Taxonomic review of the North American dung beetle genus Boreocanthon Halffter, 1958 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae: Deltochilini)
Author
Edmonds, W. D.
2625 SW Brae Mar Ct. Portland, OR 97201
text
Insecta Mundi
2022
2022-10-14
2022
952
1
65
journal article
53979
10.5281/zenodo.7399212
ca24f5e5-4716-48b7-a99b-114161d1b129
1942-1354
7399212
74CC7BA2-4E8D-4780-BB1B-E47370CBB19D
Genus
Boreocanthon
Halffter, 1958
, restored generic status
Boreocanthon
Halffter 1958: 208
(as genus)
Canthon
(
Boreocanthon
Halffter
) (downgraded to subgenus of
Canthon
Hoffmannsegg
per
Halffter and Martínez 1977: 81
)
Type
species.
Ateuchus ebenus
Say, 1823
, by original designation (as
Canthon ebenus
[Say]).
Summary diagnosis.
North American dung beetles, ball-rolling species attracted to a wide range of animal feces; usually dark or black in color, small-sized (length usually
4–7 mm
); head margin conspicuously quadri- or sexdentate; parameres compressed laterally, truncate apically, lacking elongate projection of lower apical angle; hind femora lacking fine carina along anterior edge; metatibia with single apical spur.
Diagnosis.
Dorsum (head + pronotum + elytra + pygidium) shagreened (alutaceous), with either punctures (
Fig. 38
,
48
,
75
,
105
) or raised granules (
Fig. 8. 19
), punctures often accompanied by field of faintly lustrous microspotting (
Fig. 61
,
88
); pterothoracic and abdominal sclerites shagreened, usually with accompanying flattened granules or punctures.
Head
: Clypeus quadridentate (
Fig. 20
,
66
,
79
,
112
) (sometimes virtually bidentate in
B
.
coahuilensis
,
Fig. 47
); paraocular areas often also angulate such that head appears sexdentate (
Fig. 66
,
79
). Clypeal teeth reflexed, surface behind concave, finely rugose and often somewhat shinier than rest of head surface, which is usually punctate on shagreened background. Clypeal process a low, transverse ridge. Labiogular fimbria always setose, often V-shaped, usually with associated field of coarse punctures at midline (
Fig. 60
,
69
).
Prothorax
: Subapical tubercle beneath anterior angle of pronotum usually absent. Hypomeral carina usually absent (
Fig. 24
), sometimes partially developed but never long, extending at most only one-fifth to one-quarter of distance to edge of prothorax (
Fig. 40
,
108
, arrow).
Legs:
Protibia strongly tridentate, usually serrate along lateral margin and between large teeth, inner margin smoothly curved (
Fig. 104
) or offset at level of basal tooth (
Fig. 51
). Anterior tibial spurs sexually dimorphic in most species: acute apically in female (
Fig. 116a
), unequally bifurcate apically in male (
Fig. 116b
); apex acute in both sexes in
B
.
ebenus
and
B
.
depressipennis
(
Fig. 16
). Posterior femora not margined anteriorly. Posterior tibiae with single apical spur.
Elytra
: Nine elytral striae; striae superficial, not impressed, lateral margins sometimes sharpened by fine carinulae (
Fig. 61
,
71
); 9
th
(epipleural) stria, if distinct, effaced anteriorly; 8
th
(subhumeral) sometimes carinulate (
Fig. 88
, arrow); 7
th
and 8
th
sometimes almost effaced anteriorly (
Fig. 99
). Interstriae always shagreened, either microspotted or granulate, sometimes presenting distinct humeral puncturing; anterior ends of first elytral interstriae depressed below level of second interstriae; anterior ends of 2
nd
and 3
rd
interstriae sometimes swollen (
Fig. 67
,
111
), otherwise discal interstriae flattened.
Genital capsule
: Distal portion of parameres laterally compressed, truncate, posterior edges straight, appressed, profile varies from abbreviated (
Fig. 113
) to elongate triangle (
Fig. 85
), lacking any curved elongation of the lower apical angle (as in
Fig. 43a
).
