1,840 research outputs found

    Serum ACTH and Cortisol Level is Associated with the Acute Gastrointestinal Injury Grade in ICU Patients [Erratum]

    No full text
    Xu W, Qiu Y, Qiu H, Zhong M, Li L. Int J Gen Med. 2024;17:127–134. On page 127, the third author’s name should read from “Hongping Qiu” to “Hongping Qu”. This error was introduced by the Editorial staff during the publication process

    Last words from Montmartre

    No full text
    When Taiwanese author Qiu Miaojin ended her life in 1995, she left behind her final work, the experimental novel Last Words from Montmartre. This article outlines some of the challenges in translating Qiu Miaojin's novel from Chinese to English. Structured as a series of letters to mirror the novel's own epistolary form, the article discusses how, supported by the novel's constructed chaos, Qiu's narrator occupies several distinct genders over the course of the novel. The authors argue that what might be construed in certain Western literary traditions as the novel's excessive emotionality is in fact a radical act of expression and even resistance to prevailing calls for queer 'reticence' in the time and place of its production

    QIU XIAOLONG’S NOVELS: AMERICAN DETECTIVE STORIES WITH CHINESE ROOTS

    No full text
    Qiu Xiaolong is an American writer born in China, but he has been living in the United States since 1988. He wrote eleven novels about Inspector Chen, who lives in Shanghai and investigates crimes committed in that city. One of the features of Qiu Xiaolong’s work is insertions of poetry. Its main character is an educated person, he writes poetry himself, translates and actively uses the Chinese poetic heritage to express feelings. The author uses the form of a detective novel to show the various problems of modern China (the period covered is from the 1990s to the present day)

    Eupolyphaga hanae Qiu & Che & Wang 2018, sp. nov.

