The coastal rove beetles (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae) of Atlantic Canada: a survey and new records
Author
Majka, Christopher
Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax, NS, Canada
Author
Klimaszewski, Jan
St. Francis Xavier University, Department of Biology, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada
Author
Lauff, Randolph
St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish ,, Canada
text
ZooKeys
2008
2008-09-04
2
2
115
150
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.2.2
6a4658b7-ce15-45fb-8985-b925e1490704
1313–2970
576408
Acrotona avia
(
Casey, 1910
)
NOVA SCOTIA
:
Antigonish Co.
:
Pomquet Beach
,
IV.1996
,
R.F. Lauff
, sand dunes, leaf litter, (
1 female
;
1 male
,
NSMC
)
.
Acrotona avia
(
Fig. 1
) is newly recorded in
Canada
(
Fig. 12
).
Acrotona avia
was described by
Casey (1910)
on the basis of specimens collected in Rhode Island. The bionomics of the species are unknown, however, it appears that
A. avia
could be associated with sandy, seacoast environments. Pomquet Beach (
45°39’27”N
,
61°49’18”W
) is a coastal barrier beach that lies between Pomquet Harbour and St. Georges Bay on the Gulf of St. Lawrence in
Nova Scotia
. The specimens from that locale were collected in a coastal sand dune environment adjacent to a “slack” (a temporary water body lying between two dune crests). Saunderstown (Rhode Island) is located near the mouth of Narragansett Bay where it opens up onto Long Island Sound. The Casey family farm (
41°30’44”N
,
71°25’23”W
), where T.L. Casey lived and carried out collecting (
Sikes 2004
), is located 0.35 km from the seacoast, immediately adjacent to a barrier beach and coastal lagoon environment very similar to the Pomquet Beach site in
Nova Scotia
. Although there is no specific information that Casey collected the
type
specimens from precisely this site, it appears probable that
A. avia
is associated with such coastal environments.
Cercyon litoralis
(Gyllenhal, 1808)
[
Hydrophilidae
] and
Stenus erythropus
Melsheimer, 1844
[
Staphylinidae
] were collected together with
A. avia
at Pomquet Beach.
Until this present report from
Nova Scotia
the species has not otherwise been reported from outside
Rhode Island
. It is likely that it is not as restricted in distribution as these limited records would appear to indicate, but rather
as Sikes (2004: 10)
pointed out, “…even in well-studied, temperate regions, a great deal of basic taxonomic work remains to be done”.
Gusarov (
2001
-2003) listed this name as a junior synonym of
Acrotona subpygmaea
Bernhauer, 1909
. However, we have specimens at hand from
New Brunswick
(see Klimaszewski et al. 2005: 14, 15, 34) examined by him and identified as
A. subpygmaea
Bernhauer
, which clearly belong to a different species. For this reason we provisionally retain
A. avia
as a distinct species until proper revisionary studies are finalized. We confirm however, that
A. puritana
(
Casey, 1910
)
[originally
Colpodota
] is a junior synonym of
A. avia
(Casey)
. We were able to examine four
syntypes
of
A. avia
from
Rhode Island
, Boston Neck, housed in the Casey collection in
Washington
(USNM). We designate here the female bearing the following labels as the
lectotype
: “R.I., a
via
-3,
paralectotype
USNM, 38993, Casey bequest 1925”, and Gusarov’s unpublished
paralectotype
label: “
paralectotypus
,
Colpodota avia
Casey
, female, V.I. Gusarov des. 2000” (USNM) [genital structures well preserved]. The remaining three specimens then become
paralectotypes
: R.I., Casey bequest 1925,
avia
-2,
paratype
USNM 38993,
paralectotypus
,
Colpodota avia
Casey
, male, V.I. Gusarov des. 2000 (USNM) male [aedeagus missing in the attached vial]; R.I. same labels as the
lectotype
except,
avia
-1, Type USNM 387993, Gusarov’s unpublished
lectotype
designation label 2000 (USNM)
1 female
; and R.I.,
avia
-4 (USNM)
1 female
. We have designated a female specimen as a
lectotype
because the female of this species may be easily distinguished by having the apical margin of sternite eight deeply emarginate (
Fig. 11
) and by the shape of the spermatheca (
Fig. 9
), and because the male genital structures were missing in the only male specimen in the type series. To avoid potential confusion in identification of this species in the future we provide for the first time the images of the body and the genital structures (
Figs. 1
,
5-11
). The body and the genital structures of
A. subpygmaea
(Bernhauer)
are published in Figs.
25, 116-119 in
Klimaszewski et al. (2005)
, based on V.I. Gusarov’s identification.