General
: Small, length rarely over
7.5 mm
, usually
4.5–6 mm
. North America from Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt in southern
Mexico
, through the
United States
into far south-central
Canada
(
Fig. 1
).
Comments.
Boreocanthon
is here restored to its original status of genus because, like its close relative,
Melanocanthon
, it exhibits a distinguishing suite of morphological features (see Diagnosis) and a plainly North American distribution. I have not discovered any unique feature (synapomorphy) that both unites its 13 species and separates them from other “
Canthon
,” sensu lato, and, therefore, I cannot argue with a high degree of confidence that the group is monophyletic.
Boreocanthon
and
Melanocanthon
, along with the
pilularius
species-group of
Canthon
(sensu
Halffter 1961
)
constitute the endemic
United States
contingent of the North American fauna of deltochiline
Scarabaeinae
. All other deltochilines occurring in temperate North America, north of the Rio Grande, are recently arrived representatives of southern groups; these include
Deltochilum gibbosum
(Fabricius)
,
Pseudocanthon perplexus
(LeConte)
,
Canthon
(
Glyphrocanthon
)
viridis
(Palisot de Beauvois)
,
C
. (
Canthon
)
humectus
(Say)
,
C
. (
C
.)
indigaceus
LeConte and
C
. (
C
.)
cyanellus
LeConte.
Boreocanthon
is closely related to
Melanocanthon
, and the two are sometimes confused in collections. The latter group, however, is distinguished by having two apical spurs on the hind tibia (rather than one) as well as, among other features, subtle differences in dorsal sculpturing and the shape of the head and sides of the prothorax and elytra, and a distribution largely confined to the southeastern quadrant of the
United States
, including the eastern one-half of
Texas
. There are presently four recognized species of
Melanocanthon
, but my informal impression is that there may be but three. A future, more rigorous look at
Melanocanthon
is very much in order.
Halffter et al. (2022)
recently created the subgenus
Bajacanthon
to accommodate the unique Baja
California
endemic species,
Canthon obliquus
Horn. In
their phylogenetic analysis (
Melanocanthon
was not included) the new genus emerged as sister group to
Boreocanthon
, with which it shares several features, especially the form of the parameres (
Fig. 44a,b
).
Boreocanthon
is a Nearctic taxon with deep Neotropical roots. The center of diversity of the genus is clearly the
United States
and adjacent northern
Mexico
, where it undoubtedly originated. It, as well as
Melanocanthon
and the
pilularius
species group of
Canthon
, are the only representatives of the Neotropical tribe
Deltochilini
that originated and diversified in the Nearctic. The historical biogeographic perspective proposed by
Kohlmann and Halffter (1990)
seems reasonable in the context of the results of this study: “The ancestor of
Melanocanthon
-
Boreocanthon
would have been distributed in northern
Mexico
and south-central
USA
, while the area was covered by tropical deciduous forest. By the end of Miocene the forest started to be replaced by grasslands and piñon-oak woodland, a process that was advanced in the Pliocene by the spread of pine forest and very recently the appearance of deserts. Most
Boreocanthon
species … live in this area, which leads us to think that this was the main evolutionary arena for this group. Nowadays, many of the species live in grasslands of the Great Plains … or in arid zones …” (p. 13). In the context of Gonzalo Halffter’s theory of the Mexican Transition Zone (
Morrone 2015
; Halffter 2017;
Halffter and Morrone 2017
and numerous references therein), the modern Nearctic taxa, including
Boreocanthon
, are the descendants of deltochilines among a wave of Neotropical immigrants that arrived in North America during early Cenozoic, where they originated and began to radiate during Miocene-Pliocene times. This early wave of taxa from the south produced the founding cenocron of Halffter’s Mexican Plateau Dispersal Pattern, one of five distribution patterns comprising the biogeographical panorama of the Mexican Transition Zone (
Halffter and Morrone 2017
). This cenocron included many other scarabaeines and other insects, including
Phanaeus
, whose biogeographical history in part parallels that of the
Boreocanthon
and other Nearctic deltochilines (
Kohlmann and Halffter 1990
;
Halffter and Morrone 2017
) as well as other groups (
Edmonds 1994
).