    No full text
    Eupolyphaga hanae sp. nov. (Figs. 5 E–J; 13 G–I; 19 A–D; 38 C–D, M; 40 A–K; 41 A–H) Type material. Holotype: CHINA: Sichuan: male (SWU ex LQLC), Puzhao Temple [普照寺], Daguan Town [大观镇], Dujiangyan Prefectural-Level City [都江堰市], Chengdu City [成都市], 770 m, found inside tree holes around the root of a broadleaf tree, 19.V.2015, Lu Qiu & Jing-Fei Han leg., reared by Lu Qiu from the nymph. Paratypes: Sichuan: 1 male and 1 female (LQLC, male in 100% alcohol), same data as the holotype, reared by Lu Qiu from the nymphs; 6 males and 5 females (SWU ex LQLC, 3 males and 2 females in 100% alcohol), Laogangmo Village [老岗磨村], Taixing Township [太兴乡], Fuxing Town [复兴镇], Shehong County [射洪县], Suining City [遂宁市], found around an old house, 8.III.2016, Lei Wang leg., males and parts of the females reared by Lu Qiu from the nymphs. Chongqing: 9 males and 4 females (SWU, ex LQLC, 7 males and 2 females in 100% alcohol), Majiagou [马家沟], near Feilongmiao Temple [飞龙庙], Mt. Simianshan [四面山], Jiangjin District [江 津区], 970 m, found inside the loose muddy sand under the woodpile near an old farm house, 5.VI.2016, Hao Xu, Jian-Yue Qiu & Lu Qiu leg., adult males all reared by Lu Qiu from the nymphs; 1 female (SWU), Shunzigou [笋子 沟], Mt. Simianshan, Jiangjin District, found inside a hole under a cliff, 6.III.2016, Jian-Yue Qiu & Hao Xu leg.; 1 male and 1 female (SWU), Mt. Jinyunshan [缙云山], Beibei District, 650m, 22.IX.2018, Lu Qiu leg. Guizhou: 1 male (GZU), Linjiang village [蔺江村], Xishui County [习水县], Zhunyi City [遵义市], 24-30.IX.2000, Qiong- Zhang Song leg. Other material examined. Several nymphs and oothecae (SWU), same data as the types from Dujiangyan, Suining and Mt. Simianshan. Diagnosis. Male of this species superficially resembles E. hupingensis sp. nov., but can be distinguished from the latter by the following characteristics: 1) abdomen and legs whitish yellow (Fig. 5 F), while E. hupingensis with blackish legs and abdomen (Fig. 5 B); 2) styli thin and small (Fig. 19 B), while styli stout and robust in E. hupingensis (Fig. 20 B); 3) L3 thin, anterior of L1 reduced, R2 round (Fig. 19 C–D), while L3 robust, anterior of L1 elongated, R2 with median concave in E. hupingensis (Fig. 20 C–D). Description. Male. General: measurements (mm): body length: 16.7–21.4, overall length: 27.6–36.8, pronotum length×width 5.1–5.8×8.2–9.4, tegmen length: 23.8–33.0. Small to large, brown to blackish brown in dorsal view, light pale yellow to light orange in ventral view, tegmina with dense maculae (Fig. 5 E–H). Head: round, as long as width; reddish brown, darker at vertex and the space between ocelli. Interocular space very narrow. Ocelli large, protruded, Ocelli ridge wide. Frons brownish yellow, each lateral with a large orange spot which next to the antennal socket. Antennae brown. Clypeus small, flat, ante-clypeus light orange, lateral sides white; post-clypeus reddish brown, sometimes divided by a light colored longitudinal line medially. Labrum small, brown, hind margin thin, emarginated. Maxillary palpi and labial palpi reddish brown, with joint parts and apex whitish yellow (Fig. 13 H–I). Pronotum: unicolored, reddish brown to brown. Surface generally with many small yellowish-brown pubescence and very a few reddish-brown setae, margins with additional long reddish-brown setae. Apex convex and truncated; lateral fore borders oblique roundly; lateral parts round, becoming straight towards hind part, and forming obtuse angle with the hind margin; hind margin slightly outward (Fig. 13 G). Tegmina and wings: exceeded the end of abdomen about 9.0– 14.4 mm. Tegmina dark brown, irregularly with many small hyaline maculae, denser in margins and distal half of tegmen, and more likely with several large hyaline spots around R. Wings hyaline, slightly orange, darker toward apex, venation distinct, distal portion of M, CuA densely with black maculae. Legs: with brownish pubescence, whitish yellow, tibiae darker; tibial spines usually dark reddish brown with basal portion light reddish brown. Abdomen: whitish yellow. Supra-anal plate apex slightly emarginated, anterior margin and paraprocts well pubescent; two median sclerites distinct, unequalsized; cerci yellow, slender (Fig. 19 A). Subgenital plate generally symmetrical, unicolored for the exposed part, lateral corners round, anterior margin fully with setae; styli yellow, very