Belladonna barryi Klimaszewski and Chandler, 2023

Klimaszewski, Jan, Chandler, Donald S., Davies, Anthony & Bourdon, Caroline, 2023, Aleocharine rove beetles of New Hampshire, USA: new taxa and new records (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Aleocharinae), Zootaxa 5364 (1), pp. 1-141 : 115-116

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5364.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EAEB5D9F-326D-46FE-90FD-DAFE9B01FD04

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10247375

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/282587CA-FFE6-FFF4-589E-1F0FFAD7FAF6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Belladonna barryi Klimaszewski and Chandler
status

sp. nov.

243. Belladonna barryi Klimaszewski and Chandler , sp. n.

Figs. 12a–g View FIGURE 12 , Table 1 View TABLE 1

Holotype (male). USA, New Hampshire, Strafford Co.: Spruce Hole , 3 mi SW Durham, 1–17.VI.1990, G. Fortier and D.S. Chandler, FIT on mat. ( CNC) . Paratypes: USA, Maine, York Co.: West Lebanon, 7–13.V.1990, D.W. Barry, FIT, 1 female ; 14–20.V.1990, D.W. Barry, FIT, 1 female ; 5–9.VII.1990, D.W. Barry, FIT, 1 female . New Hampshire, Strafford Co.: Spruce Hole , 3 mi SW Durham, 12.V.1990, 15.VII.1990, G. Fortier, aquatic vegetation, 2 males, 1 female ; 9–10.VI.1982, D.S. Chandler, window trap, 1 female ; 20–25.V.1990, G. Fortier and D. Chandler, FIT, 1 male ; 1–17.VI.1990, G. Fortier and D. Chandler, FIT on mat, 2 females . Durham , 25.IX.1915, 1 male . CANADA, Ontario, Rondeau Provincial Park, Tulip Tree Trail , 5.VI.1985, A. Davies and J.M. Campbell, ex Carex and moss on logs in pond ( CNC), 3 males, 1 female, 2 sex? Rondeau Provincial Park, South Pt. Trail turnoff, 30.V.1985, A. Smetana ( CNC) 1 male . 8 mi W White River , 14.VI.1973, Campbell and Parry ( CNC) 2 males, 1 female, 1 sex? Bells Corners , 9.VI.1983, A. Davies and M. Vermette, berlese muskrat nest ( CNC), 1 female . Hald.–Norfolk Reg., Cronmiller prop., 6 km W St. Williams, 42°40’21’’N, 80°29’26’’W, 20.VII.2011, Brunke and Paiero, forest, at lights, ( DEBU), 1 male. GoogleMaps

Etymology. Named for Donald W. Barry, who collected many species for us in Maine at a site 3.5 km from the NH border, of which some have not yet been taken in New Hampshire. He is a former UNH MS graduate student and eventual Agriculture Extension Agent at the University of Maine, Orono, USA.

Diagnosis. Male tergite VIII with four sharp apical teeth, two distributed laterally and two medially, median teeth smaller ( Fig. 12c View FIGURE 12 ); apical part of median lobe of aedeagus broadly triangular, elongate and sinuate ( Fig. 12b View FIGURE 12 ); spermathecal capsule pitcher-shaped in lateral view, stem swollen posteriorly ( Fig. 12g View FIGURE 12 ).

Description. Body length 3.21–3.79 mm, body broadly oval, moderately convex; color dark brown except paler (yellowish-brown) legs, two basal and two apical antennomeres, legs, posterior part of elytra and base of abdomen ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ) (some northern specimens may be black); head distinctly narrower than pronotum ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ); pronotum sub-rectangular, distinctly narrower than elytra ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ); elytra at suture about as long as pronotum along midline, posterior margins broadly arcuate ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ); abdomen broad, at base as wide as elytra or nearly so ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ); integument strongly glossy, microsculpture of forebody with hexagonal sculpticells, pubescence sparse ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ); head strongly narrowed basally behind eyes, and narrowly produced in front of eyes, eyes large and protruding, longer than genae ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ); antennomeres I–III strongly elongate, IV–VI subquadrate to slightly transverse, VII–X moderately to strongly transverse ( Fig. 12a View FIGURE 12 ). Male. Tergite VIII with 4 teeth, two lateral larger and two median ones smaller and in close proximity ( Fig. 12c View FIGURE 12 ); sternite VIII parabolic apically ( Fig. 12d View FIGURE 12 ); median lobe of aedeagus distinct, in lateral view bulbus broadly oval and slightly compressed dorso-ventrad, crista apicalis broad, of triangular shape, tubus short with apex broadly triangular and produced ventrad, its margins slightly sinuate ( Fig. 12b View FIGURE 12 ).

Female. Tergite VIII truncate apically ( Fig. 12e View FIGURE 12 ); sternite VIII rounded apically ( Fig. 1f View FIGURE 1 ); spermatheca S-curved, capsule pitcher-shaped, median invagination shallow; stem sinuate, swollen posteriorly ( Fig. 12g View FIGURE 12 ).

Distribution. Nearctic. Canada: ON. USA: ME, NH.

Collection and Habitat data. Adults were captured by flight intercept traps on the floating Sphagnum mat of a kettle bog, and by window traps on the bog margin; also, on aquatic vegetation and in ON specimens were found in Carex and moss on logs in a pond. Collected primarily from May to September in NH, ME, and ON.

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

DEBU

Ontario Insect Collection, University of Guelph

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF