Lordithon (Bolitobus) longiceps (LeConte, 1863)

Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D. & DeMerchant, Ian, 2012, New Staphylinidae (Coleoptera) records with new collection data from New Brunswick and eastern Canada: Tachyporinae, ZooKeys 186, pp. 55-82 : 68-70

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.186.2491

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/434528C7-1477-58E5-F90A-276C1115FB06

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Lordithon (Bolitobus) longiceps (LeConte, 1863)
status

 

Lordithon (Bolitobus) longiceps (LeConte, 1863) Map 19

Material examined.

New Brunswick, Carleton Co., Jackson Falls, Bell Forest, 46.2200°N, 67.7231°W, 16.IX.2006, R. P. Webster, mature hardwood forest, on Bjerkandera adusta (Willd.) P. Karsten on dead standing beech tree and on a beech log (2 ♂, 4 ♀, RWC); Meduxnekeag River Valley Nature Preserve, 46.1897°N, 67.6710°W, 12.IX.2008, R. P. Webster, mixed forest, on mass of Pholiota sp. mushrooms at base of dead standing Populus sp. (1 ♂, RWC). Restigouche, Co., Dionne Brook P.N.A., 47.9064 °N, 68.3441°W, 31.V-15.VI.2011, K. Van Rooyen & C. Hughes, old-growth white spruce and balsam fir forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1 ♀, RWC).

Collection and habitat data.

Little is known about the habitat requirements of this rare species. Campbell (1982) reported that adults have been taken on rotting gilled mushrooms. Most of the specimens from New Brunswick were collected from the fleshy polypore fungus, Bjerkandera adusta (Willd.) P. Karsten growing on a dead, standing American beech tree and a beech log. One individual was found in a mass of Pholiota sp. mushrooms at the base of a dead, standing Populus sp. Another individual was captured in a Lindgren funnel trap. Adults were found in mature hardwood and adjacent mixed forests, and in an old-growth white spruce and balsam fir forest. This species was collected during September in New Brunswick.

Distribution in Canada and Alaska.

AK, BC, AB, ON, PQ, NB, NS ( Campbell 1982; Campbell and Davies 1991). This northern species has a very broad distribution from Alaska to Nova Scotia, but with large distributional gaps between known localities ( Campbell 1982).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Lordithon