The New World whirligig beetles of the genus Dineutus Macleay, 1825 (Coleoptera, Gyrinidae, Gyrininae, Dineutini)
Author
Gustafson, Grey T.
Department of Biology and Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA
gtgustafson@gmail.com
Author
Miller, Kelly B.
Department of Biology and Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA
text
ZooKeys
2015
2015-01-23
476
1
135
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.476.8630
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.476.8630
1313-2970-476-1
086D71AF8A294F028559C2E0456B5C5B
FC4DC947FF97FF86190BFFD8B82CAB56
578702
Dineutus ciliatus (Forsberg, 1821)
Figures 12
, 13
, 53
Gyrinus ciliatus
Forsberg 1821
: 312,
Gyrinus vittatus
Germar 1824
: 32 [synonymy by
Ochs 1925b
],
Cyclous vittatus
: Dejean 1833: 58,
Dineutes vittatus
:
Brulle
1835
: 240,
Cyclous opacus
Melsheimer, 1846: 29 [synonymy by
LeConte 1868
],
Dineutus vittatus
:
LeConte 1868
: 366,
Dineutes vittatus
:
Regimbart
1882
: 411, [
Dineutes hastatus
:
Regimbart
1882
: 426 misidentified],
Dineutes ciliatus
:
Severin 1889
: 152,
Dineutes vittatus
:
Severin 1889
: 155,
Dineutes opacus
:
Severin 1889
: 154,
Dineutes vittatus
:
Regimbart
1892
: 739, [
Dineutes hastatus
:
Regimbart
1892
: 740 misidentified],
Dineutes inflatus
Blackburn 1895: 28 [synonymy by
Ochs 1926a
],
Dineutus ciliatus
:
Ochs 1925b
: 174,
Dineutus (Dineutus) vittatus
:
Hatch 1926
: 311,
Dineutus (Dineutus) ciliatus
:
Ochs 1926a
: 138,
Dineutus vittatus
:
Leonard 1928
: 262,
Dineutus ciliatus
:
Ochs 1930
: 135,
Dineutus (Dineutus) ciliatus
: Hatch 1930: 19,
Dineutus vittatus
:
Blackwelder 1944
: 81.
Dineutus (Dineutus) ciliatus
:
Ochs 1949
: 286,
Dineutus (Protodineutus) ciliatus
:
Guignot 1950
: 126,
Dineutus (Cyclinus) ciliatus
:
Brinck 1955
: 106,
Dineutus ciliatus
:
Ciegler et al. 2003
: 15.
Type locality.
East Indies, likely in error. The type is labeled,
"Ind."
according to
Ochs (1949)
, which
Young (1954)
suggested could refer to Indiana, though
Forsberg's
(1821)
indicated "Indies oriental."
Specimens examined.
73
Type material.
Not examined.
Ochs (1925b)
examined
Forsberg's
types when establishing his synonymies, therefore the identity of
Dineutus ciliatus
is well established in relation to its most common synonym
Dineutes vittatus
.
Material examined.
U.S.A.:
Alabama:
U.S.A.: Alabama: Conecuh Co., 13 km E Evergreen on Hwy 31, Old Town Creek,
31°27.037'N
,
86°49.81'W
, 53 m, 11.v.2006, leg. K.B. Miller, KBM1105061 (6 ex. MSBA); Marion Co., Barnsville, 23.viii.1931, leg. R.H. Beamer (1 ex. KSEM);
Connecticut:
New London Co., New London, 16.v.1931, leg. M. Sanderson (1 ex. KSEM);
Delaware:
New Castle Co., Glasgow, 4.v.1957, leg. L.R. Krusberg (1 ex. FSCA);
Louisiana:
Beaugarl Co., 13.viii.1928, leg. R.H. Beamer Jr. (4 ex. KSEM);
Maryland:
Prince
George's
Co., College Park, 4.x.1947, leg. B.K. Dozier (6 ex. FSCA);
Massachusetts:
Hampshire Co., Amherst, 16.vi.1904 (1 ex. MTEC); Norfolk Co., Blue Hills Reservation, v.1929, leg. G.C. Wheeler (1 ex. FSCA);
New Jersey:
Bergen Co., Dumont Woods, 9.iv.1931, leg. C.L. Ragot (1 ex. FSCA); Bergen Co., Woodcliff Lake, 20.v.1934 (3 ex. FSCA); Gloucester Co., 1 mi S Paulsboro, 3.vii.1959, leg. H.L. Dozier (4 ex. FSCA); Ocean Co., Cassville, branch of
Tom's
River, vi.1931, leg. Siepmann (4 ex. FSCA); Lakehurst, 6.v.1934, leg. C.L. Ragot (1 ex. FSCA);
New York:
Westchester Co., White Plains, 2.x.1921, leg. E.H.P. Squire (1 ex. FSCA); same as previous except: 23.viii.1922 (2 ex. FSCA); same as previous except: 5.ix.1922 (2 ex. FSCA); 10.vi.1923 (19 ex. FSCA);
North Carolina:
Wake Co., Raleigh, leg. S.P. Whitney (1 ex. FSCA);
Oklahoma:
Larimer Co., 5 mi W Red Oak, 2.vii.1977, leg. K.H. Stephan (7 ex. FSCA); U.S.A.: Oklahoma: Larimer Co., 5 mi W Red Oak, vii.1980, leg. K.H. Stephan (1 ex. FSCA); Murray Co., Arbuckle Mts., nr Davis, 21.vi.1922 (1 ex. FSCA);
Rhode Island:
Kent Co.,
"Greenwich"
, 15.vii.1934, leg. W. Sanderson (3 ex. KSEM);
South Carolina:
Sumter Co., 29.iv.1968, leg. L.L. Lampert, on stream (1 ex. FSCA).
