Cis glabratus Mellie , 1848
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.894.37862 |
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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D11503CA-5A57-4067-8179-04E0C8C162C8 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/ACA8288B-16A4-521E-9483-038690F1F69B |
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Cis glabratus Mellie , 1848 |
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Cis glabratus Mellie, 1848 Figure 39 View Figures 38, 39
Distribution.
Native to the Palaearctic region, widespread in Europe ( Jelínek 2008). Common in northern Europe, mainly found in higher elevations in Central Europe ( Reibnitz 1999, Rassi et al. 2015). Adventive in the Nearctic region (Nova Scotia, Canada).
Canadian records.
Nova Scotia: Cape Breton Highlands National Park, 21-Jul-2009 (1 ex, CBG).
Diagnostic information
(based on Lohse 1967). Body length 1.5-2.0 mm. Red-brown to dark brown, habitus as in Fig. 39A View Figures 38, 39 . Clypeus in male with two large, broad teeth ( Fig. 39B View Figures 38, 39 ). Pronotum widest behind middle, distinctly tapering towards the front angles. Vestiture on pronotum fine and pale. Outer edge of protibia serrated. Male with a large abdominal fovea on 1st abdominal ventrite. Aedeagus as in Fig. 39C View Figures 38, 39 .
Bionomic notes.
The main host fungus in Europe is Fomitopsis pinicola (Sw.) P. Karst. ( Reibnitz 1999). The Canadian specimen was collected in a jack pine forest in Cape Breton Highlands National Park.
Comments.
Cis glabratus is externally very similar to C. levettei (Casey, 1898) and leads to that species in the key to North American species ( Lawrence 1971). The microscopic vestiture of the pronotum is longer and more conspicuous in C. glabratus , but the most reliable morphological differences are in the male genitalia ( Fig. 39C, D View Figures 38, 39 ). Cis levettei forms a separate BIN (BOLD:ACA7530) which is more closely clustered to other Palaearctic members of the C. nitidus species group ( C. castaneus (Herbst, 1793), C. jacquemartii Mellié, 1848 and C. lineatocribratus Mellié, 1848) than to C. glabratus .
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