Contributions to the faunistics and bionomics of Staphylinidae (Coleoptera) in northeastern North America: discoveries made through study of the University of Guelph Insect Collection, Ontario, Canada
Author
Brunke, Adam J.
Author
Marshall, Stephen A.
text
ZooKeys
2011
75
29
68
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.75.767
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.75.767
1313-2970-75-29
Quedius cruentus (Olivier, 1795)
Materials.
CANADA: ON: Essex Co., Windsor, ~1.5km S Ojibway Prairie, forest-prairie edge, malaise trap, 15-V to 1-VI-2001, S. Paiero (1); Windsor, ~1.5 km S Ojibway Prairie, private prairie, malaise, 5 to 12-VI-2001, S. Paiero (3); Windsor, ~1.5km S Ojibway Prairie, private prairie, malaise, 19 to 30-VI-2001, P. Pratt (2); Hald. -Norfolk Reg., Charlotte 2 Rd., ~480m E of Charlotteville, West Quarterline Rd., 'C.C.S.N. -5', purple prism trap, 13 to 19-VI-2009, S.M. Paiero (1); Halton
Reg
., Milton, Derry Rd. and 4th Line, under composter, 16-X-2008, S. M. Paiero (1); Oxford Co., Woodstock, trails nr. river, 14-VI-2008, S.A. Marshall (1). Simcoe Co., Midhurst, forest nr. Neretva St., 28-IX-2008, A. Brunke and K. Brunke (1); Wellington Co., Guelph, University Campus, dairy bush, dry
Polyporus squamosus
, 22-IX-2008, A. Brunke (1).
Diagnosis.
Quedius cruentus
may be distinguished from other northeastern
Quedius
by the combination of: elytra evenly punctate; labrum distinctly bilobed; eyes distinctly shorter than temples; antennomeres one to three distinctly paler than others; distal antennomeres strongly transverse; pronotum with sublateral row of punctures longer than dorsal row.
This Palaearctic species was first detected by
Gusarov (2001)
based on a specimen collected in New York.
Hoebeke (2008)
newly reported
Quedius cruentus
from Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and
Quebec
, and established its presence in North America as early as 1983 in New York. Herein we newly report this species from Ontario (Map 36). In its native range,
Quedius cruentus
is widely distributed in the Palaearctic region (
Smetana in
Loebl
and Smetana 2004
).
Quedius cruentus
has been found in a variety of habitats in Ontario including forests, prairies, urban greenspace under loose bark, under objects and in decayed fungi.