Heterocerus selanderi (Pacheco)

King, Jonas G. & Lago, Paul K., 2012, The variegated mud-loving beetles (Coleoptera: Heteroceridae) of Mississippi and Alabama, with discussion and keys to the species occurring in the southeastern United States, Insecta Mundi 2012 (275), pp. 1-53 : 23-24

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5188356

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AC2597CC-301F-4E91-9711-5C17399C9AA2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5187851

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E15618-9823-0B27-FF19-FBFB4F841BB9

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Heterocerus selanderi (Pacheco)
status

comb. nov.

10. Heterocerus selanderi (Pacheco)

New Combination

( Fig. 28 View Figures 26-29 , 50 View Figures 45-53 , 63 View Figures 58-65 )

Efflagitatus selanderi Pacheco 1969: 37 .

Description. Length 2.6 - 2.8 mm. Orange-brown. Elytra trifasciate, markings faint, darker than the rest of the elytral surface; striae vaguely indicated ( Fig. 28 View Figures 26-29 ). Post-metathoracic coxal lines absent, postmesothoracic coxal lines feebly marked. Male genitalia ( Fig. 50 View Figures 45-53 ) of the typical Heterocerus type, although its overall shape is unusual among North American species; genitalia about 2.5 times longer than wide; anterior end of phallobase rounded and slightly enlarged; median plate expanded anteriorly to the width of the entire phallobase, its anterior end fused to, and indistinguishable from, the rounded anterior end of the phallobase; parameres small, hornlike and pointed, proximate at their base and diverging apically. Hypermandibulate males unknown.

Diagnosis. The small size and coloration of this beetle allows it to be easily separated from all other southeastern species except Tropicus pusillus and H. texanus . The orange-brown elytra and indistinct elytral markings make it easy to confuse H. selanderi with T. pusillus without the aid of a microscope. The difference in elytral pattern, however, is obvious under magnification, with Tropicus pusillus having one common macula and H. selanderi being trifasciate. The rounded anterior edge of the phallobase and horn-like parameres distinguish this from H. texanus and all other North American heterocerids.

Notes. This species emerges near the beginning of the rainy season in Florida, usually in May or June (Mark Deyrup, Archbold Biological Station, pers. comm.), but apparently ceases to fly soon thereafter. A trip to the Archbold Biological Station in early July, 2005, failed to yield any specimens.

Pacheco (1969) believed that this enigmatic species was the only North American representative of the South American genus Efflagitatus Pacheco. Molecular data collected as part of this study strongly support this species as a member of the predominantly North American undatus group, implying that Efflagitatus Pacheco is polyphyletic. This species was weakly supported as a sister species to H. tenuis , another predominantly Floridian species with genitalia that are quite different from this species.

Distribution. This species has been collected primarily in Florida and extreme southern Georgia, although one specimen of H. selanderi has been collected in southern Mississippi ( Fig. 63 View Figures 58-65 ). Although the latter is a female, the identification (W.V. Miller) appears to be correct. It was attracted to a UV light on the sandy bank of the Buffalo River in Wilkinson County (Buffalo River at Highway 61, 24 June 1982, Paul K. Lago).

Specimens examined. 36 (See Appendix).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Heteroceridae

Genus

Heterocerus

Loc

Heterocerus selanderi (Pacheco)

King, Jonas G. & Lago, Paul K. 2012
2012
Loc

Efflagitatus selanderi

Pacheco, F. 1969: 37
1969
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