Bembidion (Zeplataphus) dehiscens Broun, 1893
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5181756 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:367B2C10-0F57-46E6-AAB5-EDF240370778 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/980DC26F-E336-FFD8-FF6D-FDB09388F8F1 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Bembidion (Zeplataphus) dehiscens Broun, 1893 |
status |
|
Bembidion (Zeplataphus) dehiscens Broun, 1893 View in CoL
Fig. 18 View Figures 17–20 , 51 View Figures 45–52 , 81 View Figures 77–82
Bembidium dehiscens Broun, 1893: 1009 . Type locality: Pakuratahi Stream [=River], Rimutaka Range,
WN ( Broun 1893: 1009); Rimutaka Range, WN ( Lindroth 1976: 173), lectotype designated). Other synonymy as in Larochelle and Larivière (2001: 84).
Description. Body length 6.2–9.0 mm. Black; antennae and legs piceous to rufous (antennal segment 1, when rufous, infuscated above). Microsculpture of elytra moderately strong, irregularly isodiametric. Moderately shiny, with moderately strong metallic lustre (aeneous). Thorax. Pronotum moderately convex; thin raised lateral bead incomplete, obsolete near posterolateral angles; sides slightly rounded anteriorly, slightly sinuate posteriorly; posterolateral angles subrectangular, moderately projected laterally, somewhat sharp at tip; laterobasal foveae very deep, oblong, short, not reaching basal margin. Elytra. Subdepressed, elongate. Scutellar striole consisting of a row of punctures. Striae 2–6 incomplete (evanescent apically), shallow, finely punctate; stria 7 strong, incomplete, finely punctate. Intervals depressed; interval 3 with four or five setiferous punctures. Apical striole deep, connected to stria 5. Sutural apices rounded. Abdomen. Last visible sternum (sternum VII) of female with four long ambulatory setae only. Aedeagus. Lateral view ( Fig. 51 View Figures 45–52 ): moderately arcuate; base moderately concave dorsally; middle mostly narrow and subparallel; apex triangular, with extreme tip moderately narrow and long.
Material examined. 711 specimens ( CMNH, JNNZ, LUNZ, MONZ, NZAC).
Geographic distribution ( Fig. 81 View Figures 77–82 ). North Island: BP, GB, HB, RI, TO, WA, WI, WN. South Island: BR, FD, KA, MB, MC, NC, NN, OL, SD, WD.
Ecology. Lowland, montane, subalpine. Epigean. Banks of big rivers, close to the water. Open ground; wet, gravelly or gravelly-stony, bare soil. Nocturnal; hides during the day deep among gravel and under stones. Gregarious.
Biology. Seasonality: September–April, June. Tenerals: November–March. Often infested with fungi (Laboulbeniales). Defence mechanism: when alarmed, the adult escapes by running or flying short distances.
Dispersal power. Macropterous, capable of flight. Occasional flier. Fast runner. Vagility favoured by flight capacity.
Collecting techniques. Raking the soil; turning stones.
Reference. Larochelle and Larivière 2001: 84 (catalogue; biology, dispersal power, ecology, geographic distribution, reference).
CMNH |
The Cleveland Museum of Natural History |
LUNZ |
Lincoln University Entomology Research Museum |
MONZ |
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa - Entomology |
NZAC |
New Zealand Arthropod Collection |
BR |
Embrapa Agrobiology Diazothrophic Microbial Culture Collection |
MB |
Universidade de Lisboa, Museu Bocage |
MC |
Museo de Cipolleti |
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Bembidion (Zeplataphus) dehiscens Broun, 1893
Larochelle, André, Zeperyphodes, Broun & Larivière, Marie-Claude 2015 |
Bembidium dehiscens
Broun, T. 1893: 1009 |