The distribution of the genus covers much of North America (
Fig. 1
). Of interest is the fact that the distributions of the member species of putative species pairs (
B. ebenus-B.
depressipennis
,
Fig. 28
;
B. melanus-B.
forreri
,
Fig. 45
;
B. puncticollis-B.
integricollis
,
Fig. 63
;
B. probus-B.
halffteri
,
Fig. 82
; and
B. simplex-B.
coahuilensis
,
Fig. 100
) are allopatric or nearly so, which suggests a long history of vicariant/dispersal events punctuating the history of the group (see, for example,
Gámez et al. 2016
). The ecogeographic distributions of
Boreocanthon
species
conform rather closely to the vegetation biomes depicted in
Figure 2
:
B
.
depressipennis
and most
B
.
probus
, to eastern coniferous open-canopy forests;
B
.
praticola
and
B
.
ebenus
, to mid-latitude steppe and prairie;
B
.
lecontei
and
B
.
integricollis
to arid south
Texas
shrubland; and
B
.
simplex
to the complex highly variable mosaic of biomes present west of the Rocky Mountains. Western populations of
B
.
probus
, as well as
B
.
halffteri
, have colonized west
Texas
/
New Mexico
steppe and desert shrub habitats. All the Mexican species (
B
.
melanus
,
B
.
forreri
,
B
.
ateuchiceps
,
B
.
coahuilensis
, and
B
.
puncticollis
) are associated with desert and desert shrub areas.
That the diversity hotspot for
Boreocanthon
lies in the southwestern portion of the
United States
is unsurprising in that it is the focus of diversity for numerous vertebrate and invertebrate groups (see
Parmenter et al. 1995
). In this complex assemblage of arid and semi-arid range and basin habitats characteristic of western
Texas
, and southern
New Mexico
and
Arizona
, seven species come together:
B
.
puncticollis
,
B
.
melanus
,
B
.
ebenus
,
B
.
halffteri
,
B
.
simplex
,
B
.
praticola
and
B
.
probus
.
Only two, however, are endemics:
B
.
halffteri
and
B
.
melanus
. For comparison, in the
United States
west of the Rocky Mountains north of about 34° latitude, an area much larger than the
U.S.
Southwest, is home to a single, albeit highly variable species,
B
.
simplex
. All other species,
B. lecontei
,
B. integricollis
,
B. depressipennis
,
B. coahuilensis
,
B. ateuchiceps
and
B. forreri
can be considered peripheral, relatively localized relatives of these seven. What this says about the biogeographical history of the genus is ripe for analysis.
Available data bespeak a group that is fundamentally coprophagous, with but very few records of attraction to carrion and none to fungi or other decomposing organic matter. Available information suggests the group to be almost exclusively coprophagous but highly generalist in food choice. Reported dung sources include a wide variety of wild and domestic animals: humans, hog, cattle, bison, horses, burros, deer, elk, rabbit, prairie dog, fox, bear, coyote, dog, domestic cat, javelina (collared peccary), opossum, chicken. In only one known instance does a species exhibit a preference for a particular food source:
B. praticola
(q.v.) for dung pellets of prairie dogs (
Cynomys
spp.
).
Zunino and Halffter (2007)
report several casual associations between species of
Boreocanthon
and various vertebrate nests:
B
.
simplex
with ground squirrel (
Citellus
) burrows;
B
.
puncticollis
with packrat (
Neotoma
) and kangaroo rat (
Dipodomys
) nests. Presumably, all
Boreocanthon
conserve the ball-making/rolling (telocoprid) strategy characteristic of deltochilines (see
Tonelli 2021
). While there are some anecdotal observations that they do, I know of no formal corroborative studies on the feeding and nesting behaviors of any species of
Boreocanthon
.
Pollock and Lavigne (2019)
reported that
B
.
praticola
, along with
Digitonthophagus gazella
(Fabricius 1787)
and
Canthon floridanus
Brown, 1946
(until recently known as
C
.
imitator
Brown
; see
Génier 2019
) are regular prey items for various species of robber flies (
Diptera
:
Asilidae
) in eastern
New Mexico
.
Robinson (1948)
presented the first modern key to the species of this genus. He included the ten thenknown species of
Boreocanthon
in the
United States
and his study heretofore has been the standard taxonomic reference for the group.
