Ganthusa eva Fenyes

Klimaszewski, Jan, Larson, David J., Labrecque, Myriam & Bourdon, Caroline, 2016, Twelve new species and fifty-three new provincial distribution records of Aleocharinae rove beetles of Saskatchewan, Canada (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae), ZooKeys 610, pp. 45-112 : 81-82

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.610.9361

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:910C964F-910C-47D9-9FAE-B73A5557C7E2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D56410CC-61EF-9A20-72C7-A5EE782E602B

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Ganthusa eva Fenyes
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Coleoptera Staphylinidae

Ganthusa eva Fenyes

(for illustrations, see Klimaszewski et al. 2014)

Distribution.

Natural history.

In SK, one specimen was collected in May from lodgepole pine litter. Elsewhere, adults were captured in clear-cut Sitka spruce forest on Vancouver Island and in moss and gravel at the edge of small pools at other localities in the interior of British Columbia ( Klimaszewski and Winchester 2002). Additional specimens were found in British Columbia in a 1-year-old harvested Douglas-fir stand. In west-central Alberta, adults were collected in pitfall traps deployed in Upper Cordilleran coniferous forests, including subxeric lodgepole pine forests, mesic white spruce and lodgepole pine stands and spruce-dominated subhygric and hygric forests, but not in deciduous-dominated forest or in grassy or shrubby meadows ( Klimaszewski et al. 2014). In Alberta, adults also emerged from lodgepole pine trees infested by bark beetles ( Klimaszewski et al. 2014). In the Yukon Territory, adults were found in a squirrel midden in spring, probably overwintering, and in a coniferous woodchip pile ( Klimaszewski et al. 2014).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

SubFamily

Aleocharinae

Tribe

Lomechusini

Genus

Ganthusa