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Lycus sanguinipennis, Lygistopterus rubripennis, Lycus fulvellus femoratus, Lycus arizonensis |
Two weeks ago, I posted this series of Lycids (Net-winged Beetles) from Mount Lemmon on my blog. Joe Cicero, a friend and former college who has moved to Florida and now probably misses Tucson, commented that there is another smaller species on the mountain.
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Joe Cicero's collection of Adoceta apicalis |
He was talking about
Adoceta apicalis which he described as a small look-a-like of
Lygistopterus rubripennis. In 1950 two North American species in the genus
Adoceta were described by Green from only very few specimens each. It seems that no others were found for a long time, maybe until Joe discovered a few specimens some years ago under pine bark on Mt. Lemmon. These were
Adoceta apicalis. They are smaller than the Lycids I showed last week, the wings quite parallel sided, and head and pronotum is black. The elytra end in an apical black band. Joe challenged me to find more of them.
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Lyomorpha regulus, small Milkweed Bug, Sisenes championi, Ptychoglene phrada. |
Last Wednesday,
Ceanothus fendleri and
Ceanothus integerrimus were in full bloom along the path that crosses an area that was heavily burned several years ago. There were plenty of red and orange things crawling on the flowers, from false blister beetles to moths, seed bugs and tarantula hawks (not pictured).
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Some strange Lycids |
Leslie Eguchi and I were shooting pictures of many different flower visitors and eventually came across an accumulation of small, narrow Lycids that were mating on the blooming bushes. There seemed to be many dozens of them. (Joe Cicero explains that Lycids not only congregate to mate, the females also come together and oviposit in groups. He thinks that I may have happened upon a mass emergence from a 'group-clutch' like that.)
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Mating pair of Adoceta ignita |
I was thrilled that I had found Joe's species. But being part of a group of naturalists who usually don't collect and who might be offended, I only collected a few specimens, making sure to get males (there were many) and females (much fewer) both.
Later, from home I sent photos to Joe to report proudly "mission accomplished".
I was pretty disappointed when Joe at first glance called my beetles 'just small
Lycus sanguinipennis' - he had immediately noticed that the pronotum of these guys wasn't black ... and then he thought that maybe I had a new species ...
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Male and female of Adoceta ignita |
When I posted my photo on our SW Arthropods page on Facebook, Arthur Evans had the great idea to share it with an international group that concentrates on a related beetle family, the Soldier Beetles, Net-winged Beetles (Lycids) and Soldier Beetles (Cantharids) are similar enough to interest some of the same taxonomists, and soon we heard back from Michael Geiser in Switzerland
:
"It
keys out as Adoceta ignita Green, 1950, a species I've never seen
before (so the ID is just based on the description). A. ignita was
described from two specimens from Arizona and is apparently very rare. I
don't know how many times it was found after the description." Soon other specialists in the field like Michael Ivie and Vinicius Ferreira were alerted to our quest and agreed wit Michael Geiser's ID.
We also learned that there is an ongoing discussion about the taxonomic status of the genus
Adoceta. In their 2017 paper Motyka et al. merged the genus
Adoceta with the genus
Lygistopterus. But since until now there were only so few specimens of the American species, these were not part of the genetic sequencing that the study was based on.
We will now send a specimen to the lab around Bocak
- I'm curious what the result will be.
I also thought I would get up the mountain in time to collect a few more specimens, but right now Catalina Highway is closed because of an out of control wild fire. So I'm afraid the species I found may just get lost again.
P.S.
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so far unidentified specimen which has to be another A.ignita in the SWRS collection |
After this blog was published, I got an email from Michele Lanan, the new resident scientist at the AMNH's Southwestern Research Station in the
Chiricahuas. She checked the holdings of their collection because every AZ sky island (and Sonoran, too?) may provide similar habitats, at the right elevation, to the Ceanothus areas in the Catalinas. Sure enough, a so far unidentified treasure was found.
References to cited papers will be added later