Further contributions to the Aleocharinae (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae) fauna of New Brunswick and Canada including descriptions of 27 new species
Author
Webster, Reginald P.
Author
Klimaszewski, Jan
Author
Bourdon, Caroline
Author
Sweeney, Jon D.
Author
Hughes, Cory C.
Author
Labrecque, Myriam
text
ZooKeys
2016
573
85
216
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.573.7016
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.573.7016
1313-2970-573-85
2AE04FDB4A0440ABB854FF4461C1C634
2AE04FDB4A0440ABB854FF4461C1C634
Taxon
classification Animalia Coleoptera Staphylinidae
Atheta (Dimetrota) bubo Klimaszewski & Webster
sp. n.
Figs 84-87
Holotype (male).
Canada, New Brunswick, Westmorland Co., Sackville, near Ogden Mill,
45.92155°N
,
64.38925°W
, 12.V,2006, Scott Makepeace, coll. // black spruce forest, in nest contents of Great Horned Owl -
Bubo virginiensis
(LFC).
Etymology.
The species name bubo is the generic name of
Bubo virginensis
, the great horned owl, from the nest contents of which the holotype specimen was found, used in apposition.
Description.
Body length 2.8 mm, subparallel, moderately flattened, dark brown with darker head, pronotum, and central part of abdomen, elytra with darker scutellar region, legs yellowish brown (Fig. 84); integument moderately glossy and more so on abdomen, densely punctate and pubescent, except for head and abdomen; meshed microsculpture of forebody dense and strong with hexagonal sculpticells; head narrower than pronotum, angular posteriorly, eyes large and as long as postocular area dorsally; antennae with articles
V-X
subquadrate to slightly transverse; pronotum broadest in about middle of its length, rounded laterally and basally, slightly transverse, narrower than elytra, posterior shoulders angular; elytra wider and slightly longer than pronotum; abdomen subparallel. Male. Apical margin of tergite VIII with broadly V-shaped apical emargination with small crenulations and two large lateral teeth (Fig. 86); median lobe of aedeagus with bulbus moderately large, tubus moderately long, straight with apex slightly produced ventrally in lateral view, apex narrowly triangular and rounded (Fig. 85), internal sac structures pronounced at base of tubus (Fig. 85). Female. Unknown.
Natural history.
This species is known only from a single male found in the nest contents of a great horned owl (
Bubo virginensis
) in a black spruce forest in May.
Distribution.
Known only from NB, Canada.
Comments.
The body shape of this species is somewhat similar to species of
Atheta picipennis
species group, but the genitalia are unique in its form and are not close to any species of
Dimetrota
.
Figures 84-87.
Atheta (Dimetrota) bubo
Klimaszewski & Webster, sp. n.: 84 habitus in dorsal view 85 median lobe of aedeagus in lateral view 86 male tergite VIII 87 male sternite VIII. Scale bar of habitus = 1 mm; remaining scale bars = 0.2 mm.