No locality information:
"Station."
, 8.viii.1901, "Hatch Ex." (1 ex. MTEC).
Diagnosis.
Male (Fig.
12C-D
): Size: 12.7-14.6 mm. Body form broadly roundly oval; antennal flagellum thick and round, ultimate segment rounded; elytral apices regularly rounded, serration absent, elytra with bronzy lateral stripe disappearing apically, elytral striae weakly developed, 8th elytral stria without punctures present or strongly evident; profemora without sub-apicoventral tooth; protibiae club-shaped; anterior mesotarsal claw (Fig.
13C
) with denticle; venter normally dark reddish brown, rarely reddish orange (teneral individuals); Aedeagus (Fig.
13A, B, D
) medial lobe in dorsal view with apicomedial papilla, in ventral view sperm-groove parallel sided, in lateral view median lobe curved, apically narrow, parameres weakly rounded laterally in apical 1/3.
Female (Fig.
12A-B
): Size: 11.5-14.6 mm. Body form broadly roundly oval; Antennal flagellum thick and round, ultimate segment rounded; elytral apices regularly rounded, serration absent, elytra with bronzy lateral stripe disappearing apically, elytral striae weakly developed, 8th elytral stria without punctures present or strongly evident; profemora without sub-apicoventral tooth; protibiae club-shaped; venter normally dark reddish brown, rarely reddish orange (teneral individuals).
Figure 12.
Dineutus ciliatus
.
A
♀ dorsal habitus
B
♀ ventral habitus
C
♂ dorsal habitus
D
♂ ventral habitus. All scale bars ≈ 2 mm.
Figure 13.
Dineutus ciliatus
.
A
aedeagus dorsal view
B
aedeagus ventral view
C
♂ mesotarsal claws
D
aedeagus lateral view. Scale bar for
C
≈ 0.10 mm all others ≈ 1 mm.
Differential diagnosis.
This species is most easily distinguished from other members of North American
Dineutus
by the presence of a bronzy lateral stripe on each elytron, a regularly oval body form, large size, absence of a profemoral sub-apicoventral tooth in the male, and the form of the male aedeagus (Fig.
13A
).
Dineutus ciliatus
is most similar to
Dineutus robertsi
, but there are several characters that readily separate the two species. Both sexes of
Dineutus ciliatus
have the venter dark reddish brown in color instead of light yellowish orange (most evident on the epipleura), the antennal flagellum thicker and rounder with the ultimate segment rounded instead of thinner and more parallel sided with an angled ultimate segment, and the 8th elytral stria with punctures absent or indistinct. The venter coloration of teneral individuals is lighter, reddish orange, but this does not closely approach that of
Dineutus robertsi
, which is much more yellow in color. Males of
Dineutus ciliatus
also have the anterior mesotarsal claws with a more weakly developed denticle on their ventral surface, and a smaller general body size than
Dineutus robertsi
. The aedeagus (Fig.
13
) of
Dineutus ciliatus
has the median lobe narrow and dorsally curved in lateral view with an apicomedial papilla visible in both dorsal and ventral views. The sperm-groove is much more parallel-sided in
Dineutus ciliatus
than
Dineutus robertsi
. Finally, the parameres of
Dineutus ciliatus
are weakly lateral curved in the apical 1/3 instead of strongly curved as in
Dineutus robertsi
.
Distribution
(Fig.
53B
).
Most of the eastern half of the United Sates (
Folkerts 1978
;
Malcolm 1971
;
Sanderson 1982
;
Wood 1962
;
Young 1954
).
Habitat.
This is a lotic species (
Young 1954
;
Hatch 1927
). In Florida
Dineutus ciliatus
is commonly found in small, shaded streams, and when found in larger streams prefers to stay near the stream bank (
Young 1954
).
Hatch (1927)
describes one habitat of
Dineutus ciliatus
in Massachusetts as a small sandy bottomed stream, approximately five feet wide and with a depth from six to ten inches, with a flow rate of one foot per second or less.
Hatch (1927)
also noted that
Dineutus ciliatus
prefers to reside near the bank of the stream. In east Texas this species was only collected in lotic situations at East Texas Primitive Big Thicket (
Realzola et al. 2007
). The first author has collected
Dineutus ciliatus
from both small pebble bottomed forested streams, to larger mud-bottomed rivers, throughout the southeastern United States, where it is quite commonly encountered.
Discussion.
Dineutus ciliatus
is a common species with a wide range (Fig.
53B
) and is frequently collected and represented in collections in large numbers.