small (Fig. 19 B). Genitalia: well sclerited. Left phallomere: L1 very short, anterior part reduced, left with a very small process, two hind lobes robust; L2 curved roundly, right end with two short processes; L3 strongly curved, apex mildly sharped; pda well developed, paa strongly protruded. Right phallomere: small. R1M short; R1L thoroughly sclerited, thick; R2 small, divides into two round chunks, the chunks generally equal sized (Fig. 19 C–D). Female. Measurements (mm): body length: 24.3–27.9, body width: 18.4–20.5. Unicolored, pubescent, dark brown both in dorsal and ventral view, spines on the legs dark brown. Supra-anal plate transverse type, hind margin nearly straight, median distinctly emarginated, and divided by a longitudinal line. Subgenital plate with median protruded, bulged (Fig. 5 I–J). Nymph. Coloration varies from yellowish brown to dark brown, some individuals with abdomen orange, but the rest parts brown. Ootheca. As Fig. 38 C–D and M, reddish brown, serration of keel large, curved. Respiratory canals well developed. The longitudinal ridges distinct. Variation. Male of the species varied in the following characters: 1) body size, according to the material we examined, we found the Suining and Dujiangyan populations with shorter tegmina and body size (Fig. 5 E–F, H), while the Simianshan population more possible to with larger body and longer tegmina (Fig. 5 G); 2) the hyaline macula on tegmina ranging from small spots to extremely large spots (Fig. 5 E, H); 3) usually the black maculae on wings distribute on the margin of M and CuA, but some extreme individuals with the maculae expand to the median of CuA area; 4) usually individuals may have dark brown pronotum and tegmina, while some individuals may have light colored pronotum and tegmina (generally light yellowish rather than brown). Natural History. This species can be found inside the dry loose earth around old houses (Figs. 40 G–J; 41 D–E), or in the broad-leaved forest (Fig. 40 A); in the forest, they would like to live together in the tree holes, the humus in the holes is a little wet, but is loose enough for them to creep (Fig. 40 B–D). In Mt. Simianshan, E. hanae were found in a cliff hole, which is difficult to be wetted by the rain, the earth in the hole is wet but loose for E. hanae (Fig. 41 A–C); plenty individuals of E. hanae were also found under the woodpiles next to a farm house at Mt. Simianshan, the earth under the woodpiles is slightly wet and loose, which is mixed with bits of wood (Fig. 41 E); the house-owner said these roaches were not originally live under her woodpiles, they were brought by the owner from the cliff at the hillside. Mt. Simianshan is wet, but the environment under the cliff is dry, the roaches were found inside the sand; the local people call Eupolyphaga roaches as “turtle bugs”, they catch them and put them in the spirit for medicine use, the house-owner also put E. hanae under her woodpiles to breed them for medicine use. Etymology. This species is named after Ms. Jing-Fei Han, who helped the first author collect the type specimens from Dujiangyan. Distribution. China (Sichuan, Chongqing, Guizhou) (Fig. 2). Remarks. A species distributes around Chongqing, Sichuan and Guizhou. This new species was firstly noticed by the first author in Dujiangyan since 2012, but only a photo left (Fig. 40 C). Later from 2015 to 2016, the first author successfully obtained this species from Dujiangyan again (Fig. 40 D–F), and discovered two other populations from Suining, Sichuan and Mt. Simianshan, Chongqing. All the male adults were reared from the nymphs and oothecae were obtained from the females (Figs. 40 E–F, K; 41 F–H). One specimen from GZU was captured from Xishui, where near the border between Sichuan, Chongqing and Guizhou (Fig. 2). Before the present paper is published, a pair of this new species were captured from Mt. Jinyunshan, Chongqing. The two individuals as well as several nymphs were found inside the humus under a stone table in the forest and a nearby small hole under a cliff.Published as part of Qiu, Lu, Che, Yang-Li & Wang, Zong-Qing, 2018, A taxonomic study of Eupolyphaga Chopard, 1929 (Blattodea: Corydiidae: Corydiinae), pp. 1-68 in Zootaxa 4506 (1) on pages 16-18, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4506.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/260671

    Gated relational stacked denoising autoencoder with localized author embedding for global citation recommendation

    No full text
    Citation recommendation is an effective and efficient way to facilitate authors finding desired references. This paper presents a novel neural network based model, called gated relational probabilistic stacked denoising autoencoder with localized author (GRSLA) embedding, for global citation recommendation task. Our model is comprised of two modules with different neural network architecture. For each citing and cited papers, we use a gated paper embedding module, which is extended from probabilistic stacked denoising autoencoder (PSDAE) by adding gated units, to obtain their paper vectors. The added gated units are able to utilize text information of cited paper to refine the vector representation of citing paper in multiple semantic levels. For an author in papers, we first apply topic model to obtain his/her semantic neighbors, and then use a localized author embedding (LAE) module to excavate author vector representation from semantic and explicit neighbors. Unlike most graph convolutional network (GCN) based methods, the LAE module is able to avoid computing global Laplacian in whole graph by taking limited neighbors. Moreover, the LAE module can also be stacked to absorb more neighbors, which makes our model have high extendibility. Based on the generation process of GRSLA, we also derive a learning algorithm of our model by maximum a posteriori (MAP) estimation. We conduct experiments on the AAN, DBLP and CORD-19 datasets, and the results show that GRSLA model works well than previous global citation recommendation methods

