Taxonomic Revision of the Rove Beetle Genus Phlaeopterus Motschulsky, 1853 (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Omaliinae: Anthophagini)
Author
Mullen, Logan J.
Author
Campbell, J. M.
Author
Sikes, Derek S.
text
The Coleopterists Bulletin
2018
2018-12-28
72
1
1
http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/0010-065x-72.mo4.1
journal article
10.1649/0010-065X-72.mo4.1
1938-4394
10114201
65F0E5A1-D396-4517-9E14-764B3073E0EF
6.
Phlaeopterus filicornis
Casey, 1886
(
Figs. 2B
,
8B
,
17C
,
25C
,
29G
,
31H
)
Phlaeopterus filicornis
Casey 1886: 234
[original description].
Elias 1985: 38
.
Tilea rufitarsis
Casey 1893: 403
[original description].
New synonymy.
Phlaeopterus rufitarsis
Casey, 1893
.
Bousquet
et al.
2013: 89
.
Type
Locality.
Placer County
,
California
,
USA
.
Redescription. Habitus:
Length
5.9–7.7 mm
. Dark brown, almost black, palpi, elytra, and glabrous apices of tibiae lighter (
Fig. 2B
).
Head:
Moderately narrow, ratio of width across eyes subequal to head length. Interantennal groove deeply impressed. Anteocellar foveae large, deeply impressed. Eyes glabrous or with less than 10 scattered setae near ventral margin. Antennomeres 5–10 at least 2 times longer than wide; antennomeres 4–11 each with many sensory pits with papilliform projections. Ocelli present. Nuchal constriction vague. Mandibular molar area with L-shaped row of setae. Labrum with sensory pores along entire surface (
Fig. 31H
). Labial palpi with 3
rd
palpomere 1.6–1.8 times longer than palpomere 2.
Thorax:
Pronotum moderately narrow (
Fig. 17C
), length to width ratio = 0.76–0.81; ratio of pronotal width to head width = 1.35–1.43; maximum width less than width of elytra at bases; punctures on dorsal surface separated by average distance equal to greater than diameter of a puncture; with vague impression near midline on ventral surface; lateral margins deflexed posterad and anterad lateral foveae; lateral foveae moderately impressed. Elytra with humeral angles convex; epipleural carina not projecting; 2.4–3.2 times longer than pronotum; apical margins sexually dimorphic, elongated at suture and slightly diverging in females (
Fig. 29G
) and broadly convex and not diverging in males. Wings fully developed in most individuals, brachypterous in very few. Mesosternum with projecting tooth; longitudinal carina along midline of mesosternum complete.
Legs:
All tibiae glabrous, length of subglabrous apex of metatibia as ratio to metatibial length = 4.9–8.8. Metatrochanter without tooth on apical margin.
Abdomen:
Wing-folding spicules on tergites IV and V broad, transverse, nearly contiguous; tergite VI lacking wing-folding patches.
Aedeagus:
Length
1.25–1.38 mm
. Median lobe somewhat triangular, apex acutely triangular (
Fig. 25C
). Parameres diverging from
Fig. 20.
Phlaeopterus
species
, mesosterna, ventral oblique view. A)
P. longipennis
, B)
P. obsoletus
,
C)
P. olympicus
, D)
P. frosti
, E)
P. occidentalis
, F)
P. elongatus
.
Fig. 19.
Mesosterna, ventral oblique view, of A)
Lesteva pallipes
, B)
Lesteva longoelytrata
, C)
Unamis
sp.
undescribed, D)
Unamis
sp.
, E)
Phlaeopterus lagrandeuri
, F)
Phlaeopterus houkae
.
Fig. 21.
Phlaeopterus
species
, aedeagi (left = ventral view; right = dorsal view of median lobe). A) P.
lagrandeuri
, B)
P. houkae
, C
cascadiensis
.
