Lathrobium (Lathrobioma) othioides LeConte, 1880

Haberski, Adam & Caterino, Michael S., 2024, A review of Nearctic Lathrobium (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae), with revision and descriptions of new flightless species from the mountains of the southeastern U. S., ZooKeys 1198, pp. 193-277 : 193

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1198.118355

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:59053839-702C-46C9-B0F6-AA37C61C0E45

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D93B94DE-5692-56E0-A15F-B2CDAEF70337

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Lathrobium (Lathrobioma) othioides LeConte, 1880
status

 

Lathrobium (Lathrobioma) othioides LeConte, 1880 View in CoL

Lathrobium othioides LeConte, 1880: 175.

Lathrobioma othioides : Casey 1905: 101.

Lathrobium (Lathrobioma) inops Casey, 1885: 135; Bernhauer and Schubert 1912: 264 [in error].

Type material.

Lectotype, Lathrobium othioides LeConte, herein designated (MCZ): "Mas. / ♂ / [handwritten] L. othioides Lec. / [red] Type 6448 / Lectotype Lathrobium othioides LeConte Desg. Haberski & Caterino."

Other material.

Canada: Lake Superior (2, USNM) . USA: Iowa: ‘Ia.’ (1, USNM). Massachusetts: ‘Mass.’ (5, MCZ); Norfolk Co.: Brookline, 21 Mar 1899 (1, MCZ); same locality, 17 Apr 1899, C. A. Frost (1, CUAC); same data, except 09 Apr 1899 (1, MCZ); ‘Mass’ (1, USNM). New Jersey: ‘N.J.?’ (2, USNM) .

Diagnosis.

Males have distinctive aedeagi with the apex of the ventral process divided into two projecting horns, absent in all other Lathrobioma . Females can be difficult to distinguish from L. tenue , but their gonocoxites are generally more robust and convex in the basal half.

Description.

Body length 6 mm; body coloration dark red, appendages lighter red. Gular sutures arcuate; maxillary palpomere III> 0.4 × as wide as long; antennomeres V-VII as wide as long. Elytra as long as pronotum. Females with paraprocts undivided, apices shorter than basal portion; sternite VIII weakly oblong. Aedeagus with characteristic projections of ventral process (Fig. 31 View Figures 29–34 ).

Distribution.

Canada: ON, NB, QC ( Bousquet et al. 2013). USA: IA, NJ, MA, RI.

Remarks.

Bernhauer and Schubert (1912) listed L. inops as a synonym of L. othioides , but after comparing the types, we determined this was incorrect. The aedeagus of L. othioides is quite distinctive and that of the L. inops lectotype did not match it. Instead, it was indistinguishable from that of L. scolopaceum , with which we synonymize L. inops below.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Staphylinidae

Genus

Lathrobium

Loc

Lathrobium (Lathrobioma) othioides LeConte, 1880

Haberski, Adam & Caterino, Michael S. 2024
2024
Loc

Lathrobium (Lathrobioma) inops

Casey 1885
1885
Loc

Lathrobium othioides

LeConte 1880
1880
Loc

Lathrobioma othioides

J.L.LeConte 1880
1880