A new species of Phymatodes Mulsant (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae) from China

Abstract A new species Phymatodes (Poecilium) latefasciatus sp. n. (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Cerambycinae, Callidiini) from China is described and illustrated. Features distinguishing the new species from its congeners are presented.

Recently, specimens representing a new species of Phymatodes from Guizhou province of China were discovered and it fits into the subgenus Poecilium according to aforementioned characters. The new species is described herein.
The collection acronyms used in the text are as follows: GZNULS School of Life Sciences, Guizhou Normal University, Guiyang, Guizhou China.

Diagnosis.
Characters of the new species conform with all established characters of subgenus Poecilium, elytra with a cluster of long erect hairs behind scutellum, reddish at base and blackish posteriorly, with two pale bands; eyes nearly divided by emargination; ratio of first hind tarsal segment's length to total length of second and third segments nearly 1:1 (Gressitt 1951, Ohbayashi andNiisato 2007). Thus, it is placed in the subgenus Poecilium.
Phymatodes (Poecilium) latefasciatus sp. n. is distinguished from its congeners by the combination of the following characters: shape of the second elytral band; proportion of reddish brown area on basal elytron to the whole elytron; the color of antennae; and shapes of swelling part of femur. P. latefasciatus can be distinguished from all other congeners by the shape of its 2 nd elytral band which is gradually widening towards suture after mid-point (Fig 1a). In addition to this most obvious one, other characters distinguish the new species from three other morphologically close Chinese species in the same subgenus: P. (Poecilium) maaki (Kraatz, 1879) (Pic 1935, Hua 2002, Löbl and Smetana 2010; and P. (Poecilium) mizunumai Hayashi, 1974 (distribution: Taiwan) (Hayashi 1974, Hua 2002, Chou 2008, Löbl and Smetana 2010. The new species is also different from P. maaki (Kraatz, 1879), a species most similar to the new species, by these characters: 1) proportion of the size of reddish brown area on elytral base to the whole elytron smaller, approximately 1/3; 2) antenna black; 3) clubbed part of meso-femora and hind femora shorter comparing to length of whole femur, suddenly swelling toward tibiae after middle. Beside shape of second elytral band, P. latefasciatus also differs from P. savioi Pic, 1935 by characters: 1) smaller proportion of reddish brown basal elytral area; 2) antenna black; 3) elytral bands ivory not yellowish, and first band not reaching suture. As the above two species, three other characters are also used to distinguish P. latefasciatus from P. mizunumai Hayashi, 1974, 1) antenna black; 2) first elytral band nearly transverse, not arcuate and shape as a caret symbol; 3) ratio of femoral clubbed part to femoral basal part larger.
Description. Female (male unknown). Moderate body size, length 8.4-8.5 mm (holotype 8.4mm), width 2.9 -3.2 mm (measured across humeri, holotype 2.9 mm). Yellowish-brown, head, prothorax, swollen part of femurs black, antennae and tibiae lighter, basal part of elytra (ca 1/3 of total elytral length) reddish brown, the rest black, two subobliquely transverse ivory bands on each elytron. Front nearly flat, transverse; head slightly concave between antennal tubercles which are slightly raised and separated by approximately the width of one antennal socket, front and vertex with sparse punctures and short yellow pubescences on some of these punctures; eyes coarsely-faceted; scape and antennomere 2 with semi-erect long yellow hairs, rest of the antennomeres covered with short dark brown hairs, antennomeres 2, 3 and 4 with sparse long yellow hairs especially at tips, relatively long yellow hairs also presenting at ends of antennomeres 5 to 10 but length gradually reduced by antenna segment; outer tips of antennomeres 6 to 10 slightly serrated.
Prothorax transverse, approximately 1.2 times wide as long, widest and slightly angulated laterally near middle, contracting towards base and narrowest at base; pronotum slightly convex, shining, with irregular punctures and covered with moderately long erect black setae; short thick pale yellow hairs at collar edge and base of pronotum, forming a narrow transverse strip at the base; prosternal intercoxal process short, spine shaped, not reaching coxal middle; scutellum reddish yellow, length longer than width, nearly rectangle, semicircular at end.
Elytron long, approximately 4 times as basal width, parallel sided, with rounded apex; basal third red brown area irregularly dense punctured, with erect hairs, a cluster of long erect brown hairs after scutellum; rest of the elytron covered with dense black hairs except two nearly transverse ivory bands and a narrow golden strip lengthwisely along suture between the two bands; the first ivory band extending from elytral margin, approximately half of elytron width, not reaching suture; the second ivory band slightly curving towards base, gradually widening towards suture after mid-point of elytron, nearly reaching suture but interrupted by the lengthwisely golden strip.
Femora strongly swollen, fore-femur swollen gradually from near fore-coxa, mesofemur and hind femur swollen after approximately half of femoral length; legs cover

A B
with moderately long thick pale golden hairs, hair on tibiae longer and darker than that on femora; non-swollen part of femora reddish brown, swollen parts black; 1 st segment of hind tarsi short, approximately 1.2 times as long as 2 nd and 3 rd together. Abdomen slightly shining with small punctures, with relatively sparse moderately long semi-erect pale yellow hairs.

Modified couplets to key to Chinese Phymatodes species of subgenus Poecilium
A modified key to Phymatodes species of subgenus Poecilium is presented based on Gressitt's (1951, page 228) key to Chinese Phymatodes species. In his key, P. latefasciatus will run to couplet 8. Couplets 8-9 can be modified, as presented blow, to accommodate the new species and other species described in the subgenus after his key published.