Literature DB >> 22371670

Pseudaptinus (Thalpius) nobilis Liebke, new to the United States, and a key to the species of subgenus Thalpius LeConte in North America, including Mexico (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Zuphiini).

Peter W Messer1.   

Abstract

The Mexican carabid species Pseudaptinus (Thalpius) nobilis Liebke is documented from the United States for the first time based on two specimens captured in southeastern Texas. A new taxonomic key distinguishes the 10 members of subgenus Thalpius known in North America, including Mexico. Pseudaptinus (Thalpius) dorsalis, which is found to be highly variable in its dorsal coloration, is compared to similar Pseudaptinus (Thalpius) hoegei. Geographic ranges are extended for several species.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Carabidae; Coleoptera; North America; Pseudaptinus; Thalpius; Zuphiini

Year:  2011        PMID: 22371670      PMCID: PMC3286242          DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.147.1918

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Zookeys        ISSN: 1313-2970            Impact factor:   1.546


Introduction

LeContein Carabidae: Zuphiiniis currently treated as a subgenus of Laporte (Baehr 1985, Lorenz 2005). The subgenus is a Neotropical-Australian group that consists of 33 species (11 Australian, 22 New World; Robert Davidson in litteris, corrections to Lorenz (2005) in which several species are placed in the wrong subgenus and several synonyms are incorrectly listed as species), of which eight were reported by Bousquet and Larochelle (1993) to occur in the United States. Liebke (1934) described with the type locality given simply as “Mexico”. Reported here is the first capture of in the United States, specifically in southeastern Texas, which brings the total count to nine species. is easily separated from other adults of the subgenus by the diagnostic combination of elongated middle antennomeres, markedly reduced eyes, and a black head contrasting with a dark red-brown body. It is further distinguished in a newly synthesized taxonomic key to the 10 species of subgenus known in North America, including Mexico. The key is a consolidation of information that I obtained from specimen studies and a literature review of Bousquet and Larochelle (1993), LaBonte (1996), LeConte (1879), Liebke (1934), Darlington (1934), and Van Dyke (1926). , which is found to be highly variable in its dorsal coloration, is compared to similar . Geographic ranges are extended for several species.

Material

Using the key and original description by Liebke (1934), I determined two adult beetle specimenscaptured in southeastern Texas to be . They compared well to typical examples of the same species about 800 miles to the south in the state of Veracruz, Mexico (36 miles south of Acayucan, 5-VII-1971, at light). The two specimens were pinned females bearing the same label data: TX, Live Oak County, Calliham, Choke Canyon State Park, 24-June-2009, black light trap, B. Buchli. A prior scientific collection permit had been obtained by the private collector (personal communication). Choke Canyon State Park, despite its name, has no canyon. The local terrain is characterized as a semi-arid, gently-rolling brushland with soils ranging from loamy sand to heavy clay. The area includes lakes, streams, and dense thickets of mesquite and blackbush acacia.

