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Other literature type . 2013
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ZENODO
Other literature type . 2013
License: CC 0
Data sources: Datacite
ZENODO
Other literature type . 2013
License: CC 0
Data sources: Datacite
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Oiceoptoma inaequale Fabricius 1781

Authors: Mullins, Patricia L.; Riley, Edward G.; Oswald, John D.;

Oiceoptoma inaequale Fabricius 1781

Abstract

Oiceoptoma inaequale (Fabricius, 1781) Figs. 6, 7, 20, 33, 46 Silpha inaequalis Fabricius, 1781: 87. Diagnosis. Body length 13–16 mm, broadly oval to subparallel, entirely black. Head with short row of long, erect hairs behind each eye. Pronotum broadest at base, disc with short black hairs. Elytral apices conjointly rounded; humerus with tooth; disc tricostate, intervals distally with weak rugulose sculpturing; epipleuron wide in posterior half with upper oblique portion twice width of lower vertical portion, coloration not differing from remainder of body. Hind femur of males unmodified. Range. Quebec south to Florida, west to Ontario, South Dakota and Texas (Anderson & Peck 1985, Peck & Kaulbars 1987). Texas distribution. See Fig. 46. This species is confined to the Texan and Austroriparian biotic provinces of Texas. It occurs in the following Texas vegetational areas: pineywoods, gulf prairies and marshes, post oak savannah, blackland prairies, and cross timbers and prairies. Confirmed counties (30): Brazos, Cherokee, Cooke, Dallas, Delta, Denton, Ellis, Falls, Fannin, Grimes, Harris, Harrison, Houston, Hunt, Jackson, Lamar, Leon, Madison, McLennan, Montague, Nacogdoches, Newton, Parker, Polk, Robertson, Sabine, San Jacinto, Smith, Tyler, Walker, Wood. Collections: BRC, EGRC, JAC, PLM, SFAC, SHSU, TAMU, TORC, TTU, UTIC, WTAM. Seasonality in Texas. See Fig. 33. The adult seasonality profile of this species (based on 117 occurrence records: Appendix I) is unimodal, with a large peak in spring. Biological Notes. Anderson and Peck (1985) report that adults are mainly diurnal and appear to be restricted to deciduous forest habitats. In Kansas, this species prefers wooded areas but is often present in open fields (Lingafelter 1995). Data from examined labels. Collecting methods: hanging sugarbait trap, flight intercept trap, UV light, Lindgren funnel trap, pit-fall trap, hanging carrion trap, elevated flight intercept trap, Malaise trap, baited pit-fall trap. Habitat records: grassland [Malaise], beech–magnolia forest [pit-fall trap and Lindgren funnel trap], upland forest [flight intercept trap], bottomland forest [hanging sugarbait trap], in leaf litter, beating Quercus marylandica, and in rotting logs. Carrion records: snake/squirrel [hanging carrion trap], deer, opossum, dog, tiger [dead zoo specimen], pig, cat, shad, and cow. This species is present in the eastern forested biotic provinces of Texas, with a few records in the open prairie vegetational areas in the northeastern area of the state. Anderson (1982), Schubeck (1983), Cole (1942) and Watson and Carlton (2005) provide details on the natural history of this species.

Published as part of Mullins, Patricia L., Riley, Edward G. & Oswald, John D., 2013, Identification, distribution, and adult phenology of the carrion beetles (Coleoptera: Silphidae) of Texas, pp. 221-251 in Zootaxa 3666 (2) on page 226, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3666.2.7, http://zenodo.org/record/220054

Keywords

Coleoptera, Insecta, Arthropoda, Animalia, Biodiversity, Silphidae, Oiceoptoma, Oiceoptoma inaequale, Taxonomy

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