Taxonomic revision of North American Eusphalerum Kraatz, 1857 (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Omaliinae)
Author
Zanetti, Adriano
text
Insecta Mundi
2014
2014-10-03
2014
379
1
80
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5179446
1942-1354
5179446
014BCBF8-35B0-4656-89AC-6A30BD97DD7F
Eusphalerum carolinensis
Zanetti
n. sp.
Material examined
(
71 specimens
)
Holotype
m
Wayah Bald
5300
Macon Co.
, N. C.
VI-20-1957
W.R.M. Mason
/ CNC /
Eusphalerum carolinensis
n.sp.
det.
A. Zanetti
2012
/
HOLOTYPUS
(CNC).
Paratypes
.
USA
.
Kentucky
1 f
Rowan Co Morehead Cave
Run Lk (
24 km
SW)
Fagus forest
14.05/
20.08.1983
leg.
S. & J. Peck
(CNC)
;
1 m
1 f
Rowan Co Morehead
25.05.1975
leg.
Watrous
(FMNH)
;
Missouri
1 f
Jefferson Co Pevely
7.05.? leg.
S.W. Bock
(CNC)
;
North Carolina
1 m
Balsam
12.07.1959
leg.
W. Rosenberg
(FMNH)
;
1 f
Jackson Co Blue Rdg. Pkw.
mi.457 4460'
12.06.1967
leg.
G.W. Byers
(KSEM)
;
1 f
Jackson Co Cashiers
(
6 km
S)
975 m
20.06.1986
leg.
A. Smetana
(CNC)
;
5 mm
3 ff
Macon Co Wayah Bold
5300'
20.06.1957
leg.
W.R.M. Mason
(CNC)
;
1 m
Boone
14.05.1973
leg.
J.S. Ashe
(KSEM)
;
1 f
Cove Creek
17.06.1963
leg.
K. Stephan
(FMNH)
;
2 mm
Highlands
1.06.1957
leg.
H.F. Howden
(CNC)
;
7 mm
4 ff
Macon Co Wayah Bald
5300'
20.06.1957
leg.
Mason
(CNC)
;
Ohio
2 mm
1 f
Hocking Co Conckles Hollow St.
Pk.
1.05.1974
leg.
D. Chandler
(FMNH)
;
20 mm
6 ff
Vinton Co Ratcliffburg
,
5 mi
N litter along stream
15.05.1977
leg.
Watrous
(FMNH)
;
2 mm
1 f
Hocking Co Lancaster
,
7 mi
S
31.05
.1975 leg.
Watrous
(FMNH)
;
1 f
Hocking Co
3 mi
W 33 on 116
31.05.1975
leg.
Watrous
(FMNH)
;
Pennsylvania
1 m
Somerset Co Kantner
,
1 mi
S Berlese
, forest litter
10.06.1976
leg.
Watrous
(FMNH)
;
Tennessee
1 m
Sevier Co Greenbrier Cove
,
Ramsey Cascade Trail
3900 under bark
Aesculus
18/
23.05.1972
leg.
A. Newton
(FMNH)
;
1 m
Sevier Co Gatlinburg Cherokee Orchard
at dung, horse 16/
22.05.1972
leg.
A. Newton
(FMNH)
;
Virginia
5 ff
Pembroke
(
12 km
E)
Mtn. Lk. Biol Stn
3820' sweeping mountain ash
11.06.1982
leg.
Bousquet
&
Davies
(CNC)
;
Measurements.
head length: 0.27-0.31; head width: 0.55-0.59; pronotal length: 0.49-0.57; pronotal width: 0.75-0.88; elytral length: 1.25-1.64; elytral width: 1.16-1.51; length (clypeus to apex of elytra): 2.07-2.47; total length: 2.5-2.8.
Etymology
. The name is from
North Carolina
, the state from which part of typical specimens come.
Description
. Habitus as in
Fig. 86
. Head, pronotum, and elytra yellowish, elytra somewhat paler, neck somewhat darkened; abdomen brown in male and yellowish in female, prosternum and metasternum yellowish; legs, antennae, and mouthparts entirely yellowish.
Head
with prominent eyes, postocular carina absent, temples short, strongly convergent caudad, medial margin of eyes microsculptured without longitudinal wrinkles. Head rather flat, postantennal depressions very superficial, tentorial pits small but well impressed. Neck scarcely separated from the head. Punctation dense, superficial, ground with isodiametric microsculpture. Antennae thin and scarcely elongate, antennomere 1 and 2 ovoid, 3 twice as long as wide, 4-5 longer than wide, 6 subquadrate, 7-10 wider than long, 11 twice as long as wide, ovoid at base and conical at apex.
Pronotum
transverse (ratio width/length = 1.6), convex, widest at middle, anterior margin narrower than posterior, lateral margins rounded in anterior half, rounded in middle, and strongly convergent caudad in almost straight lines, posterior angles marked and obtuse (
Fig. 87
). Punctation rather dense and incised, sometimes sparser in the middle, ground with isodiametric microsculpture, pubescence very short, scarcely visible, depressions near posterior angles scarcely impressed.
Elytra
wide (ratio length from scutellum to apex / combined width of elytra = 1.0 in male), strongly widened towards apex, rounded at apex in male, prolonged as in
Fig.
88
in female, punctation denser and stronger than on pronotum, confluent on glossy ground, pubescence very short, almost invisible.
Abdomen
glossy, microscutured, pubescence decumbent.
Sternite
VII of the male triangularly emarginate in the middle as in
Fig. 90
.
Tibiae
straight, not modified, tarsomere 5 of posterior tarsi shorter than 1-4 together.
Aedeagus
as in
Fig. 89
.
Accessory sclerites
of female as in
Fig. 91
, spermatheca as in
Fig. 92
.
Comparative notes
.
Eusphalerum carolinensis
is distinct from the other species of the convexum group by the shape of lateral margins of pronotum (convergent caudad in the posterior half) and by the form of the female elytra (less prolonged at the suture). The shape of the posterior margin of the male abdominal sternite VII, triangularly emarginate in the middle, and of the aedeagus, with parameres strongly widened at apex, are characteristic.
Distribution
.
UNITED STATES
:
Kentucky
,
Missouri
,
North Carolina
,
Ohio
,
Pennsylvania
,
Tennessee
,
Virginia
(Map 1).
Natural history
. Specimens were collected between 1000 and
1600 m
, the only known host plant is
Sorbus
sp. (Rosaceae)
as mountain ash. The adults were found mostly between May and July.