Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830

Atomaria testacea Stephens, 1830 NEW BRUNSWICK: Albert Co.: Mary’s Pt., August 12, 2004, C.G. Majka, coastal field, in compost (4, CGMC). NOVA SCOTIA: Cape Breton Co.: Scatarie Island: Savage Cove, August 10, 2005, K.R. Aikens, beach, under wrack (1, CBU); Colchester Co.: Bible Hill, May 31, 2005, J...

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Main Authors: Majka, Christopher, Johnson, Colin, Langor, David
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789527
https://zenodo.org/record/3789527
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3789527
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Coleoptera
Cryptophagidae
Atomaria
Atomaria testacea
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Coleoptera
Cryptophagidae
Atomaria
Atomaria testacea
Majka, Christopher
Johnson, Colin
Langor, David
Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Coleoptera
Cryptophagidae
Atomaria
Atomaria testacea
description Atomaria testacea Stephens, 1830 NEW BRUNSWICK: Albert Co.: Mary’s Pt., August 12, 2004, C.G. Majka, coastal field, in compost (4, CGMC). NOVA SCOTIA: Cape Breton Co.: Scatarie Island: Savage Cove, August 10, 2005, K.R. Aikens, beach, under wrack (1, CBU); Colchester Co.: Bible Hill, May 31, 2005, June 14, 2005, K.R. Aikens, pasture, sweeping (4, CBU); Bible Hill, May 31, 2005, July 21, 2006, S.M. Townsend, sweeping (2, CBU); Bible Hill, June 3, 2007, June 15, 2007, August 1, 2007, C.W. D’Orsay, pasture, sweeping (5, CBU); Debert, June 19, 1993, J. Ogden (1, NSNR); Guysborough Co.: Dayspring Lake, 2–15 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce, FIT (1, NSMC); Malay Lake, 14 May-2 June, 1997, 1–16 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (mature), FIT (2, NSMC); Seloam Lake, 14 May-2 June, 1997, 2–15 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce, FIT (2, NSMC); Halifax Co.: Abraham’s Lake, 1–16 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (old), FIT (1, NSMC); Anti Dam Lake, 1–16 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, black spruce (90 years), FIT (1, NSMC); Antrim, June 9, 2005, J. Gordon, FIT (1, NSNR); Burnside, May 19, 2004, C. Cormier, field, on dead pig (1, SMU); Campbell Hill, 15– 30 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (mature), FIT (1, NSMC); Long Lake, May 25, 2002, C.G. Majka, along stream (1, CGMC); Pockwock Lake, 14 May-2 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (mature), FIT (1, NSMC); Pogwa Lake, 15–30 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce, FIT (1, NSMC); Pt. Pleasant Park, July 2, 2001, July 7, 2001, August 18, 2001, June 9, 2002, June 18, 2002, July 23, 2002, C.G. Majka, red spruce forest, boggy area (6, CGMC); Sandy Lake, 16–29 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (120+ years), FIT (1, NSMC); south-end Halifax, May 26, 2001, May 20, 2002, June 21, 2002, C.G. Majka, open area (3, CGMC); south-end Halifax, August 22, 2002, C.G. Majka, compost (1, CGMC); Kings Co.: Kentville, August 10, 2005, July 9, 2006, August 19, 2007, D.H. Webster, compost (11, DHWC); Kentville, August 12, 2007, D.H. Webster, at light (1, DHWC). Atomaria testacea is newly recorded in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Canada (Fig. 15). In North America it has previously been recorded from southern California (Leng 1920) under the name Atomaria ruficornis Marsham, 1802, synonymized by Johnson et al. (2007). LeConte (1869, 258) reported a species from South Carolina under the name of Atomaria testacea Zimmerman; however, as Bousquet (1989) makes clear, this refers to Cryptophagus ferrugineus Sahlberg. In the Palaearctic region it is found throughout Europe, in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia in North Africa, and in Asia in Turkey, Kazhakhstan, Mongolia, and western Siberia (Johnson et al. 2007). In Atlantic Canada it has been