Siagonium punctatum
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Ordo: Coleoptera
Familia: Staphylinidae
Genus: Siagonium
Name
Siagonium punctatum LeConte, 1866 – Wikispecies link – Pensoft Profile
Material examined
New Brunswick, Albert Co., Caledonia Gorge P.N.A. near Turtle Creek, 45.8380°N, 64.8484°W, 6.VII.2011, R. P. Webster, old-growth hardwood forest (sugar maple and yellow birch), under bark of sugar maple log (1, NBM). Carleton Co., Meduxnekeag Valley Nature Preserve, 46.1907°N, 67.6740°W, 7.VI.2007, R. P. Webster, hardwood forest, under bark of sugar maple (2, RWC); Jackson Falls, Bell Forest, 46.2210°N, 67.7210°W, 26.VI.2007, R. P. Webster, mature hardwood forest, u.v. light (1, RWC). Charlotte Co., 10 km NW of New River Beach, 45.2110°N, 66.6170°W, 16-26.VII.2010, R. Webster & V. Webster, old growth eastern white cedar forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, AFC). Queens Co., Cranberry Lake P.N.A, 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 10–15.VII.2009, R. Webster & M.-A. Giguère, old red oak forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1 ♂, RWC); same locality data and forest type, 13–25.V.2011, 7–22.VI.2011, M. Roy & V. Webster, Lindgren funnel traps (3, RWC). York Co., Charters Settlement, 45.8395°N, 66.7391°W, 23–27.V.2009, R. P. Webster, mature mixed forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC); 15 km W of Tracy off Rt. 645, 45.6848°N, 66.8821°W, 19–25.V.2009, R. Webster & M.-A. Giguère, old red pine forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC); same locality data and forest type, 8-20.VI.2011, M. Roy & V. Webster, Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC); 14 km WSW of Tracy, S of Rt. 645, 45.6741°N, 66.8661°W, 26.IV-10.V.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 trap (1, RWC).
Collection and habitat data
Members of this genus occur under bark of dead trees and sometimes at light (Brunke et al. 2011[1]). In New Brunswick, this species was captured in Lindgren funnel traps deployed in an old-growth eastern white cedar forest, an old red oak forest, an old-growth northern hardwood forest (sugar maple and yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis Britt.)), an old red pine forest, and an old mixed forest. Adults were also collected from under tight bark of sugar maple and at an ultraviolet light in hardwood forests. Adults were captured during April, May, June, and July.
Distribution in Canada and Alaska
ON, QC, NB, NS (Campbell and Davies 1991[2]; Dollin et al. 2008[3]).
Taxon Treatment
- Webster, R; Sweeney, J; DeMerchant, I; 2012: New Staphylinidae (Coleoptera) records with new collection data from New Brunswick, Canada: Scaphidiinae, Piestinae, Osorinae, and Oxytelinae ZooKeys, 186: 239-262. doi
Other References
- ↑ Brunke A, Newton A, Klimaszewski J, Majka C, Marshall S (2011) Staphylinidae of eastern Canada and adjacent United States. Key to subfamilies: Staphylininae: tribes and subtribes, and species of Staphylinina. Canadian Journal of Arthropod Identification 12: 1-110.
- ↑ Campbell J, Davies A (1991) Family Staphylinidae: rove beetles beetles. In: Bousquet Y (Ed). Checklist of Beetles of Canada and Alaska. Agriculture Canada, Research Branch, Ottawa, Ontario, Publication 1861/E: 86-124.
- ↑ Dollin P, Majka C, Diunker P (2008) Saproxylic beetle (Coleoptera) communities and forest management practices in coniferous stands in southwestern Nova Scotia, Canada. In: Majka C Klimaszewski J (Eds). Biodiversity, biosystematics, and ecology of Canadian Coleoptera. ZooKeys 2: 291–336. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.2.15
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