Holopogon albipilosus Curran, 1923
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4662.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:366A1E81-946C-4ED4-8A65-C51151FE87CC |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7708F17A-B86F-E551-63F1-FD9160F7FA20 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Holopogon albipilosus Curran |
status |
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Holopogon albipilosus Curran View in CoL
Holopogon albipilosus Curran, 1923: 207 View in CoL .
Recognition characters: Blackish species; 6.5– 7 mm; mystax white; thorax white pollinose, no brownish pollen; scutellum with long, slightly woolly pile; wings pure hyaline; abdomen shining black with pale yellowish or white pile that is longer on the sides, especially basally; legs shining black, hind tibiae greatly enlarged, hind tarsi gradually tapering, pile and bristles of legs wholly whitish, pubescence on front and hind tibiae and tarsal pads dull yellowish.
Distribution: ALBANY: Easterbrook, 1,981 m (6,500 ft), 23 June 1948 ( FW, WM); Snowy Range Mtns., 4 July 1959 ( RJL); 37 km S of Laramie, 2,306 m (7,564 ft), numerous records, 11 July–16 Aug. 1973 (SD, RJL), 8 Aug. 1973 ( RJL) (Voucher sp. #32). CARBON: Long Tree, 15 July 1950 ( GFK). FREMONT: Lander, 22 July 1953 ( RRD); Sweetwater River crossing with Highway 28, 13 July 1955; Torrey’s Lake, 7 Sept. 1895 (William Wheeler coll.). NATRONA: Casper, 3 June 1960. SWEETWATER: Green River, 1,859 m (6,100 ft), 2 July 1920. TETON: Jackson, 1,920 m (6,300 ft), 13, 17 July 1920; 22 July 1953 ( RRD); 5 km W of Hoback Jct., 19 July 1971 ( JRP) (38 specimens in CAS). UINTA: Fort Bridger, 26 June 1939 ( GFK-USU). Recorded from Wyoming by: Adisoemarto (1967) (Carbon County, Green River, Jackson, near Lander); Dennis & Lavigne (1975, 2007); Geller-Grimm (2018); Lavigne & Dennis (1994); Martin (1959) (Albany, Carbon, and Natrona Counties, Green River, Jackson); Martin & Wilcox (1965).
Habitat: Douglas fir forest and grama-needlegrass-wheatgrass grassland vegetation types. Short- to mid-grass rangeland and moist mountainous valleys; swampy areas (see Dennis & Lavigne 1975).
Ethology: Always foraged from twig tips of mountain gooseberry ( Ribes montigenum McClatchie ) 52 cm to 3 m above the ground; courtship (see Dennis & Lavigne 1975).
Prey: COLEOPTERA , DIPTERA , HEMIPTERA (Heteroptera, Homoptera) , HYMENOPTERA , PLECOP- TERA (see Dennis & Lavigne 1975, 2007; Lavigne & Dennis 1994).
FW |
Texas Christian University |
WM |
Gezira Research Station |
CAS |
California Academy of Sciences |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.