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 pilosum
Zanetti
,
n. sp.
Material examined
. (
36 specimens
)
Holotype
m
1 paratype
m
3 paratypes
ff Marin Co Lagunitas
29.03.1908
(CNC)
Other
paratypes
.
USA
.
California
1 f Alameda Co Oakland Hills
Salix
13.03.1962
leg. O’Brien (CNC);
7 mm
Alameda Co 00.03.?? (CNC); 1 f Lake Co St. Helena Creek 02/03.1951 leg. Helfer (CNC); 2 ff Marin Co Lagunitas
7.04.1907
leg. Van Dyke (FMNH);
1 m
Marin Co Point Reyes
22.03.1925
leg. Helfer (CNC); 1 f Marin Co (CNC);
1 m
Mendocino Co Mendocino
20.10.1954
leg. Helfer (CNC);
8 mm
4 ff Corte Madera Cr
13.03.1910
(MSNG);
1 m
1 f Oakland, hills back of 22.03/
12.04.1908
(CNC); 2 ff Marin Co Inverness, (
3.1 mi.
NW)
200 ft
Alnus
forest, on flowers
Heracleum lanatum
22.05.1976
leg. A. Newton and M. Thayer (FMNH); 1 f Oakland, hills back of
22.03.1908
(CNC).
Measurements.
Head length: 0.40-0.48; head width: 0.68-0.79; pronotal length: 0.57-0.66; pronotal width: 0.79-0.90; elytral length: 1.18-1.38; elytral width: 1.05-1.18; length (clypeus to apex of elytra): 1.94-2.40; total length: 2.2-2.8.
Etymology
. Adjective, from the Latin
pilosus
(hairy).
Description
. Habitus as in
Fig. 9 and 10
. Head, pronotum, and elytra yellowish, elytra somewhat paler, neck often darkened; abdomen from brown to dark brown in male, yellowish, somewhat darkened at apex in female; prosternum and metasternum brown; legs, antennae, and mouthparts yellowish, antennae sometimes very feebly darkened at apex.
Head
very wide in the male, almost as wide as pronotum, narrower in the female, 0.7 times as wide as pronotum, with moderately prominent eyes, postocular carina absent, temples long and angulate, strongly convergent in posterior part, medial margin of eyes with some longitudinal wrinkles. Head of male rather flat, postantennal depressions superficial and tentorial pits almost absent, somewhat more impressed in female. Neck slightly separated from head. Punctation dense on glossy ground, almost without microsculpture. Antennae scarcely elongate, antennomere 1 elongate, twice as long as wide, 2 ovoid, 3 thin, twice as long as wide, 4-5 longer than wide, 6 subquadrate, 7-10 progressively widened, 10 twice as wide as long, 11 twice as long as wide, rather ovoid.
Pronotum
transverse (ratio width/length = 1.4 on average), slightly impressed medially in front of posterior margin, convex, widest at the middle, anterior margin as wide as posterior in male, narrower in female, lateral margins rounded in the anterior half, somewhat sinuate in posterior half, convergent caudad in almost straight line, posterior angles marked and scarcely obtuse. Punctation dense and rather coarse, ground with isodiametric microsculpture, pubescence very long, yellowish, depressions near posterior angles wide, extending in front of middle of lateral margins, which are somewhat folded towards back and feebly crenulate.
Elytra
scarcely elongate (ratio length from scutellum to apex / combined width of elytra = 1.0), widened towards apex, somewhat oblique medially in both sexes, punctation coarser and somewhat less dense than on pronotum, confluent on glossy ground, pubescence very long, yellowish and somewhat decumbent.
Abdomen
dull, microsculpture clearly visible, formed by almost isodiametrical meshes, pubescence long, decumbent.
Tibiae
straight in both sexes, not modified, tarsomere 5 of posterior tarsi shorter than 1-4 together.
Aedeagus
as in
Fig. 11
.
Accessory sclerites
of female as in
Fig 12
, spermatheca as in
Fig. 13
.
Comparative notes
. See comparative notes for
E. subangulatum
above.
Distribution
.
UNITED STATES
:
California
: Coast Range (Map 4).
Natural history
. Only one altitudinal record is available (about
60 m
). The only reported host plant is
Heracleum maximum
Bartram
(=
lanatum
) (
Apiaceae
), and the only habitat is
Alnus
forest. The species is mostly found in spring, from the beginning of March to the end of May. One record of the end of October is to be confirmed.