<documentID-CLB-Dataset="35472"ID-DOI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.245.3416"ID-PMC="PMC3577090"ID-Pensoft-Pub="1313-2970-245-1"ID-Pensoft-UUID="FFFF52503A0AFF882450FFB66D45FF8E"ID-PubMed="23431087"ID-Zenodo-Dep="578462"ModsDocID="1313-2970-245-1"checkinTime="1425642919252"checkinUser="pensoft"docAuthor="Bousquet, Yves"docDate="2012"docId="553B4EABEE0F51E286A6B3D4F0D1A897"docLanguage="en"docName="ZooKeys 245: 1-1722"docOrigin="ZooKeys 245"docPubDate="2012-11-28"docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.245.3416"docTitle="Nebria meanyi subsp. meanyi meanyi Van Dyke 1925"docType="treatment"docVersion="10"id="FFFF52503A0AFF882450FFB66D45FF8E"lastPageNumber="141"masterDocId="FFFF52503A0AFF882450FFB66D45FF8E"masterDocTitle="Catalogue of Geadephaga (Coleoptera, Adephaga) of America, north of Mexico"masterLastPageNumber="1722"masterPageNumber="1"pageNumber="141"updateTime="1736396794539"updateUser="felipe">
<mods:affiliationid="E5905DFFD7690AB6CD1BEE670592D20D">Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada</mods:affiliation>
<taxonomicNameid="30330C441D77F4FFAB0514121729F8B6"ID-CoL="45YQ3"LSID="553B4EAB-EE0F-51E2-86A6-B3D4F0D1A897"authority="meanyi Van Dyke, 1925"authorityName="meanyi Van Dyke"authorityYear="1925"class="Insecta"family="Carabidae"genus="Nebria"higherTaxonomySource="GBIF"kingdom="Animalia"lsidName="Nebria meanyi subsp. meanyi"order="Coleoptera"pageId="140"pageNumber="141"phylum="Arthropoda"rank="subSpecies"species="meanyi"subSpecies="meanyi">Nebria meanyi meanyi Van Dyke, 1925</taxonomicName>
Van Dyke, 1925: 118. Type locality: "close to the Nesqually River, M[oun]t Rainier National Park [Pierce County], Washington" (original citation). Holotype (♂) in CAS [# 1623]. Etymology. The specific name was proposed for Professor Edmond S. Meany [1862-1935], mountaineer, state legislator, and teacher of botany and history at the University of Washington. Mount Meany in the Olympic Mountains is named after him.
<paragraphid="8A19D2BB6218DA7C48F03061F767DD3E"pageId="140"pageNumber="141">This subspecies is known from the Skagway area in southeastern Alaska and northwestern British Columbia south along the Cascade Range to Mount Shasta in north-central California [see Kavanaugh 1979a: Fig. 67]. The record from "Whitehorse Pass," Yukon Territory (Kavanaugh 1978: 773), refers to the Skagway area in Alaska (Sydney G. Cannings pers. comm. 2009).</paragraph>