The earwig Proreus simulans (Stål, 1860) is newly reported from southern parts of Korean Peninsula. The natural photos were taken from Gwangyang for the first time in 2013, at last the voucher specimens are collected by light trap from Suncheon in 2018. The species widely distributes throughout the Oriental Region, prefers to live in lowland paddy fields, frequently hides inside grass leaves, so regarded as an important predator of leaf folders on rice, or natural enemy of corn borer. The earwig belongs to Chelisochidae which is also newly recognized family in Korea. The order Dermaptera diversity of Korea is estimated that about 24 species 14 genera 6 families until now.
The complete mitogenome (20,456 bp) of Challia fletcheri (Dermaptera: Pygidicranidae) as the first dermapteran insect is the longest among sequenced insects. The genome contained typical gene sets, but harbored the largest TRU among Exopterygota and Palaeoptera. The AT- and GC-skewness showed more Ts and Gs encoded on the major strand, whereas more As and Cs on the minor strand, presenting a reversal to the general pattern found in most insect mitogenomes. This pattern was explained in terms of inversion of replication origin. The gene arrangement of C. fletcheri genome is unique in insects and differs from the ancestral type found in insects by a series of gene translocations and/or inversions. We hypothesize that the markedly different gene arrangement is probably due to some unique organism-level properties, which allow relaxed selection against mitochondrial gene rearrangement. All phylogenetic analyses consistently placed Orthoptera as the sister to the group composed of a monophyletic Isoptera + Mantodea + Blattodea and a monophyletic Grylloblattodea + Mantophasmatodea + Phasmatodea, and placed Dermaptera as the sister to Plecoptera, leaving them as the most basal lineage of Polyneoptera.
3 Anechura species were reported and reviewed from Korea. The harmandi morph of A. harmandi is first recorded in Korea. Simple diagnoisis with figures were given for all species.