Stilbus apicalis (Melsheimer, 1844)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.2.16 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3793122 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AD62582B-5119-D92F-FF06-84B7E4BBF902 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Stilbus apicalis (Melsheimer, 1844) |
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Stilbus apicalis (Melsheimer, 1844)
NEW BRUNSWICK: York Co.: New Maryland, 45.83ºN 66.73ºW, 26.VI.2003, R.P. Webster, mixed forest, at light, (1, RWC). NOVA SCOTIA: Annapolis Co.: 19.VI.1995, J. Ogden, (1, NSNR) GoogleMaps ; Colchester Co.: Bible Hill, 5.VIII.2004, 14.V.2005, 23.V.2005, 31.V.2005, K. Aikens, pasture, sweep net, (12, CBU). PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: Queens Co. : Harrington , 2.IX.2005, 8.IX.2005, M.E.M. Smith, barley fields, sweep net, (10, ACPE) .
Stilbus apicalis is newly recorded in Atlantic Canada ( Fig. 3 View Fig ). The species has previously been recorded in eastern North America from Ontario and Maine, south to Florida, and west to Louisiana, Kansas, and Illinois; and in the west from British Columbia south through Idaho to California ( Leng 1920; Campbell 1991; Downie and Arnett 1996; Chandler 2001; Gimmel 2008). Little is known about its bionomics except that individuals have been collected by sweeping grasses ( Steiner 1984), a habitat and collection mode consistent with most of the specimens collected in Atlantic Canada. Specimens are also commonly collected at lights ( White 1983). Dearborn and Donahue (1993) reported individuals from spruce ( Picea sp.) in Chesuncook and Augusta, Maine. Steiner (1984) noted that populations are almost exclusively comprised of females, and considered that it is likely a surface feeding, mold grazing, facultatively parthenogenic species. Th e precise hosts of S. apicalis are unknown although some adults were found on an unidentified smut growing on panic grass, P. dichotomiflorum ( Steiner 1984) .
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.
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