Boreocanthon
species
group in his key to
Canthon
(couplets [0] through 2) on the basis of the following combination of characters: a) no [complete] hypomeral carina; b) anterior edge of hind femora not bearing a carina; and c) hind tibia with a single apical spur. As defined here,
Boreocanthon
embraces the thirteen valid species listed below. A total of 22 available and one unavailable species-group names, and their status as valid or otherwise, are assigned to the genus and listed below (original generic placement in parentheses; brackets enclose reference to designator; valid names and new nomenclatural actions are in bold
type
):
abrasus
LeConte 1859c: 11
(
Canthon
)
—jr. subj. syn.
probus
Germar
[
Horn 1870: 45
]
antiguus
Pierce 1946: 120
(
Canthon
)—jr. subj. syn.
simplex
LeConte
[
Miller et al. 1981:626
]
ateuchiceps
Bates
1887: 35
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
bisignatus
Balthasar 1939: 229
(
Canthon
)
—jr. subj. syn.
militaris
Horn,
new synonymy
coahuilensis
Howden
1966: 732
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
corvinus
Harold 1868: 129
(
Canthon
)
—jr. subj. syn.
simplex
LeConte
[
Horn 1870: 46
]
depressipennis
LeConte
1859c: 11
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
ebenus
Say
1823: 208
(
Ateuchus
)
—valid name
ebeneus
Say 1823: 208
(
Ateuchus
)
—suppressed (see Comments for
ebenus
)
forreri
Bates
1887: 31
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
halffteri
Edmonds
(
Boreocanthon
)
—
new species
humeralis
Horn 1870: 46
(
Canthon
)—jr. subj. syn.
simplex
LeConte
[
Robinson 1948: 87
]
integricollis
Schaeffer
1915: 50
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
lecontei
Harold
1868: 68
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
melanus
Robinson
1948: 88
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
militaris
Horn 1870: 46
(
Canthon
)—jr. subj. syn.
simplex
LeConte
[
Robinson 1948: 87
]
mixtus
Robinson 1948: 91
(
Canthon
)
—jr. subj. syn.
puncticollis
LeConte
,
new synonymy
nyctelius
Bates 1887: 31
(
Canthon
)
—jr. subj. syn.
puncticollis
LeConte
[
Schaeffer 1915: 50
]
praticola
LeConte
1859c: 10
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
probus
Germar
1823: 98 (
Ateuchus
)
—valid name
puncticollis
LeConte
1866: 381
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
simplex
LeConte
1857: 41
(
Canthon
)
—valid name
vetustus
Pierce 1946: 122
(
Canthon
)—jr. subj. syn.
praticola
LeConte
[Robinson 1981: 626]
Key to the Species of
Boreocanthon
Halffter
Note.
Boreocanthon
comprises species that are often widely distributed and patently variable. The following key relies mostly upon generalizations about structure and, therefore, cannot be expected to accommodate inevitable exceptions. Reliability of identifications will be enhanced if target specimens are free or largely so of significant wear, especially to the head margin and to the dorsal surface. Since closely related
Boreocanthon
species
are commonly allopatric, accurate locality information is an important corroborator of diagnostic structural features in this genus. The text page position for each species treatment is indicated in brackets following the species name.
1. Dorsal sculpturing (including the pygidium) consisting of coarse granulation on shagreen (alutaceous) background (
Fig. 8
,
13
,
27
); granules discrete, round, raised above surface, distinct punctures and shiny microspots lacking. Notch separating clypeus from paraocular area large, setting off tooth-like anterior angle of paraocular area such that head appears strongly sexdentate (
Fig. 4
,
11
,
20
)...............
2
— Dorsal sculpture variable but not including discrete, raised, rounded granules; pronotum either punctate on shagreen background, or (
B
.
lecontei
,
Fig. 31
) covered by dense, fine granulation largely supplanting shagreen background. Dorsum (
Fig. 48
,
75
) usually presenting shiny microspots, especially on pronotum (except
B
.
lecontei
), elytra and often also on head and pygidium. Paraocular areas and dentition variable................................................................................
