Pachybrachis atomarius (F. E. Melsheimer, 1847)
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.332.4753 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8AC53B0C-AB19-F3A2-0AD6-5D4653A520ED |
treatment provided by |
|
scientific name |
Pachybrachis atomarius (F. E. Melsheimer, 1847) |
status |
|
Pachybrachis atomarius (F. E. Melsheimer, 1847) Habitus 1 View Habitus 1 ; Map 1 View Map 1 ; Figures 1c View Figure 1 , 5a View Figure 5 , 8d View Figure 8
Cryptocephalus atomarius F. E. Melsheimer, 1847: 170.
Pachybrachis infaustus Haldeman, 1849: 262.
Pachybrachys atomus Bowditch, 1909: 319.
Recognition.
Body largely fuscous, dull, mottled with many yellow spots ( Habitus 1 View Habitus 1 ); elytral puncturation dense, confused discally, more or less arranged in rows towards rear and sides; face of males predominately yellow; pygidium entirely black, convex ( Figure 8d View Figure 8 ); male size small: length 1.85 ± 0.07 mm, width 1.01 ± 0.03 mm.
Distribution.
The distribution in eastern Canada is restricted in southern Ontario to remnants of the Carolinian forest ( Johnson 2012; Shelford 1963). In Québec, the distribution is isolated from the main distribution area ( Map 1 View Map 1 ). The unique specimen available was probably collected on the Eardley Escarpment, which is a warmer refugium created by cliffs of the Laurentian Highlands oriented southwards ( Brunton and Lafontaine 1971).
Material examined.
ONTARIO: Essex Co., Ojibway, 7.VIII.1943, S. D. Hicks [6♀, CNC]; same data, except 8.VII.1943, S. D. Hicks [1♀, CNC]; Point Pelee, 9.VII.1931, W. J. Brown [5♂ 1♀, CNC]; Roseland, 24.VI.1944, S. D. Hicks [1♂, CNC]; Lambton Co., Walpole Island [1♂ 1♀, CNC]; Norfolk Co., Normandale, 4.VI.1931, W. J. Brown [1♂ 1♀, CNC]; Turkey Point, 8.VII.1931, W. J. Brown [1♂ 4♀, CNC]; Walsh, 10.VI.1931, W. J. Brown [1♀, CNC]; Ontario Co., Fisher Glen, 12.VI.1931, W. J. Brown [2♂ 6♀, CNC].
QUÉBEC: Pontiac Co., Old Chelsea, 12.VII.1961, J. R. Vockeroth [1♂, CNC].
Host plants.
No plant association records were available from specimens examined, and Barney et al. (2011) did not report any either. Clark et al. (2004) presents the known literature, but since adults were usually swept from vegetation, these records cannot automatically be interpreted as real host associations.
Comments.
Pachybrachis atomarius is one of Fall’s (1915) Group C species that have "great variation in the degree of (elytral) maculation." In spite of the extremely variable elytral mottling, ranging from heavily speckled with yellow to almost entirely black, Pachybrachis atomarius males are relatively easy to identify by the combination of the predominately yellow face ( Figure 1c View Figure 1 ) and entirely black, convex pygidium ( Figure 8d View Figure 8 ). The entirely black, convex pygidium character also permits identification of singleton females.
Although Pachybrachis atomarius is a typical eastern North American species distributed from Manitoba to Oklahoma to Atlantic states ( Riley et al. 2003; LeSage 1991; Barney, unpublished data), in Ontario it is restricted to the Carolinian Zone in the southernmost part of the province. Its presence in Québec is considerably disjunct from its main distribution area, and this isolation is due to the warmer microhabitat of the Laurentian Highlands cliffs of Eardley Escarpment, which are fully exposed southwards and harbor similarly disjunct insects and plants ( Hall 1991; Layberry et al. 1998; NCC 2011a).
Since Pachybrachis atomarius has not been collected in eastern Canada over the last 50 years, it is likely extirpated from the eastern Canadian fauna.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.