    The Study of Kangxi' Emperor's Chun Qiu Jie Yi

    No full text
    When Chun Qiu was passed down to Kangxi in the early Qing Dynasty, it had already had a history of two millennia in which it underwent elaborations and explanations by both emperors and scholars. The preceding explicatory attempts had accumulated to not only form an enormous system of interpretation but also develop many important issues. After having ascended to authority, Emperor Kangxi commissioned the Hanlin imperial academicians to expound Chun Qiu for him. Kangxi Emperor\ue2s Chun Qiu Jie Yi (referred to hereafter as Chun Qiu Jie Yi) is an anthology of the teaching materials used in the lectures. As newcomers to the long procession of previous interpreters of Chun Qiu, Kangxi and the academicians could not help having to respond to both the existent scholarship on the gist and calligraphy of the classic and the issues foregrounded by biographies and explanatory notes on which their own explications were based. Moreover, when it came to appropriating and extolling Chinese classics, the emperors reigning at the dawn of the Qing Dynasty, being foreign rulers, could not possibly bypass the exegetical tradition of Chun Qiu and were expected to declare their perspectives on the issues emphasized therein. Therefore, one of the aims of this dissertation is to examine how Chun Qiu Jie Yi responds to the issues in the exegetical system of Chun Qiu. In addition, Chun Qiu Jie Yi should be regarded as a work collaboratively written by Emperor Kangxi and his assembly of lecturers specializing in classics, known as rijiang officials. Since as early as the Song Dynasty, the jingyan rijiang officials have conferred upon themselves grand ideals and great duties, maintaining \ue2the greatest responsibilities of the country rest upon the shoulders of zaixiang (the prime minister) and jingyan: whereas the former is responsible for bringing order and peace to the country, the latter is held accountable for imparting morality and virtues to the sovereign.\ue2 In Qing, a dynasty characterized by the growing concentration of power in one individual, becoming the emperor\ue2s rijiang official virtually amounted to an opportunity of a lifetime, for it allowed scholars to mold the sovereign\ue2s thinking thoroughly over an extended period of time, thereby enabling them to realize their aspiration of bettering the world. Since Chun Qiu primarily concerns events in the political realm, it has lent itself to initiating and facilitating discussions of politics as the rijiang officials saw fit. Here, what demands attention is that, in the study, the monarch temporarily assumed the role of a student while his officials preached. Beyond the study, however, the hierarchy was resumed and the ruler-subject relationship was restored. Such alternation of the dual relationship is also an aspect worthy of further consideration in Chun Qiu Jie Yi. This dissertation intends to compare the exegetic works cited in Chun Qiu Jie Yi, in hopes of assessing the attainability of the rijiang officials\ue2 aspiration to act as the emperor\ue2s mentors. The dissertation approaches Chun Qiu Jie Yi as a historical activity. Hence, it attempts to contextualize the anthology, to reconstruct the circumstances in which Kangxi and his rijiang officials undertook the explication of Chu Qiu, and to scrutinize their interpretive behaviors and the underlying ideologies as well as purposes. On the grounds of this premise, when discussing the hermeneutic activities in Chun Qiu Jie Yi, the dissertation aims to first point out the ideas the anthology conveys, highlighting its concerns about a sovereign\ue2s method of governing a country. Second, the dissertation shifts the focus from what the anthology is about to how Kangxi and his officials\ue2 viewpoints on political doctrines were articulated. It proceeds to analyze the hermeneutics as well as ensuing pitfalls of Chun Qiu Jie Yi, with the aim of calling attention to the similarities between the anthology\ue2s reading of Chun Qiu and the decoding activity that extends from the author (real or implied) to the reader (real or ideal) as proposed in the contemporary theory of narratology. Third, the dissertation zeroes in on the exegetic works cited in Chun Qiu Jie Yi in order to, on the one hand, investigate the anthology\ue2s response to and evasion of key issues accentuated by scholars of preceding dynasties and the history of Chu Qiu studies and, on the other hand, probe into the interrelationship between the exegesis of the classic and the political appropriation of such a literary classic as exemplified therein. Finally, the dissertation ventures to suggest that in the heart of the hermeneutics adopted in Chun Qiu Jie Yi lies a structure akin to a flower with multiple layers of petals\ue2a structure of thinking wherein the anthology strives to both establish its legitimacy in understanding the profound teachings of Confucius and canonize its interpretation as the paradigm their literary and political successors would consult. It concerns not only how traditional intellectuals approached an ancient classic but also how scholars of Han descent, in particular, consciously appropriated the classic to serve their roles as teachers for a foreign emperor in early Qing