4
2. Form of protibial spur same in both sexes, viz, strongly curved laterad and tapering to acute point (
Fig. 20
). Posterior portion of lateral pronotal margin asperate (serrate). Hypomeral carina absent (
Fig. 24
). Protibia (viewed along inner margin) abruptly widened (offset) at level of third (basal) tooth; inner apical angle produced as small, conical, apically-directed tooth (
Fig. 16
, arrow). Pygidium distinctly impressed basally, resulting transverse concavity often divided by median, longitudinal swelling (
Fig. 14
,
27
). Compressed tip of parameres (viewed laterally) in form of elongate triangle (
Fig. 18
)..................
3
— Protibial spur sexually dimorphic: strongly curved laterad and tapering to acute point in female; nearly straight to curved laterad, apically slightly expanded and obliquely truncated or asymmetrically notched in male (as in
Fig. 116a,b
). Posterior portion of lateral pronotal margin smooth. Hypomeral carina present, sometimes only slightly developed. Protibia usually only gently sinuous at level of basal tooth. Pygidium evenly convex, not impressed basally (
Fig. 6
). Compressed tip of parameres short, truncated.
Length
5–10.5 mm
. Very widely ranging from south central
Canada
to northern Mexican Plateau, extending westward into eastern Arizona (
Fig. 10
).......
Boreocanthon praticola
(LeConte)
[p. 13]
3. Pronotal granules uniform in size and shape, evenly and densely distributed and seldom coalescent (
Fig. 11, 13b
). Surface granulation extending to pteropleura but much weaker on median area of metaventrite and absent or only weakly evident on abdominal ventrites. Circumnotal ridge becoming very fine posteriorly, extending around posterior pronotal angle mesally to point adjacent to 7
th
or 8
th
elytral stria (
Fig. 13b
, arrows). Dorsum dark but almost always presenting metallic green coloration (viewed under bright light). Length
6–10 mm
. Southeastern
United States
from
Louisiana
to
North Carolina
(
Fig. 28
).....................................................
Boreocanthon depressipennis
(LeConte)
[p. 18]
— Pronotal granules larger, variable sized and frequently coalescent, especially on disk (
Fig. 13a
,
19
). Surface granulation extending to pteropleura, at least anterior portion of median area of metaventrite, and at least sides of all abdominal ventrites. Circumnotal ridge ending at posterior pronotal angle, not extending onto posterior pronotal margin (
Fig. 13a
). Black, only very rarely with any hint of color. Length
6–11 mm
.
United States
west of
Mississippi
River to Rocky Mountains with southwestern extension through
Texas
to southeast
Arizona
(
Fig. 28
)...........................
Boreocanthon ebenus
(Say)
[p. 20]
4. Pronotum very finely, densely granulate, granulation highly coalescent largely supplanting shagreen background; punctures absent (
Fig. 29–31
). Paraocular notch very small, sometimes almost obsolete, scarcely if at all breaching raised lateral margin of head (
Fig. 29, 32
). Smaller beetles, overall length not exceeding
5 mm
. Southern
Texas
and northern
Tamaulipas
(
Fig. 100
)...
Boreocanthon lecontei
(Harold)
[p. 26]
— Pronotum distinctly punctate, usually on distinctly shagreen background, punctures can be bold or very fine and widely dispersed such that pronotal surface appears almost smooth; pronotum never granulate. Paraocular notch variable.................................................................
5
5. Dorsum bright metallic green, often with yellow or coppery highlights (
Fig. 36–39
). Pronotum strongly but not densely punctate, shiny, shagreen background mostly effaced, sometimes detectable in isolated patches near anterior angles (
Fig. 38
). Upper surface of head strongly roughened by large, closely packed, coalesced punctures. Length 4.5–6.0 mm.
Sierra Madre
del Sur,
Mexico
(
Fig. 45
)........................................................................
Boreocanthon ateuchiceps
(Bates)
[p. 28]
— Dorsum dark, usually black, sometimes with blue or green highlights (producing dark, metallic green color in
B. forreri
). Pronotum punctate, often finely and sparsely so; shagreen background and shiny spots distinct, only rarely obscured. Upper surface of head smooth, with subtle punctures except anterior portion of clypeus, which is usually distinctly roughened. Length variable. Distribution north of Transverse Volcanic Range in Mexico northward to southern
Canada
.....................................