found in red spruce forests, boggy areas and marshes, in pastures, fields, meadows, and open areas, on beaches under wrack, in a ravine, and in compost. Johnson (1993) reported that it was, “mainly a grassland species which has been recorded around farms, gardens and parks, but it often occurs in other habitats. It has been collected in man-made heaps of refuse, especially cut vegetation, grass, hay, haystack bottoms and compost, more rarely in dung or dung heaps.” Description: Head and prontotum piceous. Elytra piceous basally, gradually becoming paler in the apical half. Venter: pro-, meso-, and meta-sterna piceous; abdominal sterna and legs dark testaceous. Head finely, moderately sparsely, punctate. Pronotum and elytra moderately finely and densely punctate, interspaces 1.0–1.5 times the diameter of punctures, elytral punctures becoming finer apically; pronotum widest at midpoint, constricted towards base and apex; base with only a very shallow transverse impression (Fig. 9). Antennae: antennomere 1 swollen, slightly curved and expanded at apex; 2 smaller than 1 but also apically expanded; 3 almost as long as 2 and only slightly more slender; 4–8 short and somewhat bead-like; antennal club distinct; antennomeres 9 and 10 transverse (Fig. 1.8). Body: width/length ratio, 0.46; length, 1.3–1.6 mm. Québec Newfoundland Gaspe Prince Edward Cape Breton Island Island New Brunswick Haine Nova Atomaria apicalis Scotia Atomaria nigrirostris Figure Ι6. Distribution of Atomaria apicalis and Atomaria nigrirostris in Atlantic Canada. : Published as part of Majka, Christopher, Johnson, Colin & Langor, David, 2010, Contributions towards an understanding of the Atomariinae (Coleoptera, Cryptophagidae) of Atlantic Canada, pp. 37-63 in ZooKeys 35 (35) on pages 54-56, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.35.318, http://zenodo.org/record/576616 : {"references": ["Leng CW (1920) Catalogue of the Coleoptera of America north of Mexico. John D. Sherman, Jr., Mount Vernon, New York, 470 pp.", "Johnson C, Otero JC, Leschen RAB (2007) Cryptophagidae Kirby, 1837. In: Lobl I, Smetana A (Eds) Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera, Volume 4: Elateroidea, Derontoidea, Bostrichoidea, Lymexyloidea, Cleroidea, Cucujoidea. Apollo Books, Stenstrup, Denmark, 513 - 531.", "LeConte JL (1869) Synonymical notes on Coleoptera of the United States, with descriptions of new species, from the mss. of the late Dr. C. Zimmerman. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 2: 243 - 259.", "Bousquet Y (1989) A review of the North American genera of Cryptophaginae (Coleoptera: Cryptophagidae). The Coleopterists Bulletin 43 (1): 1 - 17.", "Johnson C (1993) Provisional atlas of the Cryptophagidae-Atomariinae (Coleoptera) of Britain and Ireland. Biological Records Centre, Natural Environmental Research Council, Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, Great Britain. 91 pp. http: // nora. nerc. ac. uk / 7280 / 1 / Cryptophagidae-Atomarinae. pdf [accessed 11. XI. 2009]"]}
format Text
author Majka, Christopher
Johnson, Colin
Langor, David
author_facet Majka, Christopher
Johnson, Colin
Langor, David
author_sort Majka, Christopher
title Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830
title_short Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830
title_full Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830
title_fullStr Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830
title_full_unstemmed Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830
title_sort atomaria testacea stephens 1830
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2010
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789527
https://zenodo.org/record/3789527
long_lat ENVELOPE(141.383,141.383,-66.800,-66.800)
ENVELOPE(167.167,167.167,-73.300,-73.300)
ENVELOPE(-19.392,-19.392,75.726,75.726)
ENVELOPE(-119.991,-119.991,59.920,59.920)
ENVELOPE(-109.001,-109.001,59.617,59.617)
