Belladonna fortieri Klimaszewski and Chandler, 2023

Klimaszewski, Jan, Chandler, Donald S., Davies, Anthony & Bourdon, Caroline, 2023, Aleocharine rove beetles of New Hampshire, USA: new taxa and new records (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Aleocharinae), Zootaxa 5364 (1), pp. 1-141 : 116-118

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5364.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EAEB5D9F-326D-46FE-90FD-DAFE9B01FD04

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10167396

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/282587CA-FFE7-FFF2-589E-1DA7FC50FEEA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Belladonna fortieri Klimaszewski and Chandler
status

sp. nov.

244. Belladonna fortieri Klimaszewski and Chandler , sp. n.

Figs. 13 View FIGURE 13 a-g, Table 1 View TABLE 1

Holotype (male). USA, Maine, York Co.: West Lebanon , 21–23.V.1991, D.W. Barry, FIT ( CNC) . Paratypes: Maine, York Co.: West Lebanon, 21–23.V.1991, D.W. Barry, FIT, 2 males ; 10–16.VII.1990, D.W. Barry, FIT, 1 male, 1 female. New Hampshire, Strafford Co.: Spruce Hole, 3 mi SW Durham , 18–26.VI.1990, G. Fortier, FIT on mat, 4 females ; 1–17.VI.1990, G. Fortier and D. Chandler, FIT on mat, 1 female; 20–25.V.1990, G. Fortier and D. Chandler, FIT, 2 females; 26.V.1987, D. Chandler, sift leaf litter on bog margin, 1 female. 1 mi SW Durham , 3.V.1985, D.S. Chandler, berlese grass clumps in swamp, 1 female.

Etymology. Named for Gay Fortier, collector of most of the type specimens, former graduate student of the University of New Hampshire and the University of Alberta, and formerly working as a technician on mites at the Florida State Collection of Arthropods in Gainesville (now retired).

Diagnosis. Male tergite VIII with two sharp apical teeth distributed laterally, median teeth not apparent ( Fig. 13c View FIGURE 13 ); apical part of median lobe of aedeagus narrowly elongate and sinuate ( Fig. 13b View FIGURE 13 ); spermathecal capsule ovoid in lateral view, stem more or less evenly wide ( Fig. 13g View FIGURE 13 ).

Description. Externally, except for male tergite VIII with only two teeth, this species is not distinguishable from B. barryi . Body length 3.34–3.71 mm, body broadly oval, moderately convex ( Fig. 13a View FIGURE 13 ). Male. Tergite VIII with two large lateral teeth, median ones not apparent ( Fig. 13c View FIGURE 13 ); sternite VIII parabolic apically ( Fig. 13d View FIGURE 13 ); median lobe of aedeagus distinct, in lateral view bulbus broadly oval and slightly compressed dorso-ventrad, crista apicalis broad, of triangular shape, tubus short with apex narrowly elongate and produced ventrad, its margins slightly sinuate ( Fig. View FIGURE 13 13b). Female. Tergite VIII truncate apically ( Fig. 13e View FIGURE 13 ); sternite VIII rounded apically ( Fig. 13f View FIGURE 13 ); spermatheca Scurved, capsule ovoid with truncate apex, median invagination shallow; stem sinuate, evenly narrow ( Fig. 13g View FIGURE 13 ).

Distribution. Nearctic. Canada: no records. USA: ME, NH.

Collection and Habitat data. Adults were captured by flight intercept traps on the Sphagnum mat of a kettle bog, from leaf litter on the bog margin, and from grass clumps in a freshwater swamp. Taken solely by a FIT in ME. Collected from May to June in NH, also taken in July at the ME site.

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

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