    Adjective Gradability across Speech and Writing – A Corpus Study Based on ICE-GB

    No full text
    Qiu, Yinqing.Thesis Ph.D. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2015.Includes bibliographical references (leaves ).Abstracts also in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on …)

    Eupolyphaga wooi Qiu & Che & Wang 2018, sp. nov.

    No full text
    Eupolyphaga wooi sp. nov. (Figs. 10 I–P; 16 G–I; 37 A–D; 38 G, O; 45 A–H) Type material. Holotype: CHINA: Yunnan: male (SWU), beside S307 road, Xiaohebian Stream [小河边沟], Yaonan Village [耀南村], Mt. Ailaoshan [哀牢山], Xinping County [新平县], Yuxi City [玉溪市], 1955m, 11.V.2016, Lu Qiu & Zhi-Wei Qiu leg. Paratypes: 5 females (SWU, 3 in 100% alcohol), same data as the holotype; 1 male (SWU), Changning County [昌宁县], Baoshan City [保山市], 1850m, 23.VI.1980, no collector recorded; 1 male (SWU), Changning County, Baoshan City, 1650m, 25.VI.1980, no collector recorded; 1 male (SWU), Shili Township [诗礼乡], Fengqing County [凤庆县], Lincang City [临沧市], 1800m, 7.VII.1980, Fu Zhang leg.; 1 male (SWU), Liujiegongshe (now Liujie Town) [六街镇], Jinning County [晋宁县], Kunming City, 1960m, 16.VII.1980, no collector recorded. Other material examined. Several nymphs and oothecae (SWU, nymphs all preserved in 100% alcohol), same data as the holotype. Diagnosis. Resembles E. pilosa sp. nov. by the similar maculae pattern on tegmina in male, but differs from the latter by the much narrower anterior margin of pronotum (usually indistinct, some individuals nearly disappeared, while narrow but clear in E. pilosa sp. nov.), larger body size (male body length 17.8–20.1 mm, female 19.3–20.2mm; while male body length 15.6–16.8mm, female 15.2–17.6mm in E. pilosa sp. nov.), and pronotum with setae (while with long hair in E. pilosa sp. nov.). Description. Male. General: measurements (mm): body length: 17.8–20.1, overall length: 28.1–31.5, pronotum length×width: 4.9–5.2×7.5–7.8, tegmen length: 23.9–27.6. Median to large, slender. Ventral surface chocolate, tegmina maculated (Fig. 10 I–L). Head: blackish brown. Interocular space moderate, ocelli large, ocelli ridge slightly curved. Frons wrinkled. Antennae yellowish brown. Clypeus distinct, lateral borders yellowish, anteclypeus yellow, post-clypeus brown. Labrum brown, wide, apex distinctly emarginated. Maxillary palpi and labial palpi brown (Fig. 16 H–I). Pronotum: brown to dark brown, anterior with a very narrow whitish margin, sometimes reduced. Surface generally with many small brownish pubescence and setae, lateral and anterior margins with long setae additionally. Anterior margin with apex strongly concave, lateral fore borders round, then becoming straight, hind margin convex (Fig. 16 G). Tegmina and w ings: exceeded the end of abdomen 9.6–12.1 mm. Tegmina hyaline, light yellowish brown, scatter with small, distinct and brown spots, several large spots distributed among the small spots, outer margin at the base usually strong maculated. Wings hyaline, light brown, apex slightly maculated. Legs: brown to blackish brown, long haired; tibial spines brown. Abdomen: pubescent, lateral portions dimly yellowish brown, median and the apex dark brown to blackish brown. Supra-anal plate well pubescent, apex slightly protruded; two median sclerites large, cerci slender (Fig. 37 A). Subgenital plate unicolored, brown to blackish brown for the exposed part, slightly asymmetrical, right portion lager than the left, hind margin concave; styli similar, small but long (Fig. 37 B). Genitalia: well sclerotized. Left phallomere: small, L1 round anteriorly and with a small process towards left, media of L1 narrow, two hind lobes wide apart; L2 slender, right with two processes, wrench like; pda and paa elongate and straight; L3 gradually narrowed, the hook part bend roundly; L8 irregular. Right phallomere: large, in right-ventral view, R1M with enlarged and transparent hind portion; R2 with two large chunks (Fig. 37 C–D). Female. Measurements (mm): body length: 19.3–20.2, body width: 13.2–14.5. Generally, with two color type, viz. the brown type (Fig. 10 M–N) and the black type (Fig. 10 O–P), body round, maculated. Head black, the areas around eyes and antennal sockets yellowish, ante-clypeus yellowish white, labrum yellow, slightly brownish, maxillary palpi and labial palpi brown. Pro-, meso- and metanotum setose, dark brown to black. Legs brown to blackish brown, with joint parts yellow. Abdomen terga with median and lateral dimly yellowish; sternites brown to brownish black, median with a weak longitudinal yellowish line. Supra-anal plate small, slightly protruded, median of distal margin with a small emargination. Subgenital plate protruded type, bulged. Nymph. The markings on the body more distinct and coloration lighter than the adult female. Ootheca. As Fig. 38 G and O, reddish brown, serration of keel small, curved, triangle shape, apex blunt. Respiratory canals invisible. The longitudinal ridges distinct. Etymology. This species is named in honour of the Chinese entomologist Fo-Ching Woo (Fu-Zhen Wu), for his contributions to Chinese cockroach study. Natural History. Females, nymphs and oothecae were found in shallow holes beside the mountain road in Mt. Ailaoshan, the holes usually fulfilled by dead leaves, detritus, or sandy soil (Fig. 45 A–G). Distribution. China (Yunnan) (Fig. 3). Remarks. Plenty living females and nymphs were collected by the first author and Mr. Zhi-Wei Qiu from Mt. Ailaoshan, but we only obtained one adult male from the nymph (Fig. 45 H), the rest all died mysterious. Fortunately, four male specimens of the species were found from the old collection of SWU, which were collected from several localities in Yunnan.Published as part of Qiu, Lu, Che, Yang-Li & Wang, Zong-Qing, 2018, A taxonomic study of Eupolyphaga Chopard, 1929 (Blattodea: Corydiidae: Corydiinae), pp. 1-68 in Zootaxa 4506 (1) on pages 55-56, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4506.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/260671

    Eupolyphaga pilosa Qiu & Che & Wang 2018, sp. nov.