6
6. Paraocular notch obsolete, anterior angle of paraocular area never accentuated (
Fig. 47, 52
). Clypeal margin usually bearing four perceptible teeth, median pair short, broadly rounded, wider at base than long, lateral two always small and inconspicuous and sometimes virtually absent such that clypeus appears bidentate (
Fig. 46–47
). Pronotum (viewed in profile) strongly raised above level of elytra (“humpbacked,”
Fig. 53b
). Protibia abruptly widened, inner margin offset at level of basal lateral tooth (
Fig. 51
). Larger sized, length
7–11 mm
. Distribution restricted to northwestern flank of
Sierra Madre Oriental
in southwest
Nuevo Leon
/southeast
Coahuila
,
Mexico
(
Fig. 101
).................................................................................
B oreocanthon coahuilensis
(Howden)
[p. 31]
— Paraocular notch (in
unworn
specimens) evident, sometimes very small, more often excising head margin and setting off angular prominence of paraocular area; shape of head margin variable but always distinctly quadridentate or sexdentate. Pronotum (viewed in profile) most often evenly rounded and at most only slightly raised above level of elytra. Protibia only gradually widened toward apex, any offset only weakly indicated. Smaller, length generally less than
7 mm
. Widely distributed in
Mexico
and the
United States
............................................................................
7
7. Lower apical angles of parameres expanded laterally as thin rounded or elongate flanges (
Fig. 56–57
,
68a
). Margins of elytral striae 1–4 and sometimes also 5–6 sharply defined by carinulae extending from base at least one-third total length (
Fig. 71
). Paraocular notch deep, setting off strong, angulate portion of paraocular area, head appearing clearly sexdentate (
Fig. 62
,
66
)................................
8
— Lower apical angles of parameres in form of elongate, distally rounded swellings (
Fig. 77
,
86
,
93
), not flanged. Margins of elytral striae either not carinulate, or only briefly so anteriorly and then in occasional specimens showing metallic highlights. Paraocular notch variable..................................
9
8. Ventral apical angle of parameres, viewed caudally, with ear-shaped, rounded or slightly angulate flanges (
Fig. 56–57
). Second and third elytral interstriae conspicuously swollen anteriorly, these raised areas flanking deeply impressed first interstriae (
Fig. 59
). Pronotum distinctly impressed posteromedially, resulting concavity almost smooth and contiguous with depression formed by first interstriae of elytra (
Fig. 55
). Epipleural (9
th
) stria usually visible posteriorly. Mesoventrite at most with few central punctures. Dorsum, viewed in bright light under magnification, with strong, royal blue (very rarely green) undertone (intensified when surface is wet). Length 4.0–
6.5 mm
.
Baja California
del Sur, the Mexican Plateau and adjacent areas of
Arizona
,
New Mexico
and western
Texas
(
Fig. 63
)......................................................................
Boreocanthon puncticollis
(LeConte)
[p. 33]
— Ventral apical angle of parameres, viewed caudally, in form of elongate flanges (
Fig. 68
). Second and third elytral interstriae usually not conspicuously swollen; pronotum lacking distinct posteromedian concavity. Epipleural (9
th
) stria effaced. Mesoventrite completely coarsely punctured (
Fig. 70
). Dorsum black, lacking strong blue undertone. Length 4.0–
5.5 mm
. Southern Texas and far northeast
Mexico
(
Fig. 63
).................................................
Boreocanthon integricollis
(Schaeffer)
[p. 38]
9. Paraocular notch large, lateral margin of paraocular area strongly salient (
Fig. 72, 74
). Clypeal teeth large, acute.
United States
east of the Rocky Mountains and central
New Mexico
......................
10
— Paraocular notch obscure, anterior angle of paraocular area interrupting curve of head margin as small, angulate corner (
Fig. 92
,
106
,
112
). Clypeal teeth obtuse, broadly rounded apically. Southeastern Arizona southward along coast of mainland
Mexico
to
Nayarit
...................................
11
Note.