ENVELOPE(-55.598,-55.598,51.333,51.333)
geographic Canada
Breton Island
Zimmerman
Haystack
Lake May
Dam Lake
Savage Cove
geographic_facet Canada
Breton Island
Zimmerman
Haystack
Lake May
Dam Lake
Savage Cove
genre Breton Island
Newfoundland
Siberia
genre_facet Breton Island
Newfoundland
Siberia
op_relation http://zenodo.org/record/576616
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op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789527
https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.35.318
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3789527 2023-05-15T15:46:50+02:00 Atomaria testacea Stephens 1830 Majka, Christopher Johnson, Colin Langor, David 2010 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789527 https://zenodo.org/record/3789527 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/576616 http://publication.plazi.org/id/73788C50B242D70FF55C3742FFBC1A5B https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.35.318 http://zenodo.org/record/576616 http://publication.plazi.org/id/73788C50B242D70FF55C3742FFBC1A5B https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789528 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Coleoptera Cryptophagidae Atomaria Atomaria testacea article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2010 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789527 https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.35.318 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789528 2022-03-10T13:58:39Z Atomaria testacea Stephens, 1830 NEW BRUNSWICK: Albert Co.: Mary’s Pt., August 12, 2004, C.G. Majka, coastal field, in compost (4, CGMC). NOVA SCOTIA: Cape Breton Co.: Scatarie Island: Savage Cove, August 10, 2005, K.R. Aikens, beach, under wrack (1, CBU); Colchester Co.: Bible Hill, May 31, 2005, June 14, 2005, K.R. Aikens, pasture, sweeping (4, CBU); Bible Hill, May 31, 2005, July 21, 2006, S.M. Townsend, sweeping (2, CBU); Bible Hill, June 3, 2007, June 15, 2007, August 1, 2007, C.W. D’Orsay, pasture, sweeping (5, CBU); Debert, June 19, 1993, J. Ogden (1, NSNR); Guysborough Co.: Dayspring Lake, 2–15 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce, FIT (1, NSMC); Malay Lake, 14 May-2 June, 1997, 1–16 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (mature), FIT (2, NSMC); Seloam Lake, 14 May-2 June, 1997, 2–15 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce, FIT (2, NSMC); Halifax Co.: Abraham’s Lake, 1–16 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (old), FIT (1, NSMC); Anti Dam Lake, 1–16 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, black spruce (90 years), FIT (1, NSMC); Antrim, June 9, 2005, J. Gordon, FIT (1, NSNR); Burnside, May 19, 2004, C. Cormier, field, on dead pig (1, SMU); Campbell Hill, 15– 30 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (mature), FIT (1, NSMC); Long Lake, May 25, 2002, C.G. Majka, along stream (1, CGMC); Pockwock Lake, 14 May-2 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (mature), FIT (1, NSMC); Pogwa Lake, 15–30 June, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce, FIT (1, NSMC); Pt. Pleasant Park, July 2, 2001, July 7, 2001, August 18, 2001, June 9, 2002, June 18, 2002, July 23, 2002, C.G. Majka, red spruce forest, boggy area (6, CGMC); Sandy Lake, 16–29 July, 1997, D.J. Bishop, red spruce (120+ years), FIT (1, NSMC); south-end Halifax, May 26, 2001, May 20, 2002, June 21, 2002, C.G. Majka, open area (3, CGMC); south-end Halifax, August 22, 2002, C.G. Majka, compost (1, CGMC); Kings Co.: Kentville, August 10, 2005, July 9, 2006, August 19, 2007, D.H. Webster, compost (11, DHWC); Kentville, August 12, 2007, D.H. Webster, at light (1, DHWC). Atomaria testacea is newly recorded in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Canada (Fig. 15). In North America it has previously been recorded from southern California (Leng 1920) under the name Atomaria ruficornis Marsham, 