Rhizophagus remotus
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Ordo: Coleoptera
Familia: Monotomidae
Genus: Rhizophagus
Name
Rhizophagus remotus LeConte, 1866 – Wikispecies link – Pensoft Profile
Material examined
New Brunswick, Carleton Co., Richmond, near Hovey Hill P.N.A., 46.1155°N, 67.7631°W 24.V.2005, R. P. Webster, clear-cut (hardwood forest), under bark of Populus sp. (6, NBM, RWC); Jackson Falls, Bell Forest, 46.2200°N, 67.7231°W, 23–28.IV.2009, R. Webster & M.-A. Giguère, mature hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel traps (2, AFC). Queens Co., Cranberry Lake P.N.A, 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 5–11.VI.2009, 25.VI-1.VII.2009, R. Webster & M.-A. Giguère, old red oak forest, Lindgren funnel traps (3, AFC, RWC). York Co., Charters Settlement, 45.8331°N, 66.7410°W, 29.V.2007, R. P. Webster, mature red spruce forest, under bark of Populus sp. (7, NBM, RWC); same locality, forest type and collector, 1.IV.2007, under bark of stump sticking out of snow (1, NBM); Charters Settlement, 45.8395°N, 66.7391°W, 23.IV.2008, R. P. Webster, mixed forest opening, in flight between 15:00 and 18:00 h (1, RWC); 15 km W of Tracy off Rt. 645, 45.6848°N, 66.8821°W, 1–8.VI.2009, 15–21.VI.2009, 14–20.VII.2009, R. Webster & M.-A. Giguère, old red pine forest, Lindgren funnel traps (3, AFC); 14 km WSW of Tracy, S of Rt. 645, 45.6741°N, 66.8661°W, 26.IV–10.V.2010, 26.V–2.VI.2010, R. Webster & C. MacKay, old mixed forest with red and white spruce, red and white pine, balsam fir, eastern white cedar, red maple, and Populus sp., Lindgren funnel traps (2, AFC).
Collection and habitat data
This species has been reported under bark of pine and various Populus species, but most commonly from under bark of Populus tremuloides Michx. (Bousquet 1990[1]). Adults in New Brunswick were taken from under bark of Populus tremuloides and under bark of a Populus stump sticking out of snow in early April, and were collected with an aerial net during an evening flight. Other individuals were captured in Lindgren funnel traps deployed in a mature hardwood forest, an old red oak forest, an old red pine forest, and in an old mixed forest. Adults were captured during April, May, June, and July.
Distribution in Canada and Alaska
AK, BC, AB, MB, ON, QC, NB, NS (Bousquet 1990[1]).
Taxon Treatment
- Webster, R; Sweeney, J; DeMerchant, I; 2012: New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Sphindidae, Erotylidae, Monotomidae, and Cryptophagidae ZooKeys, 179: 169-192. doi
Other References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Bousquet Y (1990) A review of the North American species of Rhizophagus Herbst and revision of the Nearctic members of the subgenus Anomophagus Reitter (Coleoptera: Rhizophagidae). The Canadian Entomologist 122: 131-171. doi: 10.4039/Ent122131-1
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