Creophilus incanus, (KLUG)

Clarke, Dave J., 2011, Testing the phylogenetic utility of morphological character systems, with a revision of Creophilus Leach (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society (Zool. J. Linn. Soc.) 163 (3), pp. 723-812 : 766-768

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00725.x

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FBFE9195-BE04-4AFE-9417-6E38BCE6AB84

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039B414F-1957-FFD6-FEFE-FD64492FF8C4

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Creophilus incanus
status

 

2. CREOPHILUS INCANUS (KLUG) View in CoL

( FIGS 1G, 2K, 4F View Figure 4 , 16 View Figure 16 , 17 View Figure 17 )

Staphylinus (Emus) incanus Klug, 1834: 137 View in CoL . Type locality: Madagascar.

Staphylinus incanus View in CoL ; Erichson, 1839: 350; Vinson, 1956: 51; Vinson, 1967: 320.

Staphylinus (Creophilus) Coquerelii Fauvel, 1866: 317 . Type locality: Réunion: Bourbon; 1867: 67; 1868: 71 (same as 1867 paper); Vinson, 1956: 51 (synonym of C. incanus View in CoL ); Lecoq, 1990: 206 (as coquereli, synonym of C. incanus View in CoL ).

Creophilus incanus View in CoL ; Fauvel, 1875: 55; Alluaud, 1900: 87; Bernhauer & Schubert, 1914: 398; Lecoq, 1990: 206, 210, fig. 39; Herman, 2001b: 3317.

Creocephalus incanus ; Fairmaire, 1893: 523 (error for Creophilus View in CoL , see Blackwelder, 1952: 111).

Creophilus Coquereli View in CoL ; Alluaud, 1900: 88; Bernhauer & Schubert, 1914: 398 (synonym of C. incanus ).

Type material: Staphylinus (Emus) incanus Klug. Lectotype (here designated). ♂, ‘[orange] Type/ incanus Kl. / 5884/ [green] incanus| Kl.| Madag Goud./ [blue] Hist.-Coll. ( Coleoptera )| Nr. 5884| Staphylinus incanus Kl. | Madagasc., Goudot| Zool. Mus. Berlin / [red] SYNTYPUS | Staphylinus | incanus Klug, 1832 | labeled by MNHUB 2004/ FMNH-INS 0000 016 781/ [red] LECTOTYPE | Staphylinus (Emus) | incanus Klug, 1832 | designated by| D. J. Clarke 2008’ (in ZMHB). Specimen missing left metatarsus and right metatarsal claws. Paralectotype. ♀, ‘[orange] Type/ [blue] Hist.-Coll. ( Coleoptera )| Nr. 5884| Staphylinus incanus Kl. | Madagasc., Goudot| Zool. Mus. Berlin / [red] SYNTYPUS Staphylinus | incanus Klug, 1832 | labeled by MNHUB 2004/ FMNH-INS 0000 016 782/ [yellow] PARALECTOTYPE | Staphylinus (Emus) | incanus Klug, 1832 | designated by| D. J. Clarke 2008’ (in ZMHB).

Staphylinus (Creophilus) Coquerelii Fauvel. Syntypes (?; not seen). Vinson (1956) notes ‘type: Réunion, probably in Paris Museum’ . Fauvel did not indicate the number of specimens examined.

Other material examined: 170 specimens. See supporting information, Appendix S1 .

Diagnosis: With characters of the maxillosus -group; integument and elytra uniformly black; antenna distinctly clavate; antennomere 11 convex apically ( Fig. 16B View Figure 16 ); basolateral pronotal impressions marked by deep punctule ( Fig. 16G View Figure 16 ); basolateral pronotal macroseta absent; elytral vestiture with indistinct whitish- or silvery-grey patch ( Figs 1G, 16H View Figure 16 ); tergal chaetotaxic formula 6-6-6-0(2)-4-6.