Discussion

Other than associations with moist soil and occurrences under stone cover during the day, almost nothing else is known about the natural history of subgenus . Flying adults are usually collected at nocturnal light sources as was the case in this report. The 10 species of subgenus that are currently known to occur in North America (including Mexico) are fully cited here: (Chaudoir, 1877); Darlington, 1934; (Brullé, 1834); (Bates, 1883); (Chaudoir, 1872); (Van Dyke, 1926); Liebke,PageBreak 1934; (Dejean, 1826); (LeConte, 1851); Liebke, 1934. All species are now known to inhabit the contiguous United States except for seudaptinus simplex which is limited to Mexico. None occurs in Canada. The geographic range of subgenus in the United States follows a somewhat U-shaped pattern from Pennsylvania southward to Florida, across the entire southern one-third of the country to California, and northward to Oregon. The northern limit in Oregon was reported for seudaptinus rufulus by LaBonte (1996). Previously seudaptinus nobilis had been known only from Mexico. It is distinguished from other species in the taxonomic key presented here. The collection site in southeastern Texas reported here is about 800 miles north of the Veracruz site in Mexico which yielded examples of the same species. Both sites are within 70 miles of the Gulf of Mexico. It is reasonable to assume that the Gulf Coastal Plain in Mexico, east of the parallel Sierra Madre Oriental, provides a narrow flat corridor for the northward migration of many insect species. I am left wondering if the simultaneous capture of two female specimens of seudaptinus nobilis in southeastern Texasrepresentsmerelyan “accidental” occurrence or whether it signifies an established breeding population in the United States. More field work and surveys of collection material are needed. I observed marked color variation in large series of specimens that otherwise fit (Brullé), a species found throughout southeastern United States and Mexico. The literature typifies the coloration as ferruginous with a contrasting dark cloud on the posterior-medial aspect of the elytra. However, most observed specimens (in the range 70-90%) were entirely cloudless and they varied in color from uniform rufotestaceous individuals to some with darker brownish forebody that contrasted with lighter elytra. I saw both clouded and cloudless in a color continuum from the same collection event. The present key takes both of these forms to branches occupied by similar (Bates), primarily a Mexican species with likely infrequent occurrences into southern Texas. The available literature provided neither an adequate description of nor did it offer comparisons with . Instructive online images under the type name Bates, 1883 are available in the MCZ Type Database at Harvard College. These images show the dorsum uniformly brownish without an obvious dark sutural cloud on elytra. However, I confirmed clouded elytra in several Mexican specimens designated as in the Smithsonian Institution. , normally with clouded elytra, is known to be occassionally cloudless. The taxonomic key presented here takes into account the variation in elytral color patterns (clouded vs cloudless) as manifested by , , and . The latter two species are ultimately distinguished on the basis of eye and temple proportions. Additional study of and is needed to better understand their morphologic and geographic differences.

