Scaphinotus (Pseudonomaretus) relictus (G. H. Horn) 1881
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13154915 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13159235 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B03365-F917-615B-FFAC-FBC5B7E9F96F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Scaphinotus (Pseudonomaretus) relictus (G. H. Horn) 1881 |
status |
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Scaphinotus (Pseudonomaretus) relictus (G. H. Horn) 1881 View in CoL
Figures 2d, 3d View FIGURE , 6 View FIGURES , 12
RECOGNITION.— Adults of this species can be distinguished from those of other species of Pseudonomaretus by the following combination of character states: SBL = 13.0 mm or more (males 13.0–16. 6 mm, females 14.7–20. 3 mm); elytra moderately shiny, microsculpture shallowly impressed, without metallic reflection; head with a distinct transverse impression at level of posterior margin of eyes clearly delineating frontal and occipital regions; labrum ( Fig. 2d) with lateral lobes moderate in length and width; antennomere 4 ( Fig. 3d View FIGURE ) not pubescent, with only a very few scattered setae in addition to apical whorl of setae; pronotum with basolateral pair of setiferous pores present; male protarsomere 1 ( Fig. 6b View FIGURES ) with pad of adhesive setae ventrally over virtually entire ventral surface, protarsomere 4 without a pad; elytra with 13–16 apparent striae, with at least lateral striae disrupted by punctures in and between striae, elytral intervals 4 and 8 each with two to six discal setiferous pores; median lobe of male aedeagus ( Fig. 12) moderate in thickness and of nearly equal thickness throughout, ventral margin arcuate in basal one-fourth, straight in middle half, and slightly deflected ventrally in apical one-fourth in lateral aspect ( Fig. 12b), widest near basal one-fourth of shaft length, straight, gradually tapered to a flattened point apically in dorsal aspect ( Fig. 12a), armature of internal sac as in Fig. 12.
GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION.— This species is known from southwestern Alberta and southeastern British Columbia, northwestern Montana, northern Idaho and eastern Washington ( Gidaspow 1973; Bergdahl 2014).
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