)
P. longipennis
, D)
P. obsoletus
, E)
P. kavanaughi
, F)
P. castaneus
base until just before apex. Internal sac elongate, lightly sclerotized, evenly covered in small microspinules.
Fig. 22.
Phlaeopterus
species
, aedeagi (left = ventral view; right = dorsal view of median lobe). A)
P. castaneus castaneus
, B–D) variation in
P. cavicollis
.
Type Specimens.
Phlaeopterus filicornis
.
Lectotype
male (here designated to clarify the application of this name to this taxon, UAMObs:Ento: 235784) labeled as follows: Sept./Placer Co. Cal./ ³/CASEY bequest 1925/TYPE USNM 48108/
filicornis Casey
/
LECTOTYPE
³
Tilea filicornis Csy.
des. 1982, J.M. Campbell.
Paralectotype
male (UAMObs:Ento:235785) labeled as follows: Sept./ Placer Co. Cal./ CASEY bequest 1925/CASEY det. 2 filicornis/
PARALECTOTYPE
³
Tilea filicornis Csy.
, des. 1982, J.M. Campbell. The Casey Collection in the USNM contains these
two males
of the species.
Tilea rufitarsis
.
Lectotype
male (here designated to clarify the application of this name to this taxon) labeled as follows: Siskiyou Co. Cal./ ³/CASEY
Fig. 23.
Phlaeopterus
species
, aedeagi (left = ventral view; right = dorsal view of median lobe). A)
P. bakerensis
, B)
P. smetanai
, C)
P. smetanai
, D)
P. occidentalis
.
bequest 1925/TYPE USNM 48107/rufitarsis/
LECTOTYPE
³
Tilea rufitarsis Csy.
des. 1982,
J.M. Campbell.
Paralectotype
female labeled as follows:
Siskiyou Co.
Cal./
♀
/CASEY bequest 1925/rufitarsis 2
PARATYPE
USNM 48107/
PARALECTOTYPE
♀
Tilea rufitarsis Csy.
des. 1982,
J.M. Campbell.
Paralectotype
female labeled as follows:
Siskiyou Co.
Cal./
♀
/CASEY bequest 1925/rufitarsis 2/
PARATYPE
USNM 48107/
PARALECTOTYPE
♀
Tilea rufitarsis Csy.
des. 1982, J.M. Campbell. The Casey Collection contains these
three specimens
.
Fig. 24.
Phlaeopterus
species
, aedeagi (left = ventral view; right = dorsal view of median lobe). A)
P. occidentalis
, B)
P. olympicus
, C)
P. loganensis
, D)
P. fusconiger
.
Distribution.
Phlaeopterus filicornis
is known only from
California
in the Sierra
Nevada
and Cascade Range (
Fig. 8B
).
Bionomics.
Adults have been collected at
1,820
–3,440
m
elevation from July–September under rocks near cold, fast-flowing streams or at the edges of permanent or long-lasting snowfields, and in moss at the edges of streams or in the splash zones of waterfalls.
Remarks.
Phlaeopterus filicornis
can be distinguished from all other
Phlaeopterus
species
by the shape of the pronotum (length:width ratio, lateral margins, and lateral foveae), sexually dimorphic shape of the elytral apices, glabrous apices of the tibiae, and form of the aedeagus. It is highly similar to
P. hatchi
, from which it differs by the sexually dimorphic shape of the elytral apices, pronotum with a vague impression near the midline on the ventral surface, shape and size of the median lobe of the aedeagus, microspinules of the internal sac of the aedeagus, and a slight difference in body length.
Fig. 25.
Phlaeopterus
species
, aedeagi (left = ventral view; right = dorsal view of median lobe). A)
Phlaeopterus frosti
, B)
P. hatchi
, C)
P. filicornis
, D)
P. elongatus
.
We examined the
lectotypes
of
P. filicornis
and
P. rufitarsis
and were not able to find any significant differences between the
two specimens
. Therefore, we chose to synonymize
P. rufitarsis
under
P. filicornis
.