Protistolophus spangleri Short, 2010

Short, Andrew Edward Z., Santana, Larissa, Benetti, Cesar J. & Hamada, Neusa, 2020, Rediscovery of the Neotropical water scavenger beetle Protistolophus spangleri Short with notes on its habitat and behavior (Coleoptera: Hydrophilidae: Hydrophilinae, Zootaxa 4759 (1), pp. 139-142 : 139-142

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4759.1.10

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3811985

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E15C87FA-FFD9-FFA4-FF7C-C2B9F035FE22

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Protistolophus spangleri Short, 2010
status

 

Protistolophus spangleri Short, 2010 View in CoL

Protistolophus spangleri Short, 2010: 30 View in CoL .

Type Material Examined: Holotype (male): ‘Venezuela. T. F. Amaz. / Cerro de la Neblina / 1 km S Basecamp / 0◦50’N, 66◦10’W/ 140 m., 17 Feb. 1985 ’, ‘ Along small whitewater/ stream; pools of dead leaves & sticks/ P.J. & P.M. Spangler, R. Faitoute, & W. Steiner’ , ‘ HOLOTYPE / Protistolophus / spangleri/ A.E.Z. Short’ (deposited in the Museo del Instituto de Zoología Agrícola , Maracay, Venezuela). New material examined (23): BRAZIL: Amazonas: Manaus: Ducke Reserve , near Igarapé Acará, 8.ii.2018, detrital pool along creek in forest, leg. Short, Benetti & Santana, BR18-0208 - 01 A (6 exs.); same locality and habitat but 6.vi.2018, leg. Short, BR18-0608 - 01 A (7 exs.); Ducke Reserve , near Igarapé Barro Branco, 9.vi.2018, muddy pools in swampy area adjacent to stream, leg. Short, BR18-0609 - 02 B (4 exs.); Ducke Reserve , 9–10.vi.2018, swampy flooded forest area adjacent to a small creek, leg. Short, BR18-0609 - 03 A (6 exs.). Newly collected specimens are deposited in the Invertebrate Collection of the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia ( INPA) in Manaus , Brazil and the Snow Entomological Collection ( SEMC) at the University of Kansas .

Habitat. The Adolfo Ducke Forest Reserve, 10,000 ha in size, is under the protection of the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia ( INPA). It is located at the border of city of Manaus, at the intersection of the Negro and Amazon Rivers. The first 6 specimens were collected on 8 February 2018 in a detrital pool in the forest that was approximately 3 x 2 m in size and a maximum of 20 cm deep ( Fig. 2A View FIGURE 2 ). It was less than 20 m from Igarapé Acará [Acará Creek], a swift sandy bottom stream with a few sandstone outcrops. Other taxa in the same pool included the hydrophilid genera Tropisternus Solier and Hydrobiomorpha Blackburn , as well as the dytiscid genera Hydaticus Leach , Thermonectus Dejean Vatellus Aubé, and Copelatu s Erichson. We collected along the margins of Igarapé Acará and several other small detrital pools, as well as large pools that were in the dirt trail leading to the stream from the Ducke Reserve research station, but no Protistolophus specimens were found in these habitats.

We returned to the Ducke Reserve on 5-9 June 2018 and conducted a more comprehensive survey of aquatic beetles. We collected in numerous aquatic habitats, including several streams ranging from rocky to sandy bottoms, artificial roadside ditches and pools, and natural forest pools. We collected 7 specimens of P. spangleri in the same detrital pool in which we found specimens four months prior. We also collected 6 specimens in shallow detrital pools (less than 5 cm deep) adjacent to another unnamed stream ( Fig 2B View FIGURE 2 ). No specimens were collected in the margins of streams, roadside pools, or grassy ditches despite extensive collecting efforts by multiple people over several days. No putative larvae of Protistolophu s were collected and they unfortunately remain unknown.

The new ecological information is remarkably consistent with the data on the labels of the holotype (“Along small whitewater stream, pools of dead leaves & sticks”). Both the Venezuela and Brazilian collections were made in pristine lowland rainforest in detrital pools that were adjacent to a swift streams.

Behavior. From our 8 February 2018 collecting trip, we kept three specimens alive in a falcon tube and brought them back to the lab where we placed them in a small glass aquarium with leaf and stick detritus taken from the pool in which they were found ( Fig. 2D View FIGURE 2 ). They lived until 19 February when they were dispatched in ethanol for preservation. The species takes flight relatively quickly when removed from water, as was observed both in the field and in the lab when removed from the tank. While the beetles are able to swim in open water, they do so very clumsily and spent most time clinging to the detritus in the tank. They are excellent crawlers and walk quickly on the substrate in and out of the water with ease. Perhaps most consequential, we discovered P. spangleri produces rather loud, audible stridulation. The beetles could be induced to stridulate when by handling them both in and out the water. Stridulation is known in several other lineages of Hydrophilinae , including the closely related genus Tropisternus within the Hydrophilini .

We recorded approximately 23 short video clips using an iPhone 6 which cumulatively contain about 15 minutes of footage that documents their swimming and crawling behavior, ability to take flight, and audible stridulation. These videos are available upon request from the first author.

Morphological Notes. The metatarsi were missing in the holotype, and thus we are able to report on their condition here for the first time. The metatarsus contains five tarsomeres, the first being very short, and the second very long— slightly longer than tarsomerses 3 to 5 combined. The metatarsomeres bear long natatory setae on the dorsal surface, with two rows of short spicules on the ventral surface. Perhaps most notable is that the metatarsi of Protistolophus are not rotated laterally as in all other Hydrophilini but remain in the plesiomorphic condition with the ventral surface (with spicules) facing ventrally. We here provide photographs of the male genitalia for the first time ( Figs 1 View FIGURE 1 C–E).

Remarks. Although these new collections of Protistolophus substantially advance our understanding of the genus, the reasons for its apparent rarity remain unknown. Now that the habitat is better understood, it may be easier to locate additional populations in the future. However, forest detrital pools are fairly common in lowland Amazonia and it is puzzling why the species was seemingly easy to encounter at the Ducke reserve at two different times of year but yet not a single individual has turned up elsewhere.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

INPA

Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia

SEMC

University of Kansas - Biodiversity Institute

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Hydrophilidae

Genus

Protistolophus

Loc

Protistolophus spangleri Short, 2010

Short, Andrew Edward Z., Santana, Larissa, Benetti, Cesar J. & Hamada, Neusa 2020
2020
Loc

Protistolophus spangleri

Short, A. E. Z. 2010: 30
2010
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF