Phymaphora pulchella Newman, 1838

Ferreira, Raul Nascimento, 2016, Annotated checklist of the handsome fungus beetles of Connecticut, USA (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Endomychidae)., Arquivos Entomolóxicos 15, pp. 279-289 : 282-283

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.12766263

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E58781-4008-3852-FEF2-F94A096CB95C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Phymaphora pulchella Newman, 1838
status

 

Phymaphora pulchella Newman, 1838 ( Figs. 3 & 4 View Figs )

Length 3.0- 3.8 mm, elongate, slightly oval, bicolored with reddish or orangish yellow and black. Head blackish with antennal club modified and antennomeres expanded in males and slightly in females. Pronotum with a central black discal spot which can be variable. Elytra with a narrow dark suture and having a wide black bands across the middle and tips. Adults found in birch polypores and shelving tooth fungi Climacodon septentrionale (Fries, 1821) Karsten, 1881 , also known as Steccherinum septentrionale (Fries, 1821) Bankers, 1906 , and Steccherinum ochraceum (Persoon, 1792) Gray, 1821 , a widespread and not uncommon species on dead hardwood twigs and branches, especially maples. Occasionally it is attracted to light. It is found across New England.

Material studied:

Fairfield Co.: Monroe, 5 September 1938, A.P. Jacot, 1 ex. ( CAES) .

New Haven Co.: South Meriden, 14 November (no year), Harry L. Johnson, 1 ex. ( CAES) .

Windham Co.: Windham, Follett Road, 12 june 1999, J. O’Donnell, 1 ex. ( UCMS); Eastford , Natchaug State Forest at entrance on State Road 198, 41.84238 N and 72.09471 W GoogleMaps , 12/ 18 April 2012, Tracy Zarrillo, 3 ex. ( RNFC), captured in a 12 funnel Lindgren trap baited with alpha-pinene and ethyl alcohol in plantation of eastern white pine, Pinus stratus Linnaeus (Chris Maier, pers. comm.) .

Length 2.0- 2.5 mm, elongate, subparallel, dark reddish brown, shining and sparcely punctate. Pronotum transverse, widest before middle, sides round before middle, then straight and converging behind and basal two-thirds with a pair of lines down the middle each flanked by a pit before angle. Elytra usually darker with humeri indistinctly and apices broadly reddish in some entire elytra reddish brown. Adults found in Polyporus tulipiferae (Schwein, 1822) Overholts, 1915 , now Irpex lacteus (Fries) Fries, 1828 a milk-white toothed polypore on dead branches of deciduous trees, and under barks with fungus. Not common in New England.

Material studied:

New Haven Co.: No locality, date or collector name, only SI#3178, 1 ex. ( CAES). Britton (1938) reported this species from Connecticut (probably New Haven) and it still resides in his collection; Hamden , 8 July 2008, Raul N. Ferreira , 1 ex. ( RNFC) .

CAES

Connecticut Agriculture Experiment Station

UCMS

University of Connecticut Biodiversity Research Collections

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Endomychidae

Genus

Phymaphora

Kingdom

Fungi

Phylum

Basidiomycota

Class

Agaricomycetes

Order

Polyporales

Family

Phanerochaetaceae

Genus

Climacodon

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