Description: Measurements ( N = 10♂, 10♀). Forebody length: ♂ 5.8–11.0 mm, ♀ 6.1–8.0 mm. See surpporting Table S 4 for comparison of ranges of male and female ratios. Head. Head weakly trapezoidal and widest posteriorly to subrectangular, particularly in females; HW/ HL = 1.43–1.70; basal margins sparsely setose; dorsal punctation sparse; eyes large ( EYL / HL = 0.48–0.65), dorsolateral in large males, more lateral in females and smaller males, not protruding, lateral margins of head visible in dorsal view only in large males, obscured by eye in smaller specimens; HL 1/ HL 2 much greater in females than males (♂ = 1.21–2.40, ♀ = 2.60–3.25); antennae as in Figure 16B View Figure 16 , distinctly clavate; antennomeres 1–6 brownish-black, 7–11 greyish-black, 9–10 narrowed anteriorly, thickened posteriorly; apex of antennomere 11 convex medially; each pair of apical setae moderately widely separated, one on each side of apex; mandibles as in Figure 16A View Figure 16 , longer than head in large males, subequal to head in females and small males ( ML / HL ♂ = 0.88–1.48, ♀ = 0.94–1.06), T 1 largest, T 3 hardly visible in dorsal view. Thorax and abdomen. Pronotum ( Fig. 16G View Figure 16 ) slightly transverse ( PW / PL = 1.07–1.24), moderately to distinctly narrowed posteriorly; PL 1.24–1.56 ¥ ESL; basolateral margins very shallowly emarginate, hind angles distinct, obtuse; disc surface faintly sinuous laterally, with sparse, black, peripheral setae and very sparse short vestiture on lower anterolateral declivities; basolateral impressions sparsely setose, accentuated by deep punctule; scutellum with uniformly black vestiture; elytra uniformly black to brownish-black, vestiture sparse, with poorly delimited central white patch ( Fig. 16H View Figure 16 ); wings fully developed, clear yellowish-brown, without black spot in medial field between MP 3 and MP 4 veins; vestiture of pterothorax mostly whitish, that of legs mostly black; dorsal abdominal vestiture mostly black but with variable maculation of whitish vestiture concentrated on tergites and parasclerites III – V ( Fig. 1G); vestiture of sternites III – VI mostly whitish, interrupted by more or less circular black patches laterally, vestiture on sternites VII –IX mostly black; whitish abdominal vestiture frequently with bluish-grey tinge; abdominal tergite VII with well-developed palisade fringe. Male genitalia. Aedeagus as in Figure 16F View Figure 16 ; median lobe apex narrowly subacuminate ( Fig. 16C View Figure 16 ); paired apicolateral sclerites (as) articulated to internal edge of median orifice, not fused to it. Paramere as in Figure 16D View Figure 16 . Internal sac inverted as in Figure 16F View Figure 16 , everted as in Figure 16E View Figure 16 ; ventral sclerite (vs) deeply notched apically ( Fig. 16J View Figure 16 ); ventral process (vp) short, with ventromedian spiculose strip (vr) shorter than ventral sclerite (vs). Female internal genitalia. Internal female genitalia as in Figure 16I View Figure 16 ; vaginal plate (vp) broadly rounded to truncate posteriorly, with median sclerotized strip (ss); surface of vaginal fold ( Fig. 16I View Figure 16 , vf) with embedded minute tooth-like scales (as in Fig. 9M). Chaetotaxy. Basolateral pronotal macrosetae absent; elytral discal series with 3–4 macrosetae; tergal chaetotaxic formula = 6-6-6-0(2)-4-6, inner lateral macrosetae absent from tergite VII, tergite VI usually without macrosetae, outer lateral macrosetae occasionally present.

Variation: Five specimens from Réunion and three from Madagascar have mostly black vestiture on elytra, tergites, and ventral side, with only paired groups of white setae in marginal fringes of tergites III – VI. Aedeagi of males from Réunion and Mauritius were identical to those from Madagascar.

data). Phenology: February–December. Vinson (1956) records one specimen ‘on decaying Clemora beetles’ ( Scarabaeidae : junior synonym of Phyllophaga Harris ), another ‘trapped in an Aristolochia flower’. He notes the species is ‘most probably a predator of dipterous larvae in carrion’.

Remarks: A female specimen from Réunion in Bernhauer’s collection ( FMNH) bears the label ‘ nigerrimus Typus’ in Bernhauer’s handwriting. Another ‘ nigerrimus ’ specimen (syntype?) is possibly in NMW ( A. F. Newton, pers. comm.). Further collecting on Réunion may reveal subspecific differences from Madagascan specimens.

Comparison: Creophilus incanus resembles C. galapagensis and C. maxillosus villosus in having the whitish dorsal abdominal vestiture concentrated on tergites IV– V. It is distinguished from both most easily by the convex apex of the terminal antennomere and the posteriorly thickened preceding two antennomeres ( Fig. 16B View Figure 16 ).

Distribution ( Fig. 17 View Figure 17 ): Madagascar, Mauritius, Mayotte ( Alluaud, 1900), and Réunion.

Biology and ecology: Rare in collections. Two specimens were taken from cow dung. Habitat: unknown. Altitude: 800 m (only one specimen with elevation

J

University of the Witwatersrand

N

Nanjing University

S

Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History

HL

Houghton Lake Wildlife Research Station

ML

Musee de Lectoure

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

PW

Paleontological Collections

PL

Západoceské muzeum v Plzni

MP

Mohonk Preserve, Inc.

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

VI

Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

FMNH

Field Museum of Natural History

NMW

Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien

F

Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Creophilus

Loc

Creophilus incanus

Clarke, Dave J. 2011
2011
Loc

Staphylinus (Creophilus) Coquerelii Fauvel, 1866: 317

Lecoq J-C 1990: 206
Vinson J 1956: 51
1956
Loc

Creophilus

Bernhauer M & Schubert K 1914: 398
Alluaud C 1900: 88
1900
Loc

Creocephalus incanus

Blackwelder RE 1952: 111
Fairmaire L 1893: 523
1893
Loc

Creophilus incanus

Herman LH 2001: 3317
Lecoq J-C 1990: 206
Bernhauer M & Schubert K 1914: 398
Alluaud C 1900: 87
Fauvel A 1875: 55
1875
Loc

Staphylinus incanus

Vinson J 1967: 320
Vinson J 1956: 51
Erichson WF 1839: 350
1839
Loc

Staphylinus (Emus) incanus

Klug JCF 1834: 137
1834
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