Native And Alien Carabidae (Coleoptera) Share Lanai, An Ecologically Devastated Island
Author
Liebherr, James K.
Department of Entomology, John H. and Anna B. Comstock Hall Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853 - 2601, U. S. A.
JKL5@cornell.edu
text
The Coleopterists Bulletin
2009
2009-12-29
63
4
383
411
journal article
10.1649/1176.1
1938-4394
4924356
0949D971-E9E0-4FD3-B4EC-2C47B6124223
Gnathaphanus picipes
(MacLeay)
(
Fig. 6E
,
7B
)
Diagnosis.
Easily distinguished among Hawaiian
Harpalini
by the presence of five to eight dorsal elytral setae in the third elytral interval, two to three of the setae situated very near the elytral apex, in combination with a glabrous fifth elytral stria. As in
G. multipunctatus
, the tibiae and tarsi are flavous, however, in contrast to that species the femora are darker, brunneous, and concolorous with the body venter. Standardized body length
9.4–11.2 mm
.
Lanai Distribution.
This Australian and New Guinean species (
Darlington
1968
;
Moore
et al.
1987
) was first collected on Lanai in Maunalei Gulch,
490 m
elevation,
3 May 1993
(Liebherr, CUIC). The specimen comprises a pterothorax and abdomen collected under a spider web suspended from the water pipe coming out of the Gulch headwall.
Samuelson
et al.
(1997)
report a 1995 Maunalei Gulch specimen as the first Lanai record. Subsequently, the species has been collected across a broad distribution on Lanai (
Fig. 6E
) including the cloud forest, mesic forest, and dry forest communities (
Fig. 1
).
Habitat.
This species has been collected at the following anthropogenically disturbed sites (CUIC): 1) the seasonally dry Maunalei Gulch bottom; 2) running on a sidewalk at the Lanai Airport; 3) in the company of
G. multipunctatus
running on a clay road after dark at the Kanepuu Dry Forest; 4) under a rock along the road at Puu Aalii on the summit ridge; 5) dead on the road adjacent to a
Pinus
plantation at Haalelepaakai; and 6) in company with
M. buchanani
under bark of downed
Eucalyptus
trunks near Lehua,
683 m
elevation on the southeastern end of the summit ridge. On one occasion this species was collected with native species—
B. depressa
,
B. filipes
, and
M. filipes
—by beating soft understory fern in cloud forest.