Gnypeta caerulea (Sahlberg)

Klimaszewski, Jan, Savard, Karine, Pelletier, Georges & Webster, Reginald, 2008, Species review of the genus Gnypeta Thomson from Canada, Alaska and Greenland (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Aleocharinae): systematics, bionomics and distribution, ZooKeys 2 (2), pp. 11-84 : 45-46

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.2.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:664C49F1-5384-43C4-8BF1-CE76AC11D32E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3792866

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D43E034B-FFBF-414F-FF17-FDEE650EFA82

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gnypeta caerulea (Sahlberg)
status

 

8. Gnypeta caerulea (Sahlberg) View in CoL

( Figs 10 View Figs 9-14 , 28 a, b View Figs 21-38 , 99-107 View Figs 99-107 , 197 View Fig )

Aleochara caerulea C.R. Sahlberg 1830: 351 View in CoL . As Gnypeta: Bernhauer and Scheerpeltz 1926: 587 View in CoL ; Palm 1966: 138; Muona 1984: 228; Campbell and Davies 1991: 100; Smetana 2004: 489. TYPE LOCALITY: FINLAND, Helsinki [in orig. description: “Ad Helsingforsiam semel tantum capta”]. Holotype not examined.

Material examined

Specimens are listed in Appendix A.

Diagnosis

This species can be recognized by the following combination of characters: body length 3.0-3.5 mm ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9-14 ); elytra (at suture) about as long as pronotum and at least 1/4 wider than maximum width of pronotum ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9-14 ); abdomen at base narrower than elytra and subparallel ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9-14 ); antennal articles 4-10 strongly to moderately elongate and increasingly less so toward the apex of antennae ( Figs 28 a, b View Figs 21-38 ); median lobe of aedeagus with apical part broadly triangular in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View Figs 99-107 ); spermatheca with capsule mushroom-shaped ( Fig. 105 View Figs 99-107 ); stem sinuate and slightly swollen basally ( Fig. 105 View Figs 99-107 ); male tergite 8 truncate and with two minute lateral dents at apical margin ( Fig. 103 View Figs 99-107 ). Gnypeta caerulea is readily distinguishable from G. lohsei by larger, slimmer and strongly glossy body and by the elongate antennal articles 6-10, which are quadrate to slightly transverse in G. lohsei ( Fig. 28 View Figs 21-38 ).

Description

Body length 3.0-3.5 mm; uniformly dark brown to black, sometimes central part of elytra rust brown, tarsi and sometimes entire legs rust brown ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9-14 ); integument strongly glossy; pubescence yellowish grey and moderately long and dense; antennal article 4 strongly elongate, 5-10 moderately to strongly elongate, and increasingly less so toward the apex of antennae ( Figs 28 a, b View Figs 21-38 ); head and pronotum of about the same width ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9-14 ); elytra and abdomen wider than either head or pronotum; head rounded posteriorly; pronotum broadest in apical third, pubescence directed anterad along midline and laterad elsewhere; elytra at suture slightly longer than pronotum and at least 1/4 wider than maximum width of pronotum, pubescence directed obliquely postero-laterad, in wavy pattern medially on each side of disc ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9-14 ); abdomen subparallel, narrower than elytra at base ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9-14 ), three basal tergites with deep basal impressions bearing large punctures; metatarsus with two basal articles of about the same length and the third one slightly shorter. Male. Tergite 8 transverse and truncate apically, with two minute apical dents ( Fig. 103 View Figs 99-107 ). Sternite 8 about as long as wide and rounded apically ( Fig. 104 View Figs 99-107 ). Median lobe of aedeagus with broadly triangular apical part of tubus and edges approximately straight in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View Figs 99-107 ); bulbus moderately large with two small anterior projections in dorsal view ( Fig. 100 View Figs 99-107 ); internal sac with structures as illustrated ( Figs 99, 100 View Figs 99-107 ). Female. Tergite 8 truncate apically ( Fig. 106 View Figs 99-107 ). Sternite 8 broadly rounded apically ( Fig. 107 View Figs 99-107 ). Spermatheca with capsule elongate, mushroom-shaped ( Fig. 105 View Figs 99-107 ); stem sinuate and slightly swollen basally ( Fig. 105 View Figs 99-107 ).

Distribution (Fig. 197)

Gnypeta caerulea is a Holarctic species with circumpolar distribution. Smetana (2004) listed this species from Europe, Asia, and North America. Muona (1984), Campbell and Davies (1991), and Gouix and Klimaszewski (2007) recorded this species from Newfoundland. Majka and Klimaszewski (2008) provided new records for Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. We report this species for the first time from New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Yukon Territory, Northwest Territories and Alaska.

Collection and habitat data

In the United Kingdom, G. caerulea was reported from river margins and in wet moss growing on boulders and rocks in rivers, waterfalls and streams ( Hyman and Parsons 1994). In Canada, adults were collected in May, June, July, and September in marshy habitats, from vegetation around beaver ponds, from edges of ponds with sphagnum, and from swamp sedges.

Comments

The late Steve Ashe (University of Kansas) worked on a revision of Nearctic Gnypeta but was not able to complete it. Some CNC specimens, which belong to this species, bear his misidentification labels as “ G. nebulosa Ashe ” and “ G. dialepta Ashe ” [1987 manuscript – unpublished names].

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Gnypeta

Loc

Gnypeta caerulea (Sahlberg)

Klimaszewski, Jan, Savard, Karine, Pelletier, Georges & Webster, Reginald 2008
2008
Loc

Aleochara caerulea C.R. Sahlberg 1830: 351

Smetana A 2004: 489
Campbell JM & Davies A 1991: 100
Muona J 1984: 228
Palm T 1966: 138
Bernhauer M & Scheerpeltz O 1926: 587
Sahlberg CR 1830: 351
1830
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF