Elaphrus fuliginosus Say, 1830

Fleming, K. J. & Beresford, D. V., 2019, Range Updates for Eight Species of the Subfamily Elaphrinae (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in Ontario'S Far North and Akimiski Island, Nunavut, Canada, The Coleopterists Bulletin 73 (2), pp. 433-439 : 438

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1649/0010-065X-73.2.433

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EF3F76-B834-FFA3-2D51-FEAE5B185FF4

treatment provided by

Valdenar (2021-08-29 22:05:34, last updated 2021-09-02 05:01:10)

scientific name

Elaphrus fuliginosus Say
status

 

Elaphrus fuliginosus Say

Elaphrus fuliginosus is found in Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, and Québec (www.gbif.org/species/ 1035539), although Bousquet (2012) notes the Alberta location is unexpected. Lindroth (1961) recorded E. fuliginosus from southern and eastern Ontario. This species is generally distributed below 50° north latitude in beach habitats where there is little vegetation and wet sandy soil (Goulet 1983). Here we report the first territorial records from Nunavut (Fig. 2h).

Six Blethisa species are known to occur in North America; three have previously been collected in Ontario’ s Far North ( Lindroth 1961). In our study, we found two species, B. julii and B. quadricollis . We did not collect the third northern Ontario species, B. hudsonica , which is far more widespread across northern Canada ( Lindroth 1961; Bousquet 2012).

There are two species of Diacheila in North America, D. arctica and Diacheila polita (Falderman, 1835) . Diacheila polita occurs exclusively in northwestern Canada and was not expected to be collected in Ontario’ s Far North. Diacheila arctica is an extremely northern species and is likely not often caught due to its short active period ( Lindroth, 1961; Elias 1992; Bourassa and Wood 2011). As well, fossilized specimens of D. arctica are recorded from northeastern Labrador, Nova Scotia, Switzerland, northeastern France, and Poland in numerous studies, indicating that it once had a more extensive range ( Elias 1982; Ponel 1995; Miller 1997; Kasse et al. 1999; Coope 2007).

Of the 19 species of Elaphrus that have been recorded in North America, eight are known to occur in northern Ontario. We collected five Elaphrus species in our study, but did not collect Elaphrus lapponicus Gyllenhal, 1810 , Elaphrus olivaceus LeConte, 1863 , and Elaphrus trossulus Semenov, 1904 .

Bousquet, Y. 2012. Catalogue of Geadephaga (Coleoptera, Adephaga) of America, north of Mexico. ZooKeys 245: 1 - 1722. DOI: 10.3897 / zookeys. 245. 3416.

Coope, G. R. 2007. Coleoptera from the 2003 excavations of the mammoth skeleton at Niederweningen, Switzerland. Quaternary International 164 - 165: 130 - 138. DOI: 10.1016 / j. quaint. 2006.10.004

Elias, S. A. 1982. Paleoenvironmental interpretation of Holocene insect fossils from northeastern Labrador, Canada. Arctic and Alpine Research 14 (4): 311 - 319.

Elias, S. A. 1992. Late Quaternary beetle faunas of southwestern Alaska: Evidence of a refugium for mesic and hygrophilous species. Arctic and Alpine Research 24 (2): 133 - 144.

Kasse, C., A. S. Huijzer, D. Krzyszkowski, S. J. P. Bohncke, and G. R. Coope. 1999. Weichselian Late Pleniglacial and Late-glacial depositional environments, Coleoptera and periglacial climatic records from central Poland (Belchatow). Journal of Quaternary Science 13 (5): 455 - 469.

Lindroth, C. H. 1961. The ground-beetles (Carabidae, excl. Cicindelinae) of Canada and Alaska. Part 2. Opuscula Entomologica Supplementum 20: 1 - 200.

Miller, R. F. 1997. Late-glacial (Allerod - Younger Dryas) Coleoptera from central Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 34 (3): 247 - 259.

Ponel, P. 1995. Russian, Eemian and Wurmian Coleoptera assemblages from La Grande Pile (Vosges, France). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 114 (1): 1 - 41.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Carabidae

Genus

Elaphrus