1802, synonymized by Johnson et al. (2007). LeConte (1869, 258) reported a species from South Carolina under the name of Atomaria testacea Zimmerman; however, as Bousquet (1989) makes clear, this refers to Cryptophagus ferrugineus Sahlberg. In the Palaearctic region it is found throughout Europe, in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia in North Africa, and in Asia in Turkey, Kazhakhstan, Mongolia, and western Siberia (Johnson et al. 2007). In Atlantic Canada it has been found in red spruce forests, boggy areas and marshes, in pastures, fields, meadows, and open areas, on beaches under wrack, in a ravine, and in compost. Johnson (1993) reported that it was, “mainly a grassland species which has been recorded around farms, gardens and parks, but it often occurs in other habitats. It has been collected in man-made heaps of refuse, especially cut vegetation, grass, hay, haystack bottoms and compost, more rarely in dung or dung heaps.” Description: Head and prontotum piceous. Elytra piceous basally, gradually becoming paler in the apical half. Venter: pro-, meso-, and meta-sterna piceous; abdominal sterna and legs dark testaceous. Head finely, moderately sparsely, punctate. Pronotum and elytra moderately finely and densely punctate, interspaces 1.0–1.5 times the diameter of punctures, elytral punctures becoming finer apically; pronotum widest at midpoint, constricted towards base and apex; base with only a very shallow transverse impression (Fig. 9). Antennae: antennomere 1 swollen, slightly curved and expanded at apex; 2 smaller than 1 but also apically expanded; 3 almost as long as 2 and only slightly more slender; 4–8 short and somewhat bead-like; antennal club distinct; antennomeres 9 and 10 transverse (Fig. 1.8). Body: width/length ratio, 0.46; length, 1.3–1.6 mm. Québec Newfoundland Gaspe Prince Edward Cape Breton Island Island New Brunswick Haine Nova Atomaria apicalis Scotia Atomaria nigrirostris Figure Ι6. Distribution of Atomaria apicalis and Atomaria nigrirostris in Atlantic Canada. : Published as part of Majka, Christopher, Johnson, Colin & Langor, David, 2010, Contributions towards an understanding of the Atomariinae (Coleoptera, Cryptophagidae) of Atlantic Canada, pp. 37-63 in ZooKeys 35 (35) on pages 54-56, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.35.318, http://zenodo.org/record/576616 : {"references": ["Leng CW (1920) Catalogue of the Coleoptera of America north of Mexico. John D. Sherman, Jr., Mount Vernon, New York, 470 pp.", "Johnson C, Otero JC, Leschen RAB (2007) Cryptophagidae Kirby, 1837. In: Lobl I, Smetana A (Eds) Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera, Volume 4: Elateroidea, Derontoidea, Bostrichoidea, Lymexyloidea, Cleroidea, Cucujoidea. Apollo Books, Stenstrup, Denmark, 513 - 531.", "LeConte JL (1869) Synonymical notes on Coleoptera of the United States, with descriptions of new species, from the mss. of the late Dr. C. Zimmerman. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 2: 243 - 259.", "Bousquet Y (1989) A review of the North American genera of Cryptophaginae (Coleoptera: Cryptophagidae). The Coleopterists Bulletin 43 (1): 1 - 17.", "Johnson C (1993) Provisional atlas of the Cryptophagidae-Atomariinae (Coleoptera) of Britain and Ireland. Biological Records Centre, Natural Environmental Research Council, Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, Great Britain. 91 pp. http: // nora. nerc. ac. uk / 7280 / 1 / Cryptophagidae-Atomarinae. pdf [accessed 11. XI. 2009]"]} Text Breton Island Newfoundland Siberia DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Canada Breton Island ENVELOPE(141.383,141.383,-66.800,-66.800) Zimmerman ENVELOPE(167.167,167.167,-73.300,-73.300) Haystack ENVELOPE(-19.392,-19.392,75.726,75.726) Lake May ENVELOPE(-119.991,-119.991,59.920,59.920) Dam Lake ENVELOPE(-109.001,-109.001,59.617,59.617) Savage Cove ENVELOPE(-55.598,-55.598,51.333,51.333)