Carpelimus elongatulus (Erichson, 1839)
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.894.37862 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D11503CA-5A57-4067-8179-04E0C8C162C8 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/455EF112-AE32-537C-8714-B471C02E0176 |
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scientific name |
Carpelimus elongatulus (Erichson, 1839) |
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Carpelimus elongatulus (Erichson, 1839) Figure 10 View Figures 9, 10
Distribution.
Native to the Palaearctic region, distributed from western Europe to the Baikal region of Russia ( Schülke 2012a). Adventive in the Nearctic region (Ontario, Quebec, and New Brunswick, Canada).
Canadian records
(DNA barcoded specimens). Ontario: Ausable-Bayfield Conservation Authority, 30-Jun-2015 (1 ex, CBG); Indian Point Provincial Park, 28-Jul-2015 (1 ex, CBG); Puslinch Township, 09-May-2010 (1 ex, CBG).
Additional Canadian records.
Ontario: Guelph, 10-Apr-2009, (2 exx, DEBU); Minesing Swamp, 26-Jan-2008 (1 ex, DEBU). Quebec: Dorval, 10-Oct-1975, (1 ex, FMNH); Sainte-Foy, 27-May-1976, (1 ex, FMNH). New Brunswick: Charlotte County, 05-Jun-2008 (1 ex, RWC); Jackson falls, 22-May-2010, (1 ex, RWC); Musquash, 07-May-2006 (1 ex, RWC).
Diagnostic information.
Body length: 2.0-2.6 mm. Habitus as in Fig. 10A View Figures 9, 10 . Aedeagus as in Fig. 10B View Figures 9, 10 .
Bionomic notes.
This species occurs on banks of waterways, wet meadows, agricultural fields and in damp leaf litter ( Schülke 2012a). The Canadian specimens were collected with Malaise traps in forests and extracted from leaf litter from a wetland and a river bank.
Comments.
As the Nearctic Carpelimus have not been revised in modern times, it is currently necessary to dissect males to match with published illustrations of the aedeagus (see Webster et al. 2016). Although only female voucher specimens from the Nearctic were available for study, they easily key to C. elongatulus in Schülke (2012a) and two of the barcoded Canadian specimens share identical haplotypes with European specimens of C. elongatulus . Similar but much smaller Palaearctic species such as C. subtilis are represented in BOLD and form separate BINs deeply divergent from C. elongatulus .
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.
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