Couplet 10 separates taxa for which intermediate populations exist in west
Texas
and eastern
New Mexico
. Some specimens from Ward and Winkler Counties in
Texas
, and Eddy and
Lea Counties
in
New Mexico
can be difficult to sort morphologically; they are here regarded as
B. probus
on the basis of distribution. See Comments for
B. probus
.
10. Pronotum not at all or only weakly (narrowly) explanate anterolaterally. Paraocular notch narrow, setting off strong, anteriorly directed tooth, head strongly sexdentate (
Fig. 72, 74
). Anterior portion of head behind clypeal teeth often abruptly shinier and rougher than posterior portion, which is smooth and punctate over shagreen background (
Fig. 79
). Subhumeral (8
th
) stria simple or only weakly, if at all carinulate. Profile of compressed distal portion of parameres in form of equilateral triangular (
Fig. 76
). Length 4.0–
5.5 mm
. Eastern
United States
from Atlantic coast to Rocky Mountains roughly south of 41
st
parallel,
Texas
and
New Mexico
east of the Pecos River (
Fig. 82
)...........
Boreocanthon probus
(Germar)
[p. 40]
— Pronotum widely explanate, upturned narrowly at lateral angle and progressively more widely so toward anterior angle (
Fig. 84, 87
). Paraocular notch setting off transverse anterior margin of paraocular area, head strongly quadridentate (
Fig. 83, 89
). Anterior portion of clypeus dull, only rarely weakly shinier than rest of head surface (
Fig. 89
). Subhumeral (8
th
) elytral stria carinulate, usually sharply so from umbone to midpoint of elytral margin or slightly beyond (
Fig. 88
, arrow). Compressed distal portion of parameres, viewed laterally, in shape of elongate triangle (
Fig. 85
). Length
4.5–6.5 mm
.
Rio Grande
drainage of
New Mexico
and
Texas
from Albuquerque southward to El Paso and
Chihuahua
(
Fig. 82
, inset).............................................
Boreocanthon halffteri
,
new species
[p. 45]
11. Median clypeal teeth broadly rounded, lateral clypeal teeth small, length less than half that of median teeth; margin of head appearing quadridentate (
Fig. 92
). Pronotal puncturing usually only weakly indicated, only occasionally conspicuous (×10). Subhumeral (8
th
) elytral stria never carinulate (
Fig. 99
); striae 7 and 8, sometimes also 6, often noticeably weaker than discal striae, anterior one-half or more of 7
th
and 8
th
sometimes nearly effaced. Compressed distal portion of parameres (viewed laterally) triangular (
Fig. 94
). Widely distributed in the western
United States
and
Canada
from the Rocky Mountains westward to Pacific coast, extending northward to southern
British Columbia
and southward to northwestern Baja California (
Fig. 100–101
)..............................
Boreocanthon simplex
(LeConte)
[p. 48]
— Median clypeal teeth rounded or acute, lateral teeth prominent, length at least one-half that of median teeth, margin of head hardly sexdentate (
Fig. 106
,
112
). Pronotal puncturing always conspicuous (×10;
Fig. 105
). Subhumeral (8
th
) elytral stria always at least finely carinulate (
Fig. 107
,
115
); elytral striae usually uniform, although base of 7
th
usually effaced at elytral umbone. Compressed distal portion of parameres (viewed laterally,
Fig. 113
) very short, truncate (“snub nosed”). Southern Arizona and west coast of mainland
Mexico
.......................................................................
12
12. Dorsum dark metallic green or yellow-green, rarely black; venter with green reflections on legs and pleura (
Fig. 102–103, 107
). Anterior ends of 2
nd
and 3
rd
elytral interstriae not swollen or only very weakly so (
Fig. 102–103
). Western coast of mainland
Mexico
from far southern
Sonora
to
Nayarit
(
Fig. 45
)..............................................................
Boreocanthon forreri
(Bates)
[p. 56]
— Dorsum and venter black, often with green or blue sheen (intensified when surface is wet). Anterior ends of 2
nd
and 3
rd
elytral interstriae distinctly swollen (
Fig. 110–111
). South-central
Arizona
southward into northwestern
Sonora
(
Fig. 45
).........................
Boreocanthon melanus
(Robinson)
[p. 58]