KAVANAUGH, SMITH, & KRASNOBROD: PHILIPPINE CARABID BEETLES 
449 
Notagonum sp. D (Fig. 48), 3 specimens; PH0018; collected in daytime by hand in forest 
Notagonum sp. E (Fig. 49), 1 specimen; PH0020; collected by hand at night in forest 
Notagonum sp. F (Fig. 50), 14 specimens; PH0021, PH0026, PH0027, PH0034; collected by hand at night, 
by beating vegetation, in yellow pan traps, and at ultraviolet light, all in forest, and in malaise trap in open 
area in forest 
?platynine/ ?Iachnophorine sp. (Fig. 51), 1 specimen; PH0002; collected by hand sorting of forest litter. 
The single specimen of this morphospecies, a female, has many features of a platynine, and that is what 
we identified it as initially. However, its subtruncate elytra and elongate mandibles and maxillae are sim¬ 
ilar to those in some members of Neotropical lachnophorine genera, such as Aporesthus Bates. Most 
laclmophorines have the abdominal venter pubescent, but the specimen we examined is not pubescent, 
altliough it does have a few short setae across the last steiTiite near the apical margin. Curiously, a similar 
vestiture pattern is seen in Aporesthus (T.L. Erwin, personal communication). At present, the only 
laclmophorine genus recorded fi'om the Oriental Region is Selina Motschulsky, members of which have 
markedly different body form and structural features; so if this specimen represents a lachnophorine 
species, it will be something either new or currently assigned to some other tribal taxon. 
Perigonini 
Perigona (s. str.) sp. (Fig. 52), 1 specimen; PH0025; collected by mini-Winkler extraction of concentrated 
forest leaf litter 
Perigona {Trechicus) nigriceps (Dejean) (Fig. 53), 1 specimen; PH0051; collected at mercury vapor light in 
forest 
Perigona {Trechicus) sp. (Fig. 54), 4 specimens; PH0015, PH0047; collected by hand sorting of forest litter 
and by mini-Winkler extraction of concentrated forest leaf litter 
Odacanthini 
Dicraspeda brunnea Chaudoir (Fig. 55), 1 specimen; PH0051; collected at mercury vapor light in forest 
Mimocolliuris sp. (Fig. 56), 1 specimen; PH0054; collected by hand at night in forest 
Pentagonicini 
Pentagonica sp. A (Fig. 57), 15 specimens; PH0008, PH0015, PH0032, PH0047, PH0051, PH0064; collect¬ 
ed by hand sorting of forest litter and by mini-Winkler extraction of concentrated forest leaf litter, at mer¬ 
cury vapor light in forest and in malaise trap in open cultivated area near forest 
Pentagonica sp. B (Fig. 58), 2 specimens; PH0057, MHW l; collected by hand sorting of forest litter and in 
yellow pan traps in forest 
Pentagonica sp. C (Fig. 59), 15 specimens; PH0043, PH0049, PH0051, PH0054, PH0062; collecting by hand 
at night and at ultraviolet and mercury vapor hghts, all in forest, and at mercury vapor light in grassland 
Lebiini 
Dolichoctis sp. A (Fig.60 ), 1 specimen; PH0051; collected at mercury vapor light in forest 
Dolichoctis sp. B (Fig. 61), 2 specimens; PH0006; collected at ultraviolet light in forest 
Dolichoctis sp. C (Fig. 62), 1 specimen; PH0039; collected in daytime by hand in grassland and degraded for¬ 
est 
Dolichoctis sp. D (Fig. 63), 1 specimen; PH0034; collected by beating vegetation in forest 
Syntomus sp. (Fig. 64), 1 specimen; PH0064; collected by hand sorting of forest litter 
Lebia {Poecilothais) sp. (Fig. 65), 1 specimen; PH0051; collected at mercury vapor light in forest 
Paraphaea philippinensis (Jedlicka) (Fig. 66), 1 specimen; PH0048; collected by beating and sweeping veg¬ 
etation in forest 
The generic assignment of this species follows Shi et al. (2013). 