    No full text
    Eupolyphaga pilosa sp. nov. (Figs. 8 A–D; 14 J–L; 34 A–D; 38 I, Q; 43 A–F) Type material. Holotype: CHINA: Yunnan: male (SWU), A valley Near Zhazi [柞子], 12 km to the east of Pantiange Township [攀天阁乡], Weixi County [维西县], Diqing Prefecture [迪庆州], 2970 m, found in dry soil around the root of a pine tree, 21.VIII.2015, Lu Qiu leg. Paratypes: CHINA: Yunnan: 1 male and 3 females (SWU, 1 male and 2 females in 100% alcohol), same data as the holotype. Other material examined. Several nymphs and oothecae (SWU), same data as the holotype. Diagnosis. See under E. nigrinotum. Description. Male. General: measurements (mm): body length: 15.6–16.8, overall length: 26.9–29.2, pronotum length×width: 4.6–4.9×7.3–8.1, tegmen length: 23.1–25.6. Small size, brown, long haired, tegmina maculated (Fig. 8 A–B). Head: dark brown, long haired. Interocular space narrow. Ocelli moderate, ocelli ridge curved. Antennae brown. Clypeus small; ante-clypeus yellow, occupied the hind and lateral margins of the clypeus; post-clypeus dark brown. Labrum brown, distal margin depressed. Maxillary palpi and labial palpi dark brown, with joint parts yellow (Fig. 14 K–L). Pronotum: dark brown, anterior with yellowish margin narrowly. Surface long haired, margins setose. Apex truncated, lateral and hind margins round (Fig. 14 J). Tegmina and wings: beyond the end of abdomen about 11.4–12.1 mm. Tegmina hyaline, light brownish yellow, sparsely covered with unequal sized dark brown speckles, denser at base. Wings hyaline, distal slightly maculated. Legs: long haired, dark brown, joint part yellow; tibial spines brown; arolia white. Abdomen: smooth, dark brown, median with an interrupted longitudinal line. Supra-anal plate well pubescent, apex protruded; two median sclerites plate-like, cerci short (Fig. 34 A). Subgenital plate slightly asymmetrical, the exposed part narrow, dark brown, but slightly yellowish; styli short, dark brown (Fig. 34 B). Genitalia: well sclerotized. Left phallomere: L1 with round anterior part, left with a long process; L2 curved sharply, right end with two irregular processes; L3 gradually thinner toward apex, nearly straight, the hook curved rectangularly; pda and paa short, bud-like. Right phallomere: large. R1M enlarged posteriorly; R1L thin; R3 hyaline in hind median; R2 with two chunks, the inner one larger than the outer one, inner one quadrate, and outer one round (Fig. 34 C–D). Female. Measurements (mm): body length: 15.2–17.6, body width: 10.6–11.9. Brown, pubescent; head brown, ocelli small, white, clypeus round, brown, ante-clypeus white, labrum with basal half white, the rest yellowish brown; legs yellowish brown to brown; pronotum brown, meso- and meta- notum brown, each median usually with two dim yellowish spots, abdomen in dorsal view, reddish brown, each segments slightly yellowish medially, median with a brown longitudinal line, in ventral view dark brown, median with a yellowish longitudinal line; supra-anal plate protruded, apex emarginated, median with a longitudinal line; subgenital plate protruded type, bulged, round (Fig. 8 C–D). Nymph. Similar to the female, but with lighter coloration, markings more distinct. Ootheca. As Fig. 38 I and Q, reddish brown, serration of keel short, triangular. The longitudinal ridges shallow. Etymology. The species name “pilosa” indicating the long hair on pronotum. Natural History. Living individuals were all collected by the first author around a pine tree in a valley during a rainy day. The environment is very cold and wet, but the roaches all stayed around the pine tree where can’t be wet by the rain, they hided themselves inside the dry earth, but the exuviae and abandoned ootheca on the surface exposed them (Fig. 43 A–F). Distribution. China (Yunnan) (Fig. 3).Published as part of Qiu, Lu, Che, Yang-Li & Wang, Zong-Qing, 2018, A taxonomic study of Eupolyphaga Chopard, 1929 (Blattodea: Corydiidae: Corydiinae), pp. 1-68 in Zootaxa 4506 (1) on pages 50-52, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4506.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/260671
    corecore