch as on tergum 9 (Fig. 2B). Tergum 7 sometimes with only a few sensilla basiconica. Metasternum and abdominal sterna 4–7 with patches of setae (Fig. 7A). Aedeagus (Figs. 2D–F, 8A–C) with basal half mostly membranous but dorsal surface with a brown sclerotized trapezoidal marking (Fig. 2D, 8A). Distal half with large patches of spines interrupted only by a large, dorsal, starfish like membrane and a membranous mesoventral patch (Fig. 2E), in lateral aspect apex with a thumb-like membranous projection (Fig. 2F). The fully everted aedeagus with some differences from Figure 2: ventroapical patch of spinules rhombic (Fig. 8B), apical membranous protrusion widened in lateral aspect (Fig. 8C). Female. Unknown. Type material. Holotype: male (HIST), China: Hunan Province, Zhangjiajie City, Sangzhi County, Badagongshan National Nature Reserve, Tianping Mountains Management Station, N 29.6697, E 110.2948, 1286 m, 2020.VII.21- 27, Chengqing Liao, Min Deng & Guohua Huang. Paratypes: 1 male (HIST), same data as holotype; 2 males (HIST), Hunan Province, Zhangjiajie City, Sangzhi County, Shanlirenjia, N 29.5068, E 110.2996, 1377 m, 2020. VI.22, Chengqing Liao, Min Deng & Guohua Huang. Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the province Hunan where the species was collected. Distribution. China (Hunan Province). Remarks. The male of the new species can be distinguished from all other known species of the genus by the aedeagus with large starfish like dorsal membrane and the membranous mesoventral patch. The aedeagus of K. hunanensis sp. n. is similar to that of K. wangi Sun & Du, 2012, a species reported from Henan and Shaanxi provinces. However, in K. wangi, the aedeagus has a pair of large ventroapical spines (figs. 15–16, Sun & Du 2012).Published as part of Li, Kefan & Li, Weihai, 2022, Two new species of Kamimuria (Plecoptera, Perlidae) from China, pp. 117-129 in Zootaxa 5214 (1) on pages 119-121, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5214.1.5, http://zenodo.org/record/738205

    Scaphidium liui Tang & Li 2010, sp. n.

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    Scaphidium liui Tang & Li, sp. n. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 940ED9AD-9D44-444F-9628-7384469AE8D6 Figs 39–42 Type Material. Holotype: CHINA: Xizang: male, glued on a board with labels as follows: “ Xizang, Motuo County, Yadong, alt. 1250m, 25.V.1980, coll. Jin Gen-Tao & Wu Jian-Yi ” “NO. 24205538” “ Holotype / Scaphidium liui / Tang & Li” [red Figures 3Ι–38. 3Ι–34 Scaphidium inflexitibiale 35–38 S. reni. 3Ι, 35 aedeagus 32, 36 internal sac in detail 33, 37 antenna 34, 38 male front leg in ventral view. Scales = 0.25 mm (3Ι, 32, 35, 36), scales = 1 mm (33, 34, 37, 38). handwritten label] (SEM). Paratypes. CHINA: Xizang: female, Motuo Couty, Kabu, 1070m, 14. V.1980, coll. Jin Gen-Tao & Wu Jian-Yi (NO. 24205537, SEM). BL: 8.0– 9.1 mm, ED: 0.36–0.40 mm, PL / PW of male: 0.79, PL / PW of female: 0.76. Extremely similar to S. reni sp. n., differing only in the following characters: body form slightly narrower; last antennal segment light brown in about apical third; apical portion of elytra indistinctly impressed; internal sac of aedeagus as in Figs 39, 40. Distribution. China (Xizang). Diagnoses. This new species was wrongly recorded as S. dureli Achard, 1922 in He et al., 2009. Scaphidium dureli is now known only from the type locality “BritishPublished as part of Tang, Liang & Li, Li-Zhen, 2010, On Scaphidium grande-complex (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Scaphidiinae), pp. 65-78 in ZooKeys 43 (43) on pages 75-76, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.43.447, http://zenodo.org/record/57665
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