Key to the adult species of in North America, including Mexico

Previously published (incomplete) keys relied heavily on dorsal color and on the following comparative measurements. Abbreviation L/W is the ratio of length to width of the middle antenna segments (5th or 6th antennomeres). Care is taken to view the broadest aspect of each segment. The ratio E/T is the longitudinal diameter of eye to the length of the posterior temple before the neck constriction, best observed from above. The characteristic values assigned to these ratios are approximations which are usually appreciated visually without exact measurements. Minor adjustments of the published values were made in some cases. Apparent body length, given in millimeters, is measured from mandible tip to abdominal apex. The known Western Hemisphere range is given for each species. New regional extensions that I observed are superscribed . Those superscribed are additional records confirmed and provided by Robert L. Davidson (Carnegie Museum of Natural History, PA).
1Dorsum distinctly dull, uniformly dark pinkish brown, finely and very closely punctate; 5.5-6 mm. (FL; Bahamas, Caymans, Dominican Republic2, Cuba) Pseudaptinus cubanus
Dorsum shiny, rufotestaceous to plain dark brown, more coarsely punctate in most species2
2Antennomeres 4-10 squarish, as long as wide (L/W = 1)3
Antennomeres 4-10 distinctly elongated (L/W > 1)4
3Elytral striae rather irregularly but seriately punctate except apically, the punctures much coarser than those of the intervals; pronotum narrower and basal angles more minutely prominent; dorsum dark (reddish to blackish brown) usually with head and elytral disc darkest; eye prominent (E/T = 2); mostly 4.2-5 mm (southeastern US quadrant: AL, AR, FL, GA, LA, MS, NC2, eastern OK 1, 2, SC, TN2, eastern TX1, VA2; Cuba) Pseudaptinus pygmaeus
Elytral striae not evidently seriately punctate, not more coarsely punctate than intervals; pronotum broader, basal angles more broadly prominent; uniformly reddish to dark brown; 5-6 mm. (FL, southeastern TX1; Caymans, Cuba, Dominican Republic2) Pseudaptinus deceptor
4Body length less than 5 mm; dorsum uniformly rufotestaceous; head small, distinctly narrower than pronotum; eyes rather small and flattish; elytra with striae poorly defined, intervals flat; location in southern California; 4.75 mm. (CA)Pseudaptinus microcephalus
Body length usually at least 5 mm; combination not as above5
5Elytra with posterior sutural dark cloud; middle antennomere ratio L/W = 1.75-26
Elytra without dark cloud; middle antennomere ratio L/W various8
6Body length ≥ 6 mm; elytral intervals flat to slightly convex, densely punctate; E/T = 1.5 with temples gently curved; middle antennomeres with L/W = 2; dark sutural cloud distinct against rufotestaceous dorsum; 6-7 mm.(southwestern US quadrant: AZ, CA, NM, NV, OK2, TX; Mexico1) Pseudaptinus horni
Body length ≤ 6 mm; elytral intervals distinctly convex, sparsely and finely punctate; middle antennomeres with L/W = 1.75; sutural cloud often less distinct7
7Body length usually ≤ 5.5 mm; eyes larger; temples strongly curved, shorter than in Pseudaptinus horni (E/T = 1.5-1.9); sutural cloud more often faint or absent; mostly ferruginous with forebody sometimes darker; 4.7-5.5 mm. (southeastern US quadrant: AL2, AR, DC, FL, GA2, LA, OK2, PA2, SC, TX; Bahamas, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Mexico1 ) Pseudaptinus dorsalis
Body length 5.6-6 mm; eyes smaller; temples gently curved, longer against small eyes as compared to Pseudaptinus horni (E/T = 1-1.5); more uniformly brownish; (south-central US: MS, TX; Mexico) Pseudaptinus hoegei
8Body length ≥ 6 mm; middle antennomere ratio L/W = 2; see also key step #6Pseudaptinus horni, an occasional specimen which lacks the sutural dark cloud on elytra. This variant occurs most notably in southern California where the population is entirely rufous (Van Dyke, 1926)
Body length ≤ 6 mm except for Pseudaptinus nobilis; middle antennomere ratio either much longer (L/W = 3) or shorter (L/W ≤ 1.75) 9
9Middle antennomeres markedly prolonged with L/W = 3; eye size and convexity both markedly reduced; eye diameter distinctly shorter than temple (E/T < 1); head black, contrasts with dark red-brown dorsum; punctures on forebody coarse and quite dense; elytra stretched lengthwise, slightly oval, not strongly narrowed at shoulders; 6.5-7 mm. (TX - Live Oak Co. is new US record1; Mexico) Pseudaptinus nobilis
Middle antennomeres short with L/W ≤ 1.75; eyes larger with E/T ≥ 1; head not black; body length less than 6.5 mm10
10Eyes appear markedly enlarged against very short temples (E/T = 3); middle antennomeres shorter (L/W = 1.25); yellow-brown; 4.8-5.1 mm. (Mexico)Pseudaptinus simplex
Eyes relatively smaller (E/T < 2); middle antennomeres longer; body usually larger11
11Dorsum uniformly ferruginous (reddish); eyes appear flatter and smaller against long temples (E/T = 1); middle antennomeres L/W = 1.5; 5.1 - 5.5 mm. (western US: AZ1, 2, CA, OR, TX) Pseudaptinus rufulus
Dorsum not uniformly reddish, often darker brownish; eyes larger relative to temples; middle antennomeres L/W = 1.7512
12Body length usually ≤ 5.5 mm; eyes relatively large with temples shorter, strongly curved (E/T = 1.5-1.9); see also key step #7Pseudaptinus dorsalis
Body length 5.6-6 mm; eyes relatively small with temples longer, gently curved (E/T = 1-1.5); see also key step #7Pseudaptinus